Mt. Rainier and Ruby Beach
coscorrosa
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Two really quick trips to some of the most photogenic locations in Washington State (Thursday night through Friday night).
#1: Crescent Moon at Sunset
#2: The Milky Way from Paradise (saw lots of meteors, some of them extremely bright, but they seemed to go away when the shutter was open!)
#3: Pre-dawn on Upper Tipsoo Lake. Normally this lake is calm at dawn and sunrise, but it was moving around quite a bit which made for some different shots than usual.
#4: Purple alpenglow at sunrise on Upper Tipsoo Lake.
#5: Ruby Beach at sunset. There was a 3 hour wait for the ferry, so I had to race to get there in time (arrived literally 2 minutes before the sun went below the horizon - fortunately the best light is usually 15-30 minutes after sunset at the beach).
#6: Just like the previous night at Rainier, the crescent moon was setting just after sunset.
#7: This is what "0% cloud cover" looks like at the beach. Fortunately the forecast wasn't accurate, there was also a fire in ONP that may have helped the colors quite a bit.
#8: Setting crescent moon (well after sunset, this was ISO 2000 f/4 for 2 seconds to minimize moon movement)
#9: About 30 minutes after moonset the stars started popping out, and about 30 minutes after that, the Milky Way was easily visible. There were as many stars as Rainier despite the low elevation, in fact the Milky Way was even more visible (no light pollution nearby). It's pretty cool seeing stars reflect in the wet sand. Like the night before there were some crazy bright shooting stars from Perseids.
#1: Crescent Moon at Sunset
#2: The Milky Way from Paradise (saw lots of meteors, some of them extremely bright, but they seemed to go away when the shutter was open!)
#3: Pre-dawn on Upper Tipsoo Lake. Normally this lake is calm at dawn and sunrise, but it was moving around quite a bit which made for some different shots than usual.
#4: Purple alpenglow at sunrise on Upper Tipsoo Lake.
#5: Ruby Beach at sunset. There was a 3 hour wait for the ferry, so I had to race to get there in time (arrived literally 2 minutes before the sun went below the horizon - fortunately the best light is usually 15-30 minutes after sunset at the beach).
#6: Just like the previous night at Rainier, the crescent moon was setting just after sunset.
#7: This is what "0% cloud cover" looks like at the beach. Fortunately the forecast wasn't accurate, there was also a fire in ONP that may have helped the colors quite a bit.
#8: Setting crescent moon (well after sunset, this was ISO 2000 f/4 for 2 seconds to minimize moon movement)
#9: About 30 minutes after moonset the stars started popping out, and about 30 minutes after that, the Milky Way was easily visible. There were as many stars as Rainier despite the low elevation, in fact the Milky Way was even more visible (no light pollution nearby). It's pretty cool seeing stars reflect in the wet sand. Like the night before there were some crazy bright shooting stars from Perseids.
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Really like the 1st and the milkyway
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BTW Ron, do you mind leaving something for me to shoot. Dang man, you have shot every possible angle and everything in that state. I don't think I want to even try shooting those park ever.
Cheers,
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Is there any more to say after that? #9 is my favorite, but the whole series is excellent as always
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Canon 5D MKII and more lenses than my wife thinks I can afford.
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18-105 mm
85 mm 1.8
10-20 mm
35 mm 1.8
Thanks Awais! That first shot was completely lucky and unplanned, but I'll take credit for it
You missed the good light by one week!
Heh, I feel the exact opposite! There are so many places in the state that I haven't photographed (North Cascades, Mt. Adams/St. Helens), rivers and forests and waterfalls, the eastern part of the state in general... There's no shortage of photo ops, just a shortage of hours in the day and vacation time from work.
It's pretty cool walking on star reflections
Thanks!
The conditions were perfect, clear skies, warm temperatures (this made it comfortable) and low tide. I'll try and repeat this shot in the future when cameras are better able to handle it.
Thanks!
I don't sleep - at least not on the weekends I'm not going to say how many miles I put on my car, but I will say that in the last year, I've spent a full month driving (30 days * 24 hours/day). If I didn't have a "real" job I could take my time a little more. And yes, noise performance makes a huge difference for those Milky Way shots, my 20D couldn't handle it, I'm waiting to see what the next generation of bodies produces as even the 5D MII isn't great. I generally try and keep it to 25 seconds or so, sometimes that requires ISO 4000 or 5000 at f/2.8, and they're often under-exposed and when you bring them close to proper exposure in post the noise gets even worse.
Definitely, now's the time too, in the next few weeks the wildflowers at Paradise will be showing (a few weeks later than last year).
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Ron, I've really run out of adjectives to describe your work and sets like this one are the reason why. Each and every one is absolute bueaty!
This one (#9) however, exceeds them all. I sat and stared at it so long I got a couple disapproving looks from my boss!
(thanks for getting me in trouble, man!)
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I don't know why more people don't shoot more stars over oceans. That shot is just unbelievable.
I feel boring.
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Just tell your boss that you're less likely to screw things up if you're looking at dgrin instead of working. They'll understand.
FWIW, here's some meta-photography (taken by dseidman) of me photographing #9, the red lights are my timer and camera, you can see the stars at my feet reflecting in the sand:
It's only Chris, no big deal
I haven't seen any star shots at the ocean before, I've thought about a few times but the conditions didn't cooperate until this trip.
Thanks!
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I have enjoyed your work for some time here on dgrin, and bumping into you and Danny on the Mountain was an unexpected pleasure. As much as you get out I won't be surprised to run into you again some time.
Hell, even I can't argue with that logic!
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Wow is about all I can really say beyond that!
Thanks, likewise, and I'm sure we'll run into each other again. The last few photo trips I've been on I've run into people I knew online or in person, it's a small world of landscape photographers here in the NW
I think any of the nice noise removal plugins (Noise Ninja, Nik Dfine) would work, LR3 has the advantage of additional features (a better RAW editor than ACR for example, better workflow than Bridge).
Thanks! I can't comment on the sand aliens, they asked me to keep quiet
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Glad you guys made it out there. Would have been nice if you went north a little bit the following day and we could have shot Shi Shi together...
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