MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
I'm going to post pictures from most of the days of my recent vacation along with comments on how I took and processed each shot. It'll be fun for me and hopefully educational for some of you.
The first day our vacation really started for me was when we arrived in the Grand Tetons. We spent the first night in a lodge at Signal Mountain. After throwing our gear into the lodge, we walked down to the shore of Lake Jackson. The weather was pretty cloudy, so it wasn't a great time for landscape shots. Instead, I shot the kids playing along the rocky coast.
I took this shot using a 7-200mm lens at 100mm, f/4, 1/200, and ISO 400. I picked that ISO because the cloudiness meant I didn't have enough light to comfortably shoot at a lower ISO. I used f/4 because it helps isolate the subject (my kids) but is much more forgiving than f/2.8. Also, I find that f/4 is as wide as I can get when shooting more than one person using a long lens. Even with that, it is easy to get one of them out of focus.
We hadn't been shooting long when someone swam out of the lake (presumably from one of the boats) and informed us that a serious storm was about to blow in. We just got back to the cabins when the storm broke. It was 15 minutes of hard rain and serious wind.
After things settled down, we went for a walk. Kathy and the boys went to the main lodge house to play games while I took a stroll along the edge of the lake.
Grand Tetons is really more of a sunrise park. The problem with sunsets is that the main views are looking west. That has the sun setting behind the mountains in the picture. I decided to try a few shots anyway. The clouds had mostly cleared, so the view was looking nice.
Both of these are HDR shots. There was just too much dynamic range to get everything I wanted in a single shot. I could have gone for more of a silhouette of the mountains in a single exposure, but I thought it would look better to see a little detail on the mountains.
I used ISO 100 because I was on a tripod and didn't have any shutter speed concerns. I used f/22 because I wanted a starbust effect from the sun. I shot at a focal length of 21mm for the first shot and 17mm for the second shot on my 17-40mm lens. I didn't use a polarizer because I was shooting directly into the sun. My shutter speeds ranges from
1/60 for the low exposure shots to 1" for the high exposure shots. I used 5 shots in my spread.
I cropped both shots to panoramas because they were much more interesting that way. Without cropping, I would either have a lot boring sky or a lot of boring lake. I liked the second shot better because the trees add a little visual interest. The shot works OK at computer resolutions, but I couldn't print it large. The trees moved too much during and between the exposures and aren't very sharp.
You can also see that I had some flare problems in the first shot. That's really hard to avoid when shooting a really bright object like the sun. The best you can do is remove all filters (including a UV filter if you are using one), which are possible flare causing surfaces. Even with that, sometimes it happens. If you can't avoid it, tell people you did it for artistic effect.
The first day our vacation really started for me was when we arrived in the Grand Tetons. We spent the first night in a lodge at Signal Mountain. After throwing our gear into the lodge, we walked down to the shore of Lake Jackson. The weather was pretty cloudy, so it wasn't a great time for landscape shots. Instead, I shot the kids playing along the rocky coast.

I took this shot using a 7-200mm lens at 100mm, f/4, 1/200, and ISO 400. I picked that ISO because the cloudiness meant I didn't have enough light to comfortably shoot at a lower ISO. I used f/4 because it helps isolate the subject (my kids) but is much more forgiving than f/2.8. Also, I find that f/4 is as wide as I can get when shooting more than one person using a long lens. Even with that, it is easy to get one of them out of focus.
We hadn't been shooting long when someone swam out of the lake (presumably from one of the boats) and informed us that a serious storm was about to blow in. We just got back to the cabins when the storm broke. It was 15 minutes of hard rain and serious wind.
After things settled down, we went for a walk. Kathy and the boys went to the main lodge house to play games while I took a stroll along the edge of the lake.
Grand Tetons is really more of a sunrise park. The problem with sunsets is that the main views are looking west. That has the sun setting behind the mountains in the picture. I decided to try a few shots anyway. The clouds had mostly cleared, so the view was looking nice.


Both of these are HDR shots. There was just too much dynamic range to get everything I wanted in a single shot. I could have gone for more of a silhouette of the mountains in a single exposure, but I thought it would look better to see a little detail on the mountains.
I used ISO 100 because I was on a tripod and didn't have any shutter speed concerns. I used f/22 because I wanted a starbust effect from the sun. I shot at a focal length of 21mm for the first shot and 17mm for the second shot on my 17-40mm lens. I didn't use a polarizer because I was shooting directly into the sun. My shutter speeds ranges from
1/60 for the low exposure shots to 1" for the high exposure shots. I used 5 shots in my spread.
I cropped both shots to panoramas because they were much more interesting that way. Without cropping, I would either have a lot boring sky or a lot of boring lake. I liked the second shot better because the trees add a little visual interest. The shot works OK at computer resolutions, but I couldn't print it large. The trees moved too much during and between the exposures and aren't very sharp.
You can also see that I had some flare problems in the first shot. That's really hard to avoid when shooting a really bright object like the sun. The best you can do is remove all filters (including a UV filter if you are using one), which are possible flare causing surfaces. Even with that, sometimes it happens. If you can't avoid it, tell people you did it for artistic effect.