Posts Tagged ‘central oregon cascades’

Oregon Landscape Photography, Three Fingered Jack at its Best.

Last summer, My wife ,Debbie, My Daughter, Emma and I made what has become an annual overnight pilgrimage to one of my favorite camping locations, Canyon Creek Meadows, at the base of Central Oregon’s Three Fingered Jack Mountain.  I visit this location at least once per summer because it is beautiful, relatively easy to access, and I always find some interesting photographic scenery.  Three Fingered Jack is itself a gorgeous mountain which has colorful volcanic striations decorating its rocky towers.  Canyon Creek Meadows, located on the eastern flank of Three Fingered Jack always has a strong wildflower display and in some years it is stunning.  This year(2009) was definitely a stunning year.  The Lupine meadows were the best I’ve seen in the 10 years I’ve been hiking to this phenomenal location.

Picture of Canyon Creek Meadow and Three Fingered Jack in the Oregon Cascades

Picture of Canyon Creek Meadow and Three Fingered Jack in the Oregon Cascades

As a Bend Oregon photographer, this location is a must see.  I certainly can’t promise that the flowers will be as stunning as they are in the picture seen above, but even if the oregon wildflowers aren’t blooming, the scenery is breath taking.  I will introduce a fine art print of the landscape photograph seen above on the first Friday in January at the Volcano Vineyards Tasting room located on 126 Minnesota St in Downtown Bend, Oregon.  I hope to see some of you there!  Scott and Liz, the owners, and operators of Volcano Vineyards, are funny,smart, and talented people who have the courage to operate a winery out of the high desert town of Bend.  They wouldn’t know it until now but they are my heros!  I’d love to have a winery business, but I’ve never had their bravery, or wine crafting talent for that matter.  If you are a wine connoisseur and find yourself in Bend, you should definitely stop in and have a glass.  I recommend their Syrah, it is firm but elegant, and my favorite!  OK, enough about the good folks at Volcano Vineyards.

My new large format camera logo!

My new photography logo!

The following image of Three Fingered Jack was also taken with my large format camera on this trip with Debbie and Emma, which is now pictured in my logo and hopefully as a favicon to the left of the URL in your browser right now.

This fine art print can currently be viewed at Pandora’s Backpack in Downtown Bend.  I hope Rod, Mo and company won’t be mad that I’m changing venues for a month!  It is a rare occasion in which I can capture more than one image in the same trip that is worthy of making a fine art print.  Well, I guess that these two fine art prints are a testament to how beautiful Canyon Creek Meadows was this year!

Picture/photo of Sunrise on Oregon's Three Fingered Jack

Picture/photo of Sunrise on Oregon's Three Fingered Jack

I’ve got a couple more fine art prints to introduce over the next week, so please stay tuned for some beautiful new Oregon Landscape Photography!

As Always,

Thanks For Visiting,

Mike Putnam


First Friday Art Walk at Luxe Home Interiors in Downtown Bend. Come see the best in Oregon Landscape Photography Oregon

I hope everybody checks their Email one last time before leaving work for the weekend because I”m getting this announcement out a little late.  I’ll be showing my work tonight, Friday June 5th at Luxe Home Interiors in downtown Bend , Oregon.   During Art walks, the wine usually starts flowing at about 5:00PM and end at about 8:30PM.  I’ll be there at about 5:30 due to some parenting responsibilities.   If any of you are in the vicinity, please stop by and say “Hello”.  Luxe is located at 856 NW Bond St.  which is the same street that the Deschutes Brewery is on but Luxe is a couple of blocks to the south.

 

Photograph/Picture of South Sister reflected in Sparks Lake in the Central Oregon Cascades

Photograph/Picture of South Sister reflected in Sparks Lake in the Central Oregon Cascades

The above Sparks Photograph will be amongst the many fine art landscape photography prints of mine on display tonight, so please stop by get some free wine and patronize the arts!  I hope to see you all tonight.

Mike Putnam


Bend , Oregon First Friday Art Hop at U.S. Bank Downtown Branch.

     I’d like to thank the good people from U.S. bank, in Bend, Oregon, who recently purchased some of my fine art landscape photography for their newly remodeled downtown branch.  

Sunrise on Central Oregon's Broken Top Mountain with a wildflower filled foreground.

Sunrise on Central Oregon's Broken Top Mountain with a wildflower filled foreground.

The above photograph is one of those now on permanent display at the downtown Bend, Oregon branch of the U. S. Bank.  This beautiful image captures Central Oregon’s Broken Top Mountain at sunrise with a beautiful flower filled foreground which includes Monkeyflowers, Queen Anne’s Lace, Indian Paintbrush, Senecio, and alpine asters.  This and all the other images at U.S. Bank are double matted with a museum white acid free matte which looks great at the bank.  

Photo/Picture of Central Oregon's favorite waterfall, Tumalo Falls

Photo/Picture of Central Oregon's favorite waterfall, Tumalo Falls

 

 

The above Tumalo Falls also looks great at U. S. Bank.  For those of you who have seen this image before, you’ll notice that this specific has a slightly different crop, giving it a more expansive feel.  It is a crop I’ve wanted to try and one that the folks at U. S. Bank wanted for their downtown Bend, OR branch.  

 

Photo/picture of an alpine sunrise as seen from the summit of Central Oregon's South Sister

Photo/picture of an alpine sunrise as seen from the summit of Central Oregon's South Sister

This semi-famous “summit sunrise” image is still one of my favorites and is now one of the favorites of U. S. Bank.  It looks great there as it does at most locations.  It gives a rugged, alpine balance to the balance of fine art images in the new collection at U. S. Bank.

 

Picture/ photograph of the Painted Hills of John Day in Eastern Oregon

Picture/ photograph of the Painted Hills of John Day in Eastern Oregon

The above Painted Hills print captured in the John Day unit of the Painted Hills area is another great representation of the tremendous geographic diversity that can be found in the Bend, Oregon area.  This image is also a permanent member of the U.S. Bank’s art collection.  

 

Photo/picture of Mt. Jefferson in the Central Oregon Cascade Range

Photo/picture of Mt. Jefferson in the Central Oregon Cascade Range

This picture of Jefferson Park was captured in late summer from one of my favorite camping and hiking areas and is one of the first locations that made me excited about fine art landscape photography.  this is simply one of my favorite types of landscapes to capture.  Beautiful snow-covered mountains, scenic alpine meadows filled with wildflowers and great warm evening light.

 

Fine Art photo/picture of Oregon's Smith Rock State Park with the Crooked River in the foreground

Fine Art photo/picture of Oregon's Smith Rock State Park with the Crooked River in the foreground

Smith Rock State Park offers endless fine art photography opportunities and this is one of my favorite prints from that wonderful Oregon location.  The glowing towers bathing in soft warm light with a fore ground of the gently curving Crooked River offer another example of the phenomenal diversity of the Central Oregon region.  I think all of the above images make a beautiful permanent addition to the downtown Bend , Oregon branch of U.S. Bank, but judge for yourself!  Please stop in at the bank and tell me what you think.

     I’d like to sincerely thank the kind people of U.S. Bank who chose to purchase my art work and who graciously hosted me during the May 2009 first Friday Art walk in Downtown Bend.  The event was well attended and it was very rewarding to meet some new people who are willing to support the arts in Central Oregon.  A special thanks should also go out to Stacey, Loretta, Andy, and the rest of the staff at the U.S. Bank Downtown branch.  They were all very efficient, helpful, organized and pleasant people to work with during the completion of this art project.  
Thank You!

Mike Putnam


Mt. Bachelor Greeting Cards, the Story behind the Picture.

The following Mt Bachelor greeting card is the third in my series of eight Central Oregon Greeting Cards.  Hopefully they will arrive for purchase in about two weeks.  As you ay be aware, my first series of art cards is focused on the beautiful volcanic mountains that highlight the skyline around Bend and the Central Oregon area.  One of the reasons that My wife and I moved to Bend over 11 years ago was the beautiful cascade mountain views.  When we visited it was it was a bluebird day in November after a fresh fall snow had covered the Central Oregon Cascades.  The scenery was stunning.  It wasn’t until several years later that I became a professional landscape photographer, but until this day, I feel a rush whenever I get to enjoy the expansive mountain views in Central Oregon.  

Mt. Bachelor greeting card as seen at sunrise after a heavy winter snowfall

Mt. Bachelor greeting card as seen at sunrise after a heavy winter snowfall

As Most of you know, Mt. Bachelor is one of the most prominent ski resorts in the Pacific Northwest and is an important hub in the Central Oregon economy.  In general, I like to de-emphasize the effects of man in my pictures but this is impossible when photographing Mt. Bachelor which is laced with ski runs, ski lifts, and lift houses.  Nonetheless,some very attractive views of Mt. Bachelor, like this one as seen from Tumalo Mountain located to the North of Mt. Bachelor’s parking areas.  

     I’ve previously recounted some of the difficulties of winter photography in a previous blog entry on our Pacific Crest Stock Photography Blog

Winter travel in deep powder and a heavy photo backpack is tedious at best and torture at worst.  Snow blows and obscures one’s lens, and It’s Cold!  I love the beauty of sunrise alpenglow after a fresh winter snow fall on a Mountain filled scene but there is a price to pay for photographs like the one above.  One of the most important things about winter photography snow.  That’s obvious but not that easy.  Fresh snow tends to blow off of trees quickly or melt off of trees shortly after sunrise.  Timing is everything.  Being at a scene after a heavy snowfall on a non windy day and before the sun comes up is critically important.  It also is why most winter mountain scenes are simply not that good, because the photographer has settled on sub- standard scenes with tree branches void of snow.  

   If you ever see one of my fine art prints, there are some interesting details.  If you look closely you can see several wispy clouds drifting around Mt. bachelor’s summit and for all of you downhill skiers, you can also see a couple of snow cats grooming the runs on Mt. Bachelor.  If you are interested in a fine art photograph of this image, please visit my Mountain Print Gallery

If you are interested in this or any of my other soon to be released Central Oregon Art Cards, please email me via the contact tab at the top right hand corner of this page or check back soon as they have been ordered and will soon be available.

All the Best,

Mike Putnam


Central Oregon Greeting Cards Part II -Three Fingered Jack

The following image is of my second greeting card in the series of eight Central Oregon Cascade Mountain images.  This picture was captured in the upper meadow in the Canyon Creek area high on the flanks of Three Fingered Jack Mountain, which is located in the Mt. Jefferson Wilderness area of the Central Oregon Cascades.

Three fingered Jack Greeting Card as seen from Upper Canyon Creek Meadow.

Three fingered Jack Greeting Card as seen from Upper Canyon Creek Meadow.

This scenic picture was captured during a backpacking trip I took with my wife, Debbie and our daughter, Emma.  It is wonderful hike that passes through several different climate zones during the short 3.5 mile hike in to the lower Canyon Creek Meadow where we camped that evening.  Emma was a trooper and as usual Debbie was patient with my landscape photography obsession.  Because of heavy snowpack from the previous winter, I didn’t end up with the picture I’d envisioned but instead got this gem of a photograph.  The Mountain heather grouping with red indian paintbrush sprinkled and a backdrop of three Fingered Jack make for a wonderful composition with with great color and texture to finish off this image.  For those of you who haven’t been to the Canyon creek area near Three fingered Jack, it is a great short dayhike with excellent overnight options.  Three Fingered Jack has several different shapes depending upon the location you are viewing it from which is part of what makes it one of my Central Oregon Mountains.  High and to the left of this art card’s coverage, is a small alpine tarn which holds small ice bergs until late in the summer.  For more great Three Finger Jack pictures, please visit the Mountain Gallery of our Pacific Crest Stock Photography website.  Mountain Gallery  If you would lie to order this or any of the other art cards in my Central Oregon Cascades Mountain collection, please check back soon as the cards have been ordered and they will available soon.  Please check back to this site soon to see the next image in my new greeting card series.

Thanks For Visiting,

Mike Putnam


Bend Oregon First Friday Art Hop!

     I’ll be showing my fine art prints at Pandora’s Backpack in downtown Bend for the 2009 spring Art Hop on April 3rd.  Pandora’s Backpack is located at 920 NW Bond Street, Suite 101 Bend, Oregon.   The Spring and the Fall art hops are the most highly promoted and anticipated of the First Friday events in downtown Bend.  Typically it is an exciting, festive evening, so please stop by and patronize the arts!  Things tend to start to kick off at about 5PM and wrap up at about 9:30 PM.   I’ll be there with my fine art prints and, homemade easels  a smiling face and a few new images.  Below is one of the images I’ll bring along which has been lightly shown but has received rave reviews from the Aspen tree lovers in Oregon.  

Aspen grove in fall near skyliner drive west of Bend, Oregon

Aspen grove in fall near skyliner drive west of Bend, Oregon

 The pure density of the fall foliage in this aspen grove picture makes it an enjoyable and festive image to view.  I’ve always been a huge fan of aspen trees and aspen groves in that they seem to have a special energy.  While I won’t divulge exactly where this photo was taken, I’ll tell you that it was taken west of Bend and it probably isn’t where you’d think it is!   I’ve searched all around Central Oregon and I had very little luck with aspen groves until I found this scene.  If you are an aspen lover, I think you’ll enjoy this photograph.  The Next image is one I captured while backpacking along the Broken Top trail with my good friend Old Mike Croxford who is currently on an extensive post retirement road trip.  Click here to read more about Old Mike’s Road Trip.  Old Mike is a great adventure partner because he can carry a lot of weight, he doesn’t complain, he loves the great outdoors, and because he makes coffee in the morning!  I remember how pleased i was to return from taking sunrise shots adjacent to Broken Top Mountain in the Three Sisters Wilderness area and find that not only was Old Mike awake but he’d already made coffee.  Excellent!

 

Picture of spring wildflowers along the flanks of Broken Top in the Central Oregon Cascades

Picture of spring wildflowers along the flanks of Broken Top in the Central Oregon Cascades

 The combination of senecio, red indian paintbrush, and alpine fireweed make a playful wildflower foreground with one of broken Top’s pinnacles as a background.  This is a very alpine area where it is difficult to find great flowers like these.  I’ve never found an official name for the small glacial lake in the mid-ground of this picture but my friend Dave Nissen of Wanderlust Tours refers to it as No-Name Lake which is as good as an official name as far as I’m concerned.    When anybody who is as gifted of a naturalist and as sharp a person as Dave has a name for something,  I don’t need any other references.  Therefore, my official name for this lake is “No-Name Lake”.

     This next picture is a favorite of both my wife and my good friend, Big Todd.  It was taken somewhere near Alder Springs Trail Head south east of Sisters, Oregon.  I’ll have it at the art hop but my wife will be mad at me until I put it back over her dresser, unless of course I sell it!  It is my favorite grouping of Bitterroot blossoms in an area managed by one of my favorite charities, the Deschutes Land Trust.  It really is a special area and a great early spring day hike as it is relatively low in elevation and has some diverse and beautiful terrain but if the balsamroot are blooming, please beware because the rattlesnakes are out of their winter hibernation!

 

Photo of bitterroot blossoms near Alder Springs trailhead in Central Oregon

Photo of bitterroot blossoms near Alder Springs trailhead in Central Oregon

 This final spring art hop preview picture is of one of central Oregon’s favorite locations, Tumalo Falls.  I shot this photo with my daughter in a driving rain.  Despite the associated gusting winds, the rain was helpful.  It served to enhance the saturation of the scene that was already at it’s peak of fall color.  despite the fact that one can find hundreds of pictures of Tumalo Falls, this is still my favorite.  The combination of color, composition, memories and a long exposure make this photograph a strong representation of a beautiful location.  

 

Picture of Tumalo Falls near Bend, Oregon

Picture of Tumalo Falls near Bend, Oregon

 

    Please stop by  and say “Hello” if you happen to be out in downtown Bend  during the upcoming spring art hop on April 3rd.  I’ll have the above fine art prints there as well as many others.

I Hope to see you all there!

Mike Putnam


Big lake, Mt. Washington the Three Sisters and early season Snows

     Typically, in the world of Central Oregon Landscape photography there is a shoulder season between Autumn and winter which can be prolonged and unproductive.  During this shoulder season, which we are in the midst of right now, I always hope for a few light snows that add texture and interest to our Central Oregon Cascades.  There is a fine line, however, between enough snow and too much snow.  Enough snow allows access without requiring overnight camping and snowshoes. Recently we’ve had just enough snow.  One spot I like to visit in our photographic shoulder season is Big Lake.  It is near Hoo Doo Ski area and is beautiful any time of year.  The shoulder seasons are my favorite times of year at Big Lake because of sunsets like I recently experienced there.  Below is the first of many shots I captured that evening.

 

Mt. Washington  and pastel skies reflected in Central Oregon's Big Lake

Mt. Washington and pastel skies reflected in Central Oregon's Big Lake

As the sun slowly faded I enjoyed the kind of light that is a landscape photographer’s dream.  The initial soft pastels hardened into more intensive and contrasty colors.  Below is a photograph taken within 10 minutes of the first, showing a quickly changing set of cloud formations.

 

Mt. Washington and Big Lake's shore line illuminated by pastel skies high in the Central Oregon Cascades.

Mt. Washington and Big Lake's shore line illuminated by pastel skies high in the Central Oregon Cascades.

Next is slightly later image showing Mt. Washington reflected in a small cove along Big Lake’s shore.

 

Mt. Washington reflected in Big Lake, high in the Central Oregon cascades

Mt. Washington reflected in Big Lake, high in the Central Oregon cascades

As the light faded an attractive and almost electric scene developed along Big Lake’s shore line.

 

Big Lake reflects a beautiful sunset high in the Central Oregon Cascades

Big Lake reflects a beautiful sunset high in the Central Oregon Cascades

Soon after the above shot was taken, the light faded, the wind picked up and I packed up my gear and headed home to Bend after a very successful and extremely beautiful sunset.  The next photograph also falls into my “shoulder season” category.  It was obviously taken on a different evening but one that was no less beautiful than the one I enjoyed at Big Lake.  This photograph was taken at Bend’s Tumalo Reservoir.  It is one of my favorite locations for Central Oregon landscape photography for several reasons.  It is close to the city of Bend, and it offers a nice reflection of all three of the Three Sisters Mountains.  The mid ground of the following image is an area commonly known as the skyline forest. This area is privately owned and was previously known as the Bull Springs tree farm.  It is composed of over 33,000 acres and encompasses much of the area between Bend and the Three Sisters Wilderness area.  It would truly be a shame to have this wonderful area developed into a resort with the possibility of over 1,000 homes.  It would be a shameless waist of breeding habitat for elk and mule deer and recreational habitat for people.  Can you imagine the view of the Three Sisters from Awbrey Butte spoiled by a city the size of Sisters where there was once nothing but beautiful ponderosa forests?  Can you next imagine the following image spoiled by a city crowding the area beyond the the reservoir? Groups like the Deschutes Land Trust  are working hard to make sure that the cities of Bend and Sisters never have their view ruined and that valuable wildlife habitat isn’t permanently destroyed so that out of state developers can get richer.  The Deschutes Land Trust is a special group filled with great people, many who I know personally and all of whom have Central Oregon’s best interests in mind Another group worth looking into if you are interested, as I am, in preserving the skyline forest west of Bend, is the Central Oregon Landwatch.

Enough of my conservation ramblings, below is the photograph which reminded me of the struggle to save the skyline forest area.

 

Sunset over Tumalo Reservoir, west of Bend. Just beyond the tree line is the area referred to as the "skyline forest"

Sunset over Tumalo Reservoir, west of Bend. Just beyond the tree line is the area referred to as the "skyline forest"