Posts Tagged ‘pic’

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


Central Oregon Cascade Mountain Greeting Cards!

For those of you who are regular readers of my updates, hold on to your hats as I’m branching into something entirely different.  I’m about to launch a small but super high quality line of art cards, greeting cards, note cards, or whatever you want to call them.  they will open to a blank inside for personal notes to friends, family, clients, or associates.  Regardless, they should be very nice and as you might expect, Central Oregon landscapes will be the theme.  My first series of 8 cards is just about to be ordered and should be available in a couple of weeks.  I hope to market them everywhere that sells attractive cards.  I’ve received countless requests for less expensive products from people who genuinely seem to love my photography but don’t have $1,650 available for a framed 30×50 inch print.  I get it!  Especially in these difficult economic times.  Thus my new business idea.  I’ve always focused on the best quality that I could possibly achieve from the beginning of my process to the end.  It all starts with great slow speed 4×5 transparency film in a balanced, accurately focusing large format camera with excellent quality multi-coated lenses on top of an exceptional carbon fiber tripod.  This is just the film capture part of the process.  Next comes the processing part of the image capture process.  I can have a beautifully exposed capture of a once in a lifetime scene but if the processing is botched then everything but the memory is lost.  That’s why I utilize the best processing outfit anywhere.  Next comes the printing.  Many people have asked if I do my own printing.  I don’t for several reasons.  The first of which is that it takes a long time to become a great printer and I’m simply too busy to perfect the art.  The second is that I don’t have quite enough through put to justify having the requisite chemicals around in my already cramped basement.  Also, maintaining a top quality color processing set-up is also time consuming and frankly, professional outfits can do it better than me and therefore I choose to have them do it.  I consider my printers to be the best in the world.  This opinion is shared by many of the best professional photographers in the world.  Because all of this adds, y fine art quality photographs are not cheap.  Because I’ve had lots of requests for my images at a lower price, I came to the conclusion that high end but fairly priced Greeting Cards featuring Central Oregon Cascade Mountains would be a good place to start.  As always, quality was my first objective.  The printing options are endless.  Decisions regarding paper, print,and font  had to be made.  Then of course, I had to select only 8 of my thousands of images for usage.  This was brutal!  There are so many photographs that I’d like to make into art cards but I had to start somewhere.  With endless help from my sweet wife, Debbie, and our great friends, Jason and Christine, we have finally reached the printing stage.  I’ll offer a photographer’s insight into how each of my new greeting card images were captured over the next couple of weeks, until the Greeting Cards are actually available.  I’ll also leak out more information about specifics of the cards, price, etc.  To start off the grand introduction of my soon to be released art cards, I give you the following image of Sparks Lake, with the distant South Sister as seen from near the Cascade Lakes Highway.

South Sister and Sparks Lake Greeting Card

South Sister and Sparks Lake Greeting Card

I felt this was an appropriate card image to start with because it is such a recognizable location for many Central Oregon outdoor enthusiasts and because it was one of the first images that I captured that I was truly excited about.  I had been to Sparks Lake for many previous sunsets but none have been the equal of this Sparks Lake photo.  The scene was stunning that I got goose bumps.  To capture that much color, with a perfect reflection of South Sister from such a scenic Oregon location was a gift.  I always have a desire to do justice to a given location.  Many of you have probably been to a scenic location and took some photos and when you returned home you were disappointed with your results because the photos didn’t do justice to the beauty of a given scene.  Well, my goal is to never let this happen.  Don’t get me wrong, it happens, but if the scene is beautiful, I keep going back until I get it right and I eventually do justice to the scene.  this photo is very rewarding because I did justice to a famous and beautiful scene.  The setting could not have been better.  I was with My wife and our daughter, Emma, who was catching toads along Sparks Lake’s shore while I photographed the scene.  The clouds were amazing, and the water could not have been more still.  Knowing that this scenic location was a favorite of Oregon’s photographer laureate,  Ray Atkeson is also immensely rewarding.  Of all the time I’ve spent photographing Sparks Lake, that evening is still my favorite.  I hope you all enjoy the greeting card version of this shot and please contact me if you would like to make a purchase.  I’ll soon have a special Art Card/Greeting Card page on my website where it will be possible to register with PayPal and buy my cards directly from the web and I’ll send them directly to you.  If anyone has any suggestions regarding locations that you’d like to see as part of my next series of cards, please leave a comment at the end of this blog entry.  Until my next Greeting card entry, Take Care.

All the Best,

Mike Putnam


First Friday Fine Art Photography show at Pandora’s Backpack

I’d like to officially thank Rod Bien of Pandora’s backpack in downtown Bend for hosting my photography show last Friday(3/6/09)  The store is great, Rod has always been generous in allowing my huge fine art prints and cumbersome easels to clutter up his store and the staff at Pandora’s backpack is also a great group of people.  Mo, Jordan, Thad and everyone who chipped in at last Friday’s art walk.  It is very appreciated.  

Mt. Bachelor and Red Indian Paintbrush in the Central Oregon Cascades

Mt. Bachelor and Red Indian Paintbrush in the Central Oregon Cascades

We had a great turn out and it was especially nice to see some old friends and collectors who I had regrettably lost touch with in the past couple years.  Above is one of the many images that are still hanging at Pandora’s backpack which I captured with my large format 4×5 film camera.

     For those of you that don’t already know, Pandora’s backpack is according to my understanding a Patagonia concept store.  Meaning they are privately owned but carry almost a full line of Patagonia clothing.  Perhaps if Rod Bien happens to stumble upon this entry , he could give us some details.  Regardless, it is full of high quality, well made outdoor gear from my favorite outdoor company, Patagonia.  Old Patagonia catalogs were one of my early photography inspirations.  When I lived in Kentucky with my parents, I had a small collection of photos cut out of old Patagonia catalogs taped up next to my spot at the dinner table.  It was my happy spot!  Back to Pandora’s Backpack.  It is a beautiful store with very attractive brick walls and some nice rugged wood details, all of which combine nicely with my large format fine art prints and the hand made cherry wood frames that I create for them.

Lichen covered basalt columns in Central Oregon's High Desert

Lichen covered basalt columns in Central Oregon's High Desert

The above is another one of my fine art photos which is currently hanging at Pandora’s backpack.  I captured this image near the alder springs area outside of Sisters, Oregon.  I met lots of new Bend residents at the show virtually all of who are living in Bend for the outdoor experiences that are available here.  Having the Deschutes River, the high desert, old growth ponderosas, and the Cascade Mountains all within minutes of each other and minutes of Downtown Bend make this an amazing place for me to live.

Middle Sister, North Sister, Mt Washington, Three Fingered Jack, and Mt. Jefferson as seen from Tam McArthur Rim

Middle Sister, North Sister, Mt Washington, Three Fingered Jack, and Mt. Jefferson as seen from Tam McArthur Rim

This is yet another fine art image hanging at Pandora’s backpack and yet another reason I feel lucky to live and work in Central Oregon.  An endless supply of beautiful photography subjects and some amazing sunsets are nothing to complain about.  The above photograph was taken from Tam McArthur Rim high on the flanks of Central Oregon’s Broken Top Mountain in the Oregon Cascades.  The sunset was clearly stunning but the view is always grand from this location.  From left to right are Middle Sister, North Sister, Mt. Washington, Three Fingered Jack, and Mt. Jefferson.  It is truly an amazing volcanic viewpoint.  

     If any of you are interested in seeing more of my work in person, please stop by Pandora’s backpack where my work is semi-permanently displayed.  It is located at the On Bond street in the St. Clair building in downtown Bend.


Deschutes River Winter Photos

     As Old Man Winter has thoroughly put his stamp on Central Oregon, my preferred backcountry photo locations become less accessible and even simple hikes can become a difficult task.  With nearly a foot of snow in my backyard, conditions are excellent for some great winter photos, of locations that would otherwise be photographically unworthy.  As there doesn’t appear to be a break in Central Oregon’s pattern of snow storms and heavily overcast skies in the near future, I’ve temporarily given up on any mountain alpenglow and fresh snow shots for the foreseeable  future.  Instead I’ve turned towards some less remote scenes for some interesting winter pictures.  

     On overcast, snow days like today, I usually find some worthy photo material at Tumalo State Park.  As Highway 20 descends into the Deschutes River’s basin, on the left side of the road is an attractive overlook where you can get an arial view of the northern end of Tumalo State Park and a graceful curve in the Deschutes River.  On rare snowy cold days like today, when the riparian area along the Deschutes’ shores are powdered with fresh snow, the scene is especially elegant because the juniper and ponderosa trees retain extra detail from the snow on their limbs and the snow covers some less attractive areas in the state park area.  The following photo was taken from that unmarked but very pleasant location.  

Deschutes River in winter

Deschutes River in winter

 Upon entering the state park, I was rewarded with solitude and some of the best winter and snow scenery in the Bend, Oregon area.  I made first tracks in the freshly fallen snow and thoroughly explored this beautiful Central Oregon location.  I took pictures from all over the park but I’ll only present a few of my favorites in this blog entry.  I think these photos will be great for stock photo purposes.  As I stumbled up stream, I made an obligatory stop at my favorite ponderosa tree.  It’s broad limbs were predictably snow covered making an interesting, graphic picture.  This tree is absolutely immense and the density of the arrangement of its branches make it one of my favorite oregon photo subjects.

 

snow covered ponderosa tree in Central Oregon's Tumalo state park near Bend Oregon

Snow covered ponderosa tree in Central Oregon's Tumalo State Park near Bend Oregon

Further up river more rewarding winter photos were to be found.  The red osier dogwoods along the Deschutes River’s shores add a splash of red to the scene as do the trunks of numerous ponderosa trees along both banks of the river.  Near the southern end of the park is a broad and rugged boulder field filled with volkswagen sized lava rocks.  This boulder field is tedious to navigate in summer and it turns out that it is fairly treacherous when snow covered.  The following photo was taken at the up stream end of the boulder field.  

Snow covered boulders and ponderosa trees line the Deschutes River

Snow covered boulders and ponderosa trees line the Deschutes River

Because these boulders were snow covered many cracks and concave areas were hidden, making the travel especially difficult.  I spent a considerable amount of time on my belly grasping at small slippery hand hold in an attempt to not fall into any of the snow covered cracks that served as trap doors between the large rocks.  Frankly, I wouldn’t recommend traveling through the rock field to others.  Instead I would recommend climbing up hill above the rocks if you insisted on pressing up stream beyond this location.  The next photo is from just beyond the boulder field.  I really like the graceful curvature that the deschutes makes in this location and I love the color lent to this beautiful winter scene by the ponderosas and red osier dogwoods that flank the river.

 

The Deschutes River flanked by snow covered ponderosa trees fill this Central Oregon scene.

The Deschutes River flanked by snow covered ponderosa trees fill this Central Oregon scene.

I stopped my hike at the point where the above picture was taken and began a cold and hasty retreat back to my truck.  For those of you who enjoy winter hiking, Tumalo State Park is beautiful right now.  The snow cover has made an already beautiful hike even more stunning but I would highly recommend avoiding the snow covered boulder field as it is challenging and quite dangerous when snow covered, like now!


Central Oregon snow, Winter’s Arrival!

     It appears that old man winter has finally arrived in full force on the Central Oregon scene.  I received a mixed reaction when I declared that Central Oregon residents were in need of a cold snow infusion two entries ago, in that perhaps there aren’t as many snow lovers in our midst as I had once imagined.  Personally, I love distinct seasons.  I wouldn’t mind spring being a little more distinct and prolonged here in the Bend area but I have no reservations in regards to winter’s arrival.  In celebration of our recent snowfalls, I strategically made my first cross country ski outing of the season to Tumalo Falls.  I knew it had been quite cold and enough snow had fallen to make a potentially interesting photo or two.  I’ve been to Tumalo Falls many times in the winter but frankly I’ve never really dialed in the scene to the point where I’m truly proud of my photos.  This outing was very good but far from perfect.  It was a day that my friend and fellow photographer, Troy McMullin refer to as a good stock day.  By this we mean that the conditions or the setting might not have been appropriate for capturing a fine art photograph that is worthy of selling as a print but it was probably an attractive enough scene that is has some commercial value.

     In early season conditions like this, one often has travel options.  The road from the parking lot along Tumalo Creek had enough snow for skiing but it had little enough that it was still hikeable.  Probably the only way to go wrong was to snowshoe.  I had enough kick and glide that the weight of my skis were easily justified.  After the quick 2.5 mile ski into Tumalo falls, my first stop was at the viewpoint where I took the following wintry picture.

 

Bend, Oregon's Tumalo Falls after Central Oregon's first significant snow of 2008.

Bend, Oregon's Tumalo Falls after Central Oregon's first significant snow of 2008.

     The attractive elements of this image led me to my next several shots.  I like the snow cover on the trees and the rocks in the middle of Tumalo Creek but I am especially fond of the ice formations at the base of the waterfall.  Their artistic shapes and blue hues made them a subject worth zooming in on a little closer.  any good photographer will tell you that it is better to get closer to your subject that to employ a lens with a longer, so I got closer.  I dropped my skis and skirted along the right hand side of the creek’s canyon for a more intimate vantage point.  The travel was actually more hazardous than I’d anticipated as some of the steep snow laden slopes were a bit nerve racking.  Looking down I realized that one slip and I slide 75 feet straight into the creek which would be uncomfortable but not devastating.  What would be devastating was the fact that I was potentially the last person into the falls that evening and that I could possibly break my leg during a slide into a creek.  It is moments of exposure like this that trigger my mind to draw out dark scenarios of my own dismemberment that at worst are melodramatic and at best are preventing my wife from cashing in on a life insurance policy!

Bend Oregon's Tumalo Falls in Winter.

Bend Oregon's Tumalo Falls in Winter.

As I was fussing with optimal tripod placement and being covered with fresh fallen powder, I became acutely aware that i was getting cold!  I like the details of the falls and its associated ice formations that are captured in this picture.  When I tried to hike/climb/scramble I ran into two issues.  The hillside became intimidatingly steep for someone(me) who isn’t ready to cash in their own life insurance policy and  the spray from the waterfall became problematic for my lenses.   The next image emphasizes the Ice sculptures beneath a tad more aggressively.

 

Icy formations beneath Tumalo Falls near Bend, Oregon.

Icy formations beneath Tumalo Falls near Bend, Oregon.

Hopefully this will be the first of many winter photo outings that I’ll make this winter season.  It was great to be back out on skis and I’m glad winter has finally arrived despite the wishes of my  loving wife and my favorite ultra-marathoner/retailer.  By the way, my wife will have to wait awhile for summer and to cash my life insurance policy!