South Carolina workshop

Our JKPW South Carolina Beaches and Plantations photo workshop ended a few days ago. A talented group of photographers was on hand to capture images of the great landscapes around the Charleston, SC area. The photograph above was from one of our favorite locations, the Morris Island Lighthouse Inlet. This black and white image was an 8 second exposure to smooth out the waves crashing against and through the boards and pilings of this wooden wall protecting the beach.

The image below is also of the Morris Island Lighthouse, using a jetty of rocks as a leading line to the lighthouse just before sunset.

Our first evening of the workshop included a boat trip to a barrier island with a “boneyard” beach of dead trees that have been overtaken by the ocean due to erosion. Our group found many compositions using the collection of trees standing and laying along the beach at the water’s edge. The boat ride home included the chance to see a number of dolphins playfully showing off alongside our boat.

Another favorite photographic location is the Old Sheldon Church Ruins. This church, built in 1753, suffered a hard history, being burned down by British forces in the Revolutionary War and believed to have been burned again during the Civil War. Now the ruins of the church provide some wonderful photographic opportunities.

The city of Charleston is also a prime subject for photography and our photo group used the backdrop of the city to capture the setting sun were the Cooper and Ashley Rivers meet to flow into the Atlantic.

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    NANPA Annual Summit

    The 20th Nature Photography Summit was just held in Jacksonville, FL. Sponsored by the North American Nature Photography Association, the Summit is a gathering of hundreds in the nature photography community. It provides an opportunity to exchange information and techniques, learn about subjects such as conservation of our natural resources, composition design, weather watching, and hear from leaders in the field of nature photography.

    There were a number of speakers giving presentations each day in breakout sessions. These were an hour and a half long dives into a number of subjects with plenty of time to ask questions to the presenters (Jennifer King above). There were also ‘Super Sessions’, lasting 3 hours, on topics like macro photography and marketing, plus vendor product demonstrations each day.

    Keynote presentations were given by Christian Ziegler, Art Wolfe, John Nuhn, and Jack Dykinga. Book signings were also available (Art Wolfe above).

    A trade show was also included that gave everyone a chance to spend some more money on the latest and greatest equipment. The next Summit will be held Feb. 21-23, 2019 in Las Vegas, NV. If you are not a NANPA member, I highly recommend that you consider becoming one. NANPA holds local events throughout the year as well as regular webinars. NANPA membership also gives you access to a great insurance program for your expensive photo equipment. To learn more, click here: nanpa.org

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      2017 Workshops!

      The 2017 Jennifer King Photography Workshops are filling up. There are some fantastic new locations that have been added this year along with some favorite locations that offer amazing landscapes for your photography. Locations like:

      Badlands
      British Columbia
      Mongolia
      Smoky Mountains
      Iceland
      Grand Tetons
      Palouse
      South Carolina
      Columbia River Gorge
      Arches & Canyonlands
      Valley of Fire

      Taking a workshop improves your photography by teaching you new techniques in the field and maximizing your time to photograph these incredible locations. It is a learning experience that is shared with others who also have a love of photography. It’s also huge fun!

      For more information on our 2017 workshops, click here.

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        Gift your photography

        Have you considered creating a photo calendar, or greeting cards or perhaps a photo book as a way to share your images with friends and family? These are great ways to provide unique gifts for birthday, anniversaries, and holidays and also a potential sales outlet for your art. I personally create a yearly photo book to chronicle my travel through the year. I give them away as gifts and also sell them through my web site, but even if I didn’t give them away or sell them, I find that putting my images into publication form provides the satisfaction of accomplishment and something I can enjoy for years to come.

        Making a set of greeting cards, or a yearly calendar or a photo book will actually help make you a better photographer because it forces you to take a close and critical look at your images. You may want to create a certain theme and use the appropriate images within that theme or you may want to select your best overall images to use. Whatever the context, you will go through a self-critique examination that will make you think about each image and relive the experience of taking that image. This process is a real trip down memory lane for me!

        Once you have the images selected, how do you actually go about creating a publication? Well, it is relatively easy these days. There are numerous internet site which will create greeting cards, calendars and/or photo books for you. Even your local Staples, Walgreens, Costco or Walmart can produce photo cards and calendars. If you use Adobe Lightroom to process your images, there is a Book menu option that can easily format your selected images and send them off to a bookmaker. Here are some of the more popular internet sites, many with easy-to-use formats and text creating capabilities:

        Greeting Cards –
        www.mpix.com
        www.snapfish.com
        www.picaboo.com
        www.vistaprint.com

        Calendars –
        www.shutterfly.com
        www.mpix.com
        www.adoramapix.com
        www.picaboo.com

        Photo Books –
        www.shutterfly.com
        www.mixbook.com
        www.blurb.com
        www.pintsizeproductions.com

         

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          Zion in the fall

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          Zion National Park is one of the great natural treasures of the Southwest. Majestic mountains, red rock walls, graphic sandstone hillsides, deep canyons, the Virgin River, colorful Cottonwood trees, Bighorn Sheep, Mule deer and more are all here. The view above is found at the end of the Canyon Overlook trail, a 1.1 mile hike with 163 feet of elevation gain to the overlook at 5300 feet. Our photography workshop group set out on this trail in darkness, well before sunrise, so that we could capture the view in the best light.

          In the bottom of the canyon runs the Virgin River, which created the canyon by carrying away thousands of feet of rock over the centuries. The Cottonwood trees, the river water, the red rock cliffs come together to produce a beautiful landscape.

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          The Virgin River is also the location of Zion’s most famous hiking trail, The Narrows. A hike in the river itself between towering canyon walls. The image below is the very beginning of the hike traveling upstream.

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            Incredible Iceland

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            Our journey to Iceland this year was nothing short of incredible. The weather was perfect and actually untypical for Iceland as we saw little rain during our stay there. However there was no shortage of fantastic skies as this sunset over the lava field waterfalls called Hraunfossar, demonstrate.

            The sunrise sky over the Atlantic ocean lights up the pieces of glacial ice and adds reflective color on the black sand beach along the southeastern coast of Iceland.

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            The most incredible skies were at night, where we enjoyed the great fortune of fantastic displays of the northern lights for several days. The most brilliant light shows I have ever witnessed.

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            Despite all of the color we experienced, I thought a black and white image of a black church we came across on the western coast of Iceland, provided the appropriate atmosphere for an Iceland scene.

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              Hot time in the Palouse

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              August is harvest time in the Palouse area of eastern Washington. It’s also a dry and hot time. While in the area for our JKPW workshop, we saw the evidence of several fields of wheat on fire. In the image above, you can see the red in the sky from the flames in one field.

              The fires did not deter us from finding images of the fantastic landscape that the rolling hills of the Palouse offers. This view from Steptoe Butte shows off the fields of lines and patterns, and the dusty conditions.

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              We were lucky to come across a nice field of sunflowers, still in bloom, right off the highway.

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              We also had a marvelous sunrise which filled the sky with color at the site of the ‘Palouse Country’ barn.

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              • PaulSeptember 5, 2016 - 2:25 pm

                Really nice pictures

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