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02-22-2014, 07:43 PM #1
I bought a camera and moved to Utah
This is pretty much a life report from when I bought a camera in June to present. Warning absolute photo overload.
Last June I bought a canon 40D from Cascadianwarrior. I had little knowledge of photography but have always been interested in it and felt like I had a decent eye. I picked up a 28-135 f/3.5-5.6 to go along with the body. I work at Mt. Hood over the summers and spent the summer trying to figure out how to use the thing while getting tips from friends and campers who knew more than me. Towards the end of the summer I was able to get it out of sport mode and start shooting in manual.
My first week at Hood it snowed and we ended up making laps off of ZigZag all day.
I'd hit this cornice many times but never with fresh snow.
Getting out of it there where a few rocks, you could either navigate in between them or jump them, or do this.
Oregon has to be one of my favorite places and was the perfect setting for learning how to use a camera. I started to understand depth of field
Saw my first bald eagle
I made it up to Timberline for the super moon, admittedly I had no idea what the camera was doing at the time, simply set it to AV and held it steady on a table
Happy campers
The whole area is beautiful
Shot lots of racing
Messing around in the High Cascade lap park
Really wish I knew how to use my camera for this one, believe it or not, wasn't planned
Got to hike one of the hills behind the camp lodge for sunset. Got to the top right at sunset and ended up bushwacking our way down in the dark.
I now go to The University of Utah and did my orientation trip rafting on the Green River in Flaming Gorge. At this point I understood how to use manual controls much better.
Went on a hike to the "U" behind campus the one night we stayed in the dorms
View from outside the tent at orientation
Getting artsy
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7342/9...c1979cc9_c.jpg
I went home for two weeks then back out to Utah in the end of August. I quickly realized the sunsets here are consistently amazing.
My first trip up Little Cottonwood Canyon
Slacklining by the dorms is very common
Some friends from Westmini invited me on a last minute camping trip to Joes Valley. While taking long exposures a friend knocked over my 40D and the LCD cracked. Put the card in another camera and it still took pictures. I shot that weekend and the next couple weeks with no LCD. It gave me the chance to perfect my manual shooting. No hard feelings.
It snowed in september so naturally we had to go for a ski. Maybe 7" at the top of Guardsmans Pass in Big Cottonwood.
The seasons felt confused
After that day I could officially say that I've skied every month of the year, not consecutively though, still working on that one.
Was planning on spending buying some more skis but that changed and I bought a Canon 7D. By this time I had sold the first lens I bout and now had a 17-40 f/4 and a 50 f/1.8.
At the U we have a random week off in October. Not wanting to go home I hitched a ride to California with some friends.
Took some portraits for a friend while out there
One of my personal favorites, this was on I-80 at about 80mph
Trailsright behind campus
It snowed again in October so we hiked Alta, my favoirte shot from that day.
Snowed again in November so we skinned up Alta, left the dorms at 3:30 and made it to class by 9:00
Like I said the sunsets out here are killer, borrowed a friends flash for this one
They let abunch of balloons go during a football game, I feel like this should be a pre loaded phone background
I flew home for thanksgiving and took this while taking off in Chicago
Last edited by skibum220; 02-24-2014 at 05:41 PM.
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02-22-2014, 07:46 PM #2
I bought a 70-200 f/4 in time for Snowbird to open.
Learned it's easy to fake a pow shot when there isn't much snow around.
More early season fun
Shot some photos for She Jumps on International Woman's Ski Day
Back home for winter break, got to explore places I was familiar with but put my own twist on them
32 second exposure under a full moon and some help from headlamps
Got my first star photos
Back in Utah shot the first college race of the season at Park City, Pat Miller Invitational.
This guy finished his run without having to hike.
Walking around campus
It started to snow again. This is one of the few shots of myself I have this winter. I've since realized that fat skis are over rated and sold my 196 Bodacious
Some friends from NH followed me out, conditions are just a little better out here
Crushing windlips on The Cirque
Now I get to shred with friends who I worked with out at Hood at various times who have moved out here too.
Was unbelievably stoked when I looked at my camera after getting this one
Like I said it is easy to fake a pow shot
Rock jibs
It's a small world, I bought boots from this guys roommate, met him on my own and then found out they lived with some friends from Hood. A few people moved out and a friend from NH moved in.
Fresh snow with dodgy light on Tiger Tail
Seriously Snowbird is huge, its hard to go back to NH and ski there.
It snows a lot out here. I realized when shooting on powder days you have to be close to the subject otherwise the snow messes with your shot.
Made our way to the Candelabra tree, lots of rocks getting in and people ended up following us. Some of them cared about there skis and weren't too happy but the snow below it was killer.
More skiing on the gad side of The Cirque
Missed the focus on this one thinking he was going to drop the cliff not launch off it.
Hiking Baldy to get fresh turns the day after the storms
Back at the candelabra tree
Needless to say the past few months have been incredible. Besides the inversion it is great out here. So many places to adventure in. The snow is amazing and it snows a lot. With no moisture in the air it never gets too cold out here. It also amazes me how many people have lived here their whole life who don't explore the awesomeness that is around them. Ill keep updating this thread as life goes on.
Comments, critiques, and criticisms welcome.
Thanks for taking a look!Last edited by skibum220; 02-24-2014 at 06:37 PM.
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02-22-2014, 07:53 PM #3Registered User
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Nice shots! Much better than a GoPro.
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02-22-2014, 08:10 PM #4Registered User
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So a bit of an overload there, but really good. I can see the progress. Keep it up.
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02-22-2014, 08:41 PM #5
Nice work skibum220! Glad to hear that the 40D served it's purpose (RIP)
"No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible" -Stanislaw Jerzy Lec
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02-23-2014, 07:39 AM #6
Nice pic dump. Keep em coming.
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02-23-2014, 09:01 AM #7
Nice 220. Thanks for posting.
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02-23-2014, 09:43 AM #8
Damn... nice shots. I hope you've been shooting for a while and didn't just pick up a camera and get all these! If you did, I hate you.
Screw the net, Surf the backcountry!
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02-23-2014, 11:04 AM #9
Good stuff. Enjoyed the compilation.
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02-23-2014, 02:06 PM #10What can brown do for u?
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02-24-2014, 11:50 AM #11Hudge
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Looks like you've picked it up pretty quickly. nice pics!
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02-24-2014, 12:39 PM #12
Agree with everyone above.... lots of pictures, but I looked at them all and you can definitely see the progression since you first got the DSLR. Keep 'em coming!
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02-24-2014, 05:45 PM #13
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02-24-2014, 06:58 PM #14
Thanks for all the feedback! I've shot pictures on my iPhone and various point and shoots from time to time but the 40D I bought this summer was my first real camera. I've always wanted to get into more serious photography but never wanted to go through the learning curve. Now that I've learned the basics I'm glad I did.
Only having classes two days a week gives me the chance to ski a lot and I bring my camera up every time I ski. I like to ski and shoot photos, not stand around, so its usually hanging from my neck and in my jacket ready to go. This limits my time to line up shots and prep who I'm shooting but I get to ski more and get to go shoot more locations in one day which ultimately is much more fun. Shooting every ski day has been a huge learning experience in what makes a good ski photo, for every ski shot up here there are hundreds of shots that got trashed. I look back on many of my shots from earlier this year and wonder what I was doing. Lots of people advise to get out and shoot as much as possible so that is what I've done and I think it is truly the best advice I've gotten or for anyone who wants to get into photography.
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02-24-2014, 09:09 PM #15
shouldn't be on page
anything but 1
type stuff
and representation of the moniker
is most worthy
thanks"When the child was a child it waited patiently for the first snow and it still does"- Van "The Man" Morrison
"I find I have already had my reward, in the doing of the thing" - Buzz Holmstrom
"THIS IS WHAT WE DO"-AML -ski on in eternal peace
"I have posted in here but haven't read it carefully with my trusty PoliAsshat antenna on."-DipshitDanno
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02-24-2014, 10:22 PM #16
This is particularly good. Well composed. Unique even
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02-25-2014, 03:15 PM #17
Props dude.
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02-25-2014, 04:18 PM #18
Real nice, buddy. Makes me wish I was still up at the U skiing and running around Utah again.
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02-27-2014, 10:43 PM #19
They had inexpensive FSLRs back in the day...
Good work, man! Lots of good shots here and it's cool to see your improvement throughout....Some will fall in love with life and drink it from a fountain that is pouring like an avalanche coming down the mountain...
"I enjoy skinny skiing, bullfights on acid..." - Lacy Underalls
The problems we face will not be solved by the minds that created them.
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03-03-2014, 02:43 PM #20
Thanks, this is a personal favorite. 1/6 F/22 at 80mph gave it the real cool blur effect.
A few from the past couple of days
Like I said earlier, sunsets out here are routinely amazing. Shot from the foothills behind campus.
It's been storming in the Wasatch and the skiing has been great.
Also making for soft landings
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03-04-2014, 03:24 PM #21
Good shit. Hope you realize some of the kudos you've gotten in this thread are from pros (not me.) Keep up the good work!
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03-06-2014, 11:06 PM #22
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03-21-2014, 03:03 PM #23
Some shots from a storm the other day and a last minute climbing trip to Moab.
Had to shoot still life for a class
Campsite under an almost full moon
Woke up at 5 to take a leak, got to see the moon set and the milky way come out before the sun came up
Sleeper storm last tuesday
I've got some friends that go big. The highest diving board on Carbonite under Gadzoom at Snowbird.
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03-28-2014, 08:08 PM #24
Cool.......
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04-26-2014, 06:17 AM #25Registered User
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