by Mark Bohrer | Jul 26, 2018 | cloudscape, How to shoot, Landscape photography, Leica, Night Sky, Stormy sky, timelapse |
“There’ll be another one tomorrow night!” Another patron shouted this to me as I photographed an Albuquerque evening cloudscape outside local restaurant favorite The Range Cafe. The guy was probably referring to that evening’s non-existent...
by Mark Bohrer | Jul 5, 2018 | How to shoot, Landscape photography, Leica, Night Sky, Shot Design |
You just finished shooting an absolutely killer sunset, waiting 10 minutes after the sun disappeared for the best color. So it’s time to head inside, put the cameras away and pop a cold one, right? After the sunset, El Prado, New Mexico Nope. Now a different...
by Mark Bohrer | Jun 14, 2018 | How to shoot, Leica, New Mexico |
Everyone shoots them. But most sunset shots make you yawn – see one end-of-day color riot, and you’ve seen ’em all, right? InfoTrends estimated all of us shot 1.3 trillion photos in 2015. Of that number, a large percentage were sunsets. (If all 1.3...
by Mark Bohrer | May 17, 2018 | Equipment, How to shoot, Leica, Photographic physics |
Mine came without caps. There were a few scratches, but the soft front coating was mostly intact. Most important, there was no visible haze when I blasted a flashlight through it. Buzz at home – vintage 90mm f/2 Summicron v2 (1959) Old lenses are cheap. You can...
by Mark Bohrer | May 3, 2018 | Ancestral Puebloan, Cliff Dwellings, Ghost Towns, Interiors, Landscape photography, Leica, New Mexico, Ruins |
There were about 100,000 of them when the Spanish arrived in the 16th century. They were scattered among the volcanic cliffs and protected sites along the Rio Grande River, 30 settlements altogether. The Conquistadores, missionaries, and pioneer settlers called them...
by Mark Bohrer | Mar 22, 2018 | How to shoot, Landscape photography, Leica, New Mexico, Petroglyphs, Shot Design, Sigma, Travel, ultra-wide-angle, Zeiss |
Go close. Or put it this way: “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough.” Clan mask, Piedras Marcadas, Petroglyph National Monument Leica M10, 35mm f/1.2 Nokton Aspherical VM II That was Magnum photographer Robert...
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