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Some Thoughts on Bear Safety

Some Thoughts on Bear Safety

by Chip Phillips | Aug 29, 2019 | Backpacking, Education, Locations | 0 comments

“Saint Mary Lake Sunrise” Glacier National Park, Montana Within the past two months, two separate campgrounds have been closed to tent camping due to bear encounters in Glacier National Park. While I was visiting Glacier this past July, the Many Glacier...
Looking Beyond Locations in Landscape Photography

Looking Beyond Locations in Landscape Photography

by Erin Babnik | Aug 19, 2019 | Education, Erin Babnik, Locations, Philosophy, Photography Tips, Portfolios | 0 comments

“A double rainbow, all the way! What does it mean?!” (Paul Vasquez, in a viral YouTube video of 2010) A famous pair of Greek maxims inscribed over the entrance to the Temple of Apollo at Delphi urged visitors to nurture self knowledge and to exercise restraint: “Know...
Creating Mood With Water

Creating Mood With Water

by Kevin McNeal | Aug 5, 2019 | oceans, Photography Techniques, Photography Tips | 0 comments

Shutter speed of 1 Second to create water streaks One of my favorite subjects to photograph is water. Using different shutter speeds on your camera, you can create a diversity of different moods. Some of the best examples that involve water are waterfalls, creeks,...
Your Hard-drive Will Fail… Eventually

Your Hard-drive Will Fail… Eventually

by Adrian Klein | Jul 30, 2019 | Camera Raw, Education, Image Processing, Philosophy, Photo Travel, Photography Business | 0 comments

4TB External backup drive and assortment of compact flash cards. Yes, I do still shoot intentionally at times with small sized cards! As Tom Keifer of wrote on a hit ballad in 1988, you “don’t know what you got till it’s gone”. You really...
A Brief History and the Rich Tradition of Oregon’s Landscape Photography

A Brief History and the Rich Tradition of Oregon’s Landscape Photography

by David Cobb | Jul 22, 2019 | David Cobb, Education, Featured Photographers, Photo Article, Photography History, Uncategorized | 0 comments

Crater Lake Showing Wizard Island by Peter Britt/photo commons public domain. I’ve often been asked, “Why does the Pacific Northwest have so many good landscape photographers?” Well, the scenery certainly has something to offer a landscape photographer and maybe part...
Some Thoughts on “Grit” and the Landscape Photographer

Some Thoughts on “Grit” and the Landscape Photographer

by Chip Phillips | Jul 8, 2019 | Uncategorized | 3 comments

You’ve heard the term “grit.” It seems like it’s everywhere these days; from podcasts and radio to magazines, to pioneering psychologist Angela Duckworth’s bestselling book “Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance.” What is it? How do we get it?...
How To Fix Dreaded Polarizer Sky

How To Fix Dreaded Polarizer Sky

by Sean Bagshaw | Jul 1, 2019 | Image Processing, Photography Software, Photography Techniques, Photoshop, Sean Bagshaw, Video Tutorial | 0 comments

Wide angle sky polarization before and after fix The circular polarizer (cpl) is one of the most useful tools in landscape photography in my opinion (FYI – I use Breakthrough Photography filters and I am one of their ambassadors but this is not sponsored...
From The Archives – Photographing Wildflowers for Impact.-Kevin McNeal

From The Archives – Photographing Wildflowers for Impact.-Kevin McNeal

by Photo Cascadia | Jun 23, 2019 | Composition, Locations, Photo Travel, Spring Photography, Uncategorized, Wildflower Photography | 0 comments

For the Photo Cascadia 10th anniversary, we’re revisiting some of the blogs you may have missed the first time around. With wildflower season in full swing I thought a photography blog about photographing wildflowers would be fitting. I hope you enjoy it and...
From The Archives – Forget About Dawn and Dusk

From The Archives – Forget About Dawn and Dusk

by Adrian Klein | Jun 12, 2019 | Abstract Photography, Color, Composition, Philosophy, Photo Travel, Photography Techniques, Portfolios | 0 comments

An afternoon of stormy skies and splashes of sunlight in Southern Utah I wrote these two blogs back in 2012 so they are definitely near the bottom of the archives when it comes to the blogs I have created on Photo Cascadia. Here we are seven years later with this...
From the Archives –  Backpacking with Camera Gear Ultralight

From the Archives – Backpacking with Camera Gear Ultralight

by David Cobb | Jun 3, 2019 | Backpacking, David Cobb, Gear Review, Photography Tips | 0 comments

It’s the 10-year anniversary for Photo Cascadia this year, and during this time we’re reposting a few blogs you might have missed the first time around. A few things have changed since I wrote this lightweight backpacking article, the advent of cuben fiber makes gear...
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