Mt. Hood just before dawn


Mt. Hood as seen from Jonsrud Viewpoint in Sandy, Oregon. Taken at about 7 a.m. this morning. Taken with a Canon 6D mounted to a tripod. Lens was a Canon 70-200mm F4L @ 70mm. ISO 100. Aperture at F4. 0.8 second exposure.

Blue Heron at Steigerweld National Wildlife Refuge

Taken earlier today.

Canon 7D
Canon 100-400 F4L
F5.6
1/1000 sec
ISO 200 (AUTO)
400mm focal length

Royal Air Force Red Arrows Demonstration Team






Breaking Vapor



USAF F35A Lightning II
Flown by Captain Andrew "Dojo" Olson

Canon 7D
Canon 100-400mm lens @ 400mm
ISO 500
F13
1/1000th of a second

2019 Oregon Airshow

USAF F-35A Lightning II flown by Captain Andrew "Dojo" Olson. 2019 Oregon Airshow.




F35 Lightning engaging Afterburner
2019 Oregon Airshow

Canon EOS 7D
Canon 100-400mm F4L @ 310mm
ISO 500
F13
1/1000 of a second

When shooting fast action, especially jet aircraft, its important to really crank up the shutter speed in order to freeze the action. For this shot, I had my camera in manual mode with the above settings. The only thing I did differently than usual was to set my camera to automatic ISO. This works out because the camera is allowed to choose the best ISO (How sensitive the camera is to light) to work with the other settings that I set the camera to. However, I should have limited the cameras ISO limit to prevent the ISO from getting too high. When the ISO is too high, than digital noise starts to become a factor, particularly with crop factor cameras such as the Canon 7D.


YAK 110 flown by Jeff Boerboon


"YAK 110" aircraft at the Oregon Airshow. Shot with a Canon 7D using the Canon 100-400mm lens. ISO 100, 1/160th of a second. Aperture of F13. Lens zoomed all the way out to 400mm. Normally when shooting fast action you want to have the shutter speed as fast as you can. However, when shooting propeller aircraft, you want to actually slow down and pan the shot with your camera. The panning motion keeps the image shot while the slow shutter speed allows motion to be shown in the propellers of the aircraft. Showing the motion of the props is important as freezing the motion would look unnatural and weird.

Another Oregon Sunset
Canon 6D
 17-40mm F4L @ F4
 ISO 500
 1/60th second exposure

Sunset Gulls


Sunset Gulls

Canon EOS 7D
Canon 100-400mm F4L
F6.3
ISO 250
1/800th of a second


Gladstone Car Show


Taken at the 2019 Gladstone Car Show

Canon 6D
Canon 17-40mm F4L
ISO 1250
1/125th of a second
F14

Neskowin Ghost Forest


Neskowin Ghost Forest
an ancient forest that subsided into the sea during a powerful earthquake event. The tree stumps at this site are said to be 2000 years old. 

Canon 6D
Canon 70-200mm F4L @ 70mm
F/8
ISO 400
1/400th of a second exposure
Converted to black and white in photoshop with a 100% red filter applied to the image.


Columbine Flower at Schreiner's Iris Gardens near Keizer, Oregon


Columbine Flower
Canon 6D
Canon 70-200 F4 L @ 200mm
F5.6
1/250th of a second
ISO 2000

Shot in manual mode using automatic ISO.

#flowers
#canon
#Oregon
#willamettevalley
#canon6d

Cedar Creek Grist Mill near Woodland, WA



Cedar Creek Grist Mill. Near Woodland, WA. Canon 6D, 17-40mm F4 L @ F5.6. ISO 640. 13 second exposure. Used a 10 stop ND filter.

Alternative view of the pond at the Portland Japanese Gardens Heavenly Falls


Canon EOS 6D
Canon 17-40mm F4 L @ 29mm
ISO 320
F6.3
45 second exposure
10 ND filter used

Bridge at Portland Japanese Gardens


Canon EOS 6D
Canon 17-40mm F4 L lens @ 40mm
F8
ISO 320
1/25th of a second

The famous Japanese Elm at the Portland Japanese Garden


Canon EOS 6D
Canon 17-40mm F4 L @ 17mm
ISO 320
1/25th of a second
Aperture at F8

Swirling leaves at Heavenly Waterfall, Portland Japanese Garden


Canon 6D
Canon 17-40mm F4 L lens @ 22mm
10 stop Neutral Density filter
ISO 50
75 second exposure
F 5.6

Abiqua Falls, Willamette Valley, OR.


Canon 6D
17-40mm F4 L lens
ISO 250
1 second exposure
Taken wide open at 17mm.

Moon Over Mt. Hood


Composite shot: Mountain was exposed for 20 seconds using a Canon EOS 6D with a 70-200mm lens at 200mm. F5.6, ISO 100. The moon was exposed for 1/125th of a second. Both images combined in Photoshop. Images taken from Sherrard Point on Larch Mountain.

Heceta Head Lighthouse

This is Heceta Head Lighthouse. I took this shot about a year ago. This image was taken using a handheld Canon 6D with a 17-40mm F4 lens. The settings were at: ISO 200, F8 @ 1/640 sec. The lens was nearly fully extended to 40mm. This is an extreme crop of the original shot, but the full frame of the 6D allows me to really dig into the image and give me more options for cropping. Even though it was a bright and beautiful day, I bumped up the ISO a bit so that I could get a faster shutter speed and help eliminate the possibility of blurriness in the image. Image edited in photoshop, red filter cranked way up, some sharpening added as well.