Large format

A few years ago I was given a panoramic tripod head. I had never taken any panoramics outside of using my smartphone - but the process was intriguing to me. I wanted to approach the landscapes and images much like a photographer using a large format view camera would have. The weight and preparation, as well as the timing and light shifting (exposures span over a few frames, to hundreds of frames), created new challenges and opportunities.

Prints

Printing of these images can be seen as two-fold. Print sizes that can be produced on most traditional fine-art printers and print sizes that represent the actual resolution and native size of these images. Because these images are comprised of a series of full-frame captures, the resolution is based on the capturing camera’s native sensor resolution times the number of frames. For instance, as part of my Farm Portrait series, I produced some images with sizes between 10’ wide and 14’ wide at the longest.

Due to COVID-19, my access to large scale printers is on hold at the moment.

Currently, I am limited to images that are 16”x any length.

mounting

Mounting and framing these images follow the same conventions as printing - standard sizes (less than 44” on the longest edge) follow standard pricing models, whereas oversized and custom sizes (sizes that do not fit off the shelf frames) are done on a case by case basis.

trillium lake & mt hood, or - 120”x40” giclee

 

johnston ridge observatory, mount saint helens, Wa - 120”x35” giclee

 

3 pools, silver falls state park, or - 120”x32” giclee

 

Central Oregon lake - 66”x33” Giclee

 

opal creek, or - 120”x32” giclee

 

condominium 1 - sea ranch, ca - 107”x58” giclee

 

summer lake hot springs, or - 120”x30” giclee

 

oia santorini, greece - 90”x28” giclee