Posts Tagged ‘acadia’


Sunset From the South Bubble in Acadia National Park.
Foliage has been spectacular last year, bright colored, lots of reds mixed in with yellows, oranges and greens. Eagle Lake is in the distance.
I literally ran up this trail chasing the fast changing light – the sun was somewhat obstructed by the clouds on the west so it never “lit up” the fall colors.
Please view on black.
Again, mega thanks to Alex Noriega (http://bit.ly/1BpxX1o) for his guidance and skype lessons in post-processing tecqniques.

http://bit.ly/1uFYSPg


The night before I missed the biggest sunset of our trip. You know the one when the sky explodes in all sorts of red, pink and magenta. The one that takes your breath away and sometimes even makes you forget to click your camera’s shutter.
The reason that I missed it, is I dropped my camera in the lake and a bunch of stuff stopped working, so it spent a day or more in the bag full of rice. By the way that trick really works – not only with cameras but with phones as well, just put your soaked electronic gadget on the top of rice bed inside of a closed container overnight or longer.
So as you can see from this shot, sunset did not let me down.
This is Otter Point – not the usual more crowded sunset watching area, but a little more to the north. I loved all sorts of lines, shapes and amazingly colorful rock formations here – I can spend hours exploring.
Waves were high and loud, while the sunlight was naturally glowing from the moisture in the air – Acadia was at its best: beautiful, charming and full of adventure.
Please view on black.
Again, big (huge) thanks to Alex Noriega (http://bit.ly/1BpxX1o) for his guidance and lessons in post-processing.

http://bit.ly/1IUklfz


The night before I missed the biggest sunset of our trip. You know the one when the sky explodes in all sorts of red, pink and magenta. The one that takes your breath away and sometimes even makes you forget to click your camera’s shutter.
The reason that I missed it, is I dropped my camera in the lake and a bunch of stuff stopped working, so it spent a day or more in the bag full of rice. By the way that trick really works – not only with cameras but with phones as well, just put your soaked electronic gadget on the top of rice bed inside of a closed container overnight or longer.
So as you can see from this shot, sunset did not let me down.
This is Otter Point – not the usual more crowded sunset watching area, but a little more to the north. I loved all sorts of lines, shapes and amazingly colorful rock formations here – I can spend hours exploring.
Waves were high and loud, while the sunlight was naturally glowing from the moisture in the air – Acadia was at its best: beautiful, charming and full of adventure.
Please view on black.
Again, big (huge) thanks to Alex Noriega (http://bit.ly/1BpxX1o) for his guidance and lessons in post-processing.

http://bit.ly/1IUklfz