Landscape Photography by Jeff Ball > Flowing Water Workshop Gallery
-
Douglas Falls May 2011
Spectacular Douglas Falls on a beautiful spring day in 2011. Revisiting familiar locations and employing new visualization techniques as well as new optimizing techniques is critical to improving your photography. Douglas Falls is one of my favorite locations in northern West Virginia. This interpretation is an attempt to capture the scene as it looks to the human eye, but the camera sensor is limited in capturing the scene in this manner.
-
Douglas Falls in West Virginia
Spectacular spring greens surround the colorful Douglas Falls in the highlands of West Virginia in May 2010.
-
Blackwater Falls, West Virginia
The power and beauty of West Virginia's largest waterfall in the spring of 2010. This print is the May 2010 Print of the Month with a special discount offer. Please see the Print of the Month page for more details.
-
-
-
Forest Mist
Some of the best photographic opportunities are with fog, rain, and mist in the atmosphere. These elements provide a beautiful light in the forest and one simply has to be on the lookout for the more intimate landscape setting that captures the emotion of the scene. This image is from the 2011 workshop.
-
Lindy Point Sunset
Beautiful sunset from Lindsy Point during our 2011 workshop.
-
-
Elakala Falls Black and White Downstream
It is important to experment with black and white interpretations of scenes when the color component is not critical and the image is more about light and structure. Flowing water lengs itself very nicely to black and white interpretations. This is not my primary visualization while in the field, but it is one that we need to be mindful of if we are not inclined to view a scene in the eyes of black and white.
-
Tree in Fog
Light and atmospherics come together in Canaan Valley in the spring.