Showing posts with label Nature Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nature Photography. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2017


The years have a way of slipping by with so many photos and great adventures, it was time to build a new photography website.  After much contemplation, I was able to narrow down my files from the thousands  of photographs collected over the years.  
Welcome to my new Bonnie Rannald's Reflecting Nature's Artistry Website that is Google Compliant, Mobile Friendly and  "Responsive".   


 


http://www.bonnierannald.com

Photography has the ability to transport one to another world or dimension if only in their mind.  Take a trip with me as we embark on ever new photo-adventures.  




What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.


















Visit our website at: http://www.bonnierannald.com/

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Art of Photography

Creating the Photograph


 In this technological age where pocket cameras and phones are producing photographs with the quality comparable to that of a Hassleblad, I am ever minded of the quote from Ansel Adams, “You don't make a photograph just with a camera. You bring to the act of photography all the pictures you have seen, the books you have read, the music you have heard, the people you have loved.”



How often do these traits mentioned by Adams still hold true when the art of producing photographs has become as common as serving a prepackaged gourmet meal from the microwave.   Looking over Adam's background, an early childhood devotion to music, an appreciation for the arts, plus a love for our natural environment greatly influenced his photography. Furthermore, Adams developed his mastery of photography through countless hours of reading, observing art exhibits and attending camera club meetings.  During the time that Adams was perfecting his camera skills, he was also conditioning his body for the strength and stamina needed to carry the heavy equipment over rugged trails and higher elevations in Yosemite Valley, California.



At this point, maybe you are curious as to why I am making comparisons with Ansel Adams and present day photographers.  I suppose it is due to the numerous requests that I receive from people who want to get in to photography and enjoy what I'm doing.  As a seasoned professional photographer, I am always amazed by these requests, especially when it comes from a novice who thinks photography is the easiest art medium to pursue.



I get amused when I reflect over the times I stood in the freezing cold and waited for a photo that never materialized.   Or the day I was out in the desert hiking with a backpack of camera equipment and a lightning storm was moving in.  Yes, photography is easy when a snapshot is taken from the inside of a climate controlled car.


So over and above the fitness training that I perform on a daily basis, as with Adams, my photographs are a composite from my background in music, studies in fine art, a MA degree and countless hours perfecting my skill.  I create my photographs by carefully composing the scene and then adjusting the exposure per the available light within the camera before I ever release the shutter.  Shooting in the RAW mode, any additional adjustments are made to the photograph with Lightroom editing software.





My mentor once compared the making of a photograph to that of cooking a gourmet meal:  the careful preparation and slow simmering to bring out the flavor of all the ingredients.  How true I've found this to be when the photograph has that WOW factor and pops right off the wall.









What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Monday, December 24, 2012

Celebrating the Season


 Special Time for Embracing Nature

As the countdown begins toward that big time of festivities and traditions on Christmas Day, I look out my office window at the trees shuttering in the cold wind and am reminded of how I love to celebrate this special day.


 With all the rush and frenzy to buy the right gift, plus the hours in preparation for the holiday feast, there is nothing more pleasing than taking a quiet walk in nature.


  I suppose my desire to spend time in nature was developed by my dad when he took interesting drives after our big noon-time meal on the back roads in Georgia.


Christmas Day to me is a time to embrace and celebrate peace and to reflect back on treasured moments with loves ones.


 What better way to celebrate the peace than a picnic on leftovers with some hot spiced tea, surrounded by the wonders of nature.


As I reflect back over special times and cherished  memories of Christmases past, I wish to you a peaceful and joyous Holiday Season.






What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, September 2, 2012

Reno Open Studios Art Scholarship Fund



Nevada's Desert Bighorn Sheep Donated Art

  
Art touring with Reno Open Studios is just around the calendar, on September 7th. through the 9th. from 10:00am until 5:00pm.  I am privileged to share studio space with Sculpture by Michael Smith at 430 Sunnyside Drive.  For more information please follow the link posted below.

Along with demonstrating the art process and having selected products for purchase, the Reno Open Studios artists also provide funding for art scholarships for high school seniors that will be matched through the Ronald McDonald House.  To raise the funds, the individual artists donate original art creations that will be raffled during the Open Studios Tour.



My donated art is an 8"x10" photograph of Nevada's Desert Bighorn Sheep hunkering down in a winter snow storm.  The photograph is custom framed to 11"x14" in a rustic wooden frame.



Donation tickets will be available for purchase during the open studios with the winning ticket to be drawn on Sunday afternoon, just before closing at 4:45pm.  The winner will be notified by telephone and is not required to be present.



Come out and join us for a weekend of art touring.  For maps and information, please click on the links:


What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, August 26, 2012

Reno Open Studios

  
Art Touring in Reno, Nevada

 
  
On this blog post, I would like to introduce you to Reno Open Studios and give everyone a personal invitation to join us September 7~9th.


Reno Open Studios is a group of Northwestern Nevada’s finest visual artists who open their studios during the second weekend in September to the public.  During the art touring event, the individual artists will demonstrate their work and techniques, plus this is a great opportunity to purchase the art directly from the artist.  

Since my art medium is nature photography, I would like to take you on a short tour of my studio. Along with spending time on the computer processing RAW digital images in Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom, I also enjoy countless hours in the open studio of nature.



Being a professional nature photographer with a background in athletics, I get many requests to photograph outdoor events.


 Event photography is exciting and very challenging because it puts me in the moment and I only get that one click of the shutter to get it right.



Sometimes my photography gets me in to interesting places like the Temecula Tractor Races with Stephanie Prescott, co-producer for NBC's Tournament of Roses Parade telecast.



Most of the time, my photography is spent on scenes of nature that I just happen to come upon, like with this group of Desert Bighorn Sheep waiting it out in a snow storm.  By the way, this framed 11"x14" photograph is my donation to the Reno Open Studio's art scholarship fund.  Donation tickets will be available at my studio location.



For maps and additional information, please follow the link:







What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, March 4, 2012

Bonnie Rannald's Digital Downloads


New Features Make Shopping Easier


On my newly revised website, I now have a shopping cart with check out through PayPal Express.  PayPal is a secure, pass through bank and one of the advantages of Express is that you are not required to have a PayPal account, just a credit card.  
  
A new feature that I am offering for the first time is digital downloads. The digital downloads are available in three sizes:  4x6, 5x7and 8x10.  The digital downloads are affordably priced at $2.50, $5.00 and $15.00 to fit everyone's budget. The signed, high resolution photograph becomes available immediately to the buyer after successful payment and checkout .


There is an implied non-commercial, one time usage license that comes with the download. The buyer must check the "Agreement" box before they are allowed to check out.

Going with the trends of the ever changing economy, I am happy to provide a convenient way of shopping by offering gifts in very affordable price ranges that may be purchased directly or with our virtual gift certificates.  The Gift Certificates may be purchased to use later of give away to friends, family or employees.  Still available through the shopping cart are my greeting cards, prints, plus the custom framed and matted photographs in my Off the Wall gallery.  

 Photographs Make Great Gifts




What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, April 10, 2011

Macro Photography, Up Close and Personal



Exploring Hidden Worlds With Macro Photography

Spring is finally here and flowers are starting to bloom, bringing photographers out of their winter hiatus. I just recently returned from an exciting wildflower workshop in Death Valley that I conducted with Karen Linsley and you might have read about it in several previous posts. So I thought in this entry, I would go into further detail with how I like to set up for macro photos of flowers.


The way I prefer to photograph flowers if at all possible is in diffused lighting and with a small aperture of f/8-11 for maximum depth of field.  A small aperture and low light, thanks to the good old laws of reciprocity, equals a slow shutter speed, which makes it all most impossible to hold the camera steady and to focus on the flower.




For the above stated reasons, to me a tripod is essential in photographing flowers or with macro work. The tripod that I prefer is the Manfrotto NA24 with the Manfrotto 3265 Grip Action Ball Head and Quick Release. 




This tripod is light, with a weight of only 5 pounds, 2.26 kg, and lowers to 23 inches, 50.8cm, from ground level.  The Grip Action Ball Head allows me to position the camera with just a squeeze of the handle within a 180° sphere.


 


Having the tripod low to the ground and tilting the head, I can get up close and personal to the flower and also concentrate on where I want my area of selective focus to fall. 





The lens I use most often for closeups on flowers is the Nikon 150mm 2.8 macro. Sometimes when photographing the macro world, you might even get a surprise visitor.




If the flower is on a flat plane and depth of field is not critical or I want to blur the background, I will open the aperture to f5.6 




For my taste with macro and flower photography, I like to isolate a subject so that it stands out against the background and becomes the main subject. In the following photo, it is difficult for the eyes to pick out the main subject.




Photographing flowers with macro photography is like exploring hidden worlds and inner universes.  So many of nature's secrets are revealed. 




A special thanks to Photographers Karen Linsley and Donald Heldoorn for use of their photos in this post.








What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Wildflower Photography Workshop in Death Valley

 Photography Workshop


Imagine a desert landscape colored with yellows, golds and purples of numerous wildflowers. With all the soaking rains through out the winter, the wildflower season at Death Valley promises to be one of the best in years. On March 8--10th., 2011, professional photographer Karen Linsley and I will be offering a Wildflower Photography Workshop in Death Valley.

The workshop fee of $99.00 includes tuition and camping in the Furnace Creek group campground, plus an additional $20.00 park entrance fee.  From sunrise to sunset, Karen and I will be offering techniques and tips on photographing the wildflowers.  At night, while we camp in the group camping area at Furnace Creek, we will point our cameras at the canopy of stars overhead.  Death Valley with its dark skies is one of the best locations for night photography.






What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, November 7, 2010

Portals of Time, the Mind and the Past


Portals



While working on my photographs over the past week, I came across several that were of openings in structures. As I began to study the photos, the word "portal" came to mind and has been floating in my memory ever since. I decided on this post to explore the concept of portals and why I am drawn to these subjects in photography. Furthermore, it seems that I am not the only photographer sharing an interest in this subject; many photos by friends on Facebook also are of portals.


When I goggled the word portal, a number of different applications came up under the term. There is "Portal" the video game, "Portal the Flash Version" and a "Web Portal" which happens to be a links page. The Princeton definition of portal caught my attention, "a portal is a grand and imposing entrance (often extended metaphorically) or an opening in a wall or such structure", and this is where my interest lies. I am always fascinated by various shapes that allow for portals. Being the curious soul that I am, I wonder what is on the other side, so I would like to explore some of my favorite portals and what drew me to take the photo.



Residing in an area that during 1800's was once big in mining, I run across many structures that are still partially standing. Peering through these portals gives me a glimpse of how life might have been while living at higher elevations, out in the desert.


Some portals that I discover have such strange structures; it is hard to imagine what they were used for. Was this once the bank to store all the gold and silver from the Aurora mines? As I peer out at the road beyond the portal, I can imagine the wagon trains coming down the hill, carrying the ore.


A portal in the Cabin at the Fletcher Stage Stop leads into a small empty, deserted building. But as I look beyond the entrance, I can feel the presence of passengers waiting for the stage so that they could be transported to and from Nevada and California, during the 1800's.


Other portals  cause me to wonder, was this open view of the sky  to provide sunshine and light to the workers at the Stamp Mill, or did the harsh desert wind eventually take its course as it does on all things standing.


The portal looking through the side of an old building in Schurz, Nevada gives the lonely feeling of watching for the next train and what it might bring.

And our final portal is perhaps just that, a final resting place for the weary and worn. We shall only be privileged with a look at, not through this portal, until it's our time.





What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.














Sunday, October 17, 2010

Walker Lake Wild Horses


A Community Unites to Save Their Wild Horses

In this post, I would like to deviate from my usual writings about photography and travels to bring attention to the plight of the Walker Lake Wild Horse Herd that BLM has scheduled for roundup around the middle of November, 2010. The Walker Lake Wild Horse Herd has been on the south end of Walker Lake for well over ten years. The area on the south end of Walker Lake is over ten square miles with fresh ground water and abundant native grasses. These wild horses are actually on land that is controlled by the military and restricted for use by the public. US highway 95 runs along and above the south end of Walker Lake and the wild horses are within easy viewing from the road.

The rational behind BLM’s roundup of these wild horses is due to several horses straying on to the highway and getting hit by cars. The speed limit in this area is 70mph.




The communities of Hawthorne and Walker Lake that are located near the wild horses have united to protest BLM’s roundup of this wild horse herd. On October 16, 2010, a rally was held at Veteran’s Memorial Park in Hawthorne to gather the community support with petitions, letters of protest, banners and photos to try and persuade BLM to cancel this roundup. In order to protect the wild horses and prevent them from getting near the highway, plans are underway to construct a fence at the projected cost of $10,000, to run along the highway and taper back to the water’s edge of the lake.



Allowing the Walker Lake Wild Horse Herd to remain at the south end of the lake will benefit the local communities which have been hit very hard by the recession. A local wild horse advocacy group will be formed and will become involved with the Walker Lake Herd. A monitoring program, which has not been previously developed, will be implemented to study the wild horses in their natural habitat. An additional advocacy group, Horsepower has volunteered to lend support to the community and has offered to fund ¼ of the cost of the fence.



Unfortunately, there is still much controversy over whether the Wild Horses on our American Pubic lands are actually wild horses. Many view the present day wild horses as nothing more than feral offspring that were turned out to fend for themselves because they were no longer useful. Others see the wild horses as nuisances who destroy the fragile desert eco-systems and unlike cattle, provide no benefit to humanity. However, scientists are starting to question the theories and documented history of the wild horse. For example, did the horse become entirely extinct in North America, or were there any survivors? Was it the Spanish who brought the horse back to the Americas, or were they returned earlier by the Norsemen or Chinese Explorers? Has the horse always been with some of the Native American tribes as mentioned in their oral histories?

On January 5, 2007, a statement was introduced to the 110th Congress, entitled Wild Horses as Native North American Wildlife, by Jay F. Kirkpatrick, Ph. D. and Patricia M. Fazio, Ph.D, which supports evidence through DNA analysis that the modern horse is genetically equivalent to a horse, that according to fossil records, represented the most recent specimen prior to extinction in North America. In summary, Kirkpatrick and Fazio conclude that native status for wild horses would place these animals, under law, within a new category for management considerations. As a form of wildlife, embedded with wilderness, ancient behavioral patterns, and the morphology and biology of a sensitive prey species, they may finally be released from the “livestock-gone-loose” application.

The future of the Walker Lake Wild Horse Herd remains uncertain and with all the community effort, will it be enough to persuade BLM to allow these horses to remain free? Only time will tell. There are so many benefits including ecotourism and scientific study that could come from keeping this herd intact, but the most important by far is that an American Icon will be allowed to roam free and wild.



For more information:

Mustangs in danger? Too many horses, too little land

Wild Horses as Native North American Wildlife








What an exciting and interesting photo-adventure this day has been.  I love it when I am drawn to an area and not knowing what to expect I get treated to new experiences. 

Sign up and follow my blog to see where my next photo-adventure will be!


Photography places me in the moment where I can share that moment in time. It becomes a life story as represented by my interaction with the scene. The happiness and beauty or the sorrow and strife; how I focus leaves a lasting impression that might touch the viewer on a spiritual level.


 "Reflecting Nature's Artistry" 




Many of these images are available on my website:

 http://www.bonnierannald.com/ 

For custom matted and framed images:
Off The Wall


No images on this blog are within Public Domain or are available for free download. 

 All rights reserved, world-wide and images protected by Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). All photography, graphics, text, design, and content is copyrighted by Bonnie Rannald and should not be copied, down-loaded, transferred and re-created in any way without the express consent, in writing to Bonnie Rannald. For information on Bonnie Rannald licensed, right-managed images, please submit a written request.