Canyonland
96 creative works found
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Canyonlands NP Utah. Back from Moab and got my slides back. This is Mesa Arch which faces East and catches reflected light from below. i think my favorite part of this is the washboard lady. Can you see her. /
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The warm light of a Cold November Dawn illuminates the sandstone of Canyonlands National Park and Mesa Arch with the La Sal Mountains hiding in the distance.
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An ancient granary in Island in the Sky District of Canyonlands National Park, Utah. All content & images are © Nolan Nitschke. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved. www.nitschkephotography.com
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Near the Green River Overlook, Canyonlands – Utah. / Saturation. I was nearly thrown from a cliff by a 60 ft wide dust devil trying to get this shot. Very intense windstorm. All images© Copyright by Benjamin Charles Mitchell / They may not be used in any way without written consent.
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An Anasazi grainery located in Canyonlands National Park. (island in the sky district). /
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Gooseneck of the Colorado River at Dead Horse Point State Park, Utah. All content & images are © Nolan Nitschke. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved. www.nitschkephotography.com
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A commonly photographed subject in Canyonlands National Park in Utah. / At sunrise, light briefly illumitates the underside of this arch. A beautifull place to watch the sunrise and grab a few shots. Enjoy! /
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Light display from the Green River Overlook in Canyonlands National Park, Utah. Note the aura of light backighting the features. I would believe this is caused by reflected light off dust in the air. Added a strange touch. Thanks for lookin’ /
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So very lucky to have gotten this shot. My partner and I drove to dead horse point in near white-out conditions and moments before the sunset the storm broke and we ran out of the truck and began shooting. Truelly a spectaclur overview. Dead Horse Point State Park, Utah. / ........ / All images are © Nolan Nitschke. You may not use this image in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.
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Dead Horse Point in Canyonlands Natl. Park, Utah. Enjoy.
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I was unprepared for the absolute beauty of this park. We added this destination at the end of already long vacation and only budgeted an afternoon. We will certainly return when we have more time to do it justice. I think what I loved most, was the feeling of solitude here. This park is so out of the way, the throngs of visitors just aren’t here and it feels very intimate, even with the vastness that surrouds you. This was taken from the Green River Overlook, Canyonlands National Park, Utah, USA
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Dead Horse Point State Park – Utah. / Saturation. All images© Copyright by Benjamin Charles Mitchell / They may not be used in any way without written consent.
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Green River Overlook, Canyonlands National Park – Utah. / Saturation. Tone Curve. Exposure. All images© Copyright by Benjamin Charles Mitchell / They may not be used in any way without written consent.
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On Delibrad Minor,the great canyons are visited by millions of tourists every year. / They rival the Grand Canyon of Earth in beauty.They say nobody knows what monster lurk in the deep shadows. / Some of the canyons are up to 5 miles deep. / And of course we always have the ringed world of Great Fractal above. Illustrations taken from the Zorind Rakkmnn’s “Photographic Tour of the Universe”
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Located outside Moab, UT. Canyonlands is 527 sq miles of breathtaking landscape. While being a member of the Golden Circle of parks in Southern Utah, this park is so out of the way, they don’t get many visitors. It’s a shame, as the view from several locations throughout the park are simply stunning.
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Canyonlands National Park – Utah. / Saturation All images© Copyright by Benjamin Charles Mitchell / They may not be used in any way without written consent.
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One of my favorite images so far from my recent trip. Shot from Buck Canyon overlook, Canyonlands National Park, Utah
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The amazing vistas, unbelievable rock formations, and native american relics of the beautiful state of Utah rolled into one calendar for your viewing pleasure! All content & images are © Nolan Nitschke. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved. www.nitschkephotography.com
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A view Of Canyonlands National Park in Utah. USA September, 2007
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Dead tree in Canyonlands National Park, Utah.
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Sunset at Green River Overlook Canyonlands National Park
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A view of the La Sal Mountains from Canyonlands National Park – Utah. / Saturation. All images© Copyright by Benjamin Charles Mitchell / They may not be used in any way without written consent.
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“My Native Parchment Series” © Brad Michael Moore 2008—I did not do a historical study and image search of ancient parchments before I began this series. I tried to remember what I know. This series is idealistic. Many true parchments are filled with cracking, holes, extreme fading and bleed-through. The earlier papers were not white – but gray and yellow an very pulpish. Like any drawing made going on through history, often, the edges were left unworked so to provide some working surface space for testing medium, notes, imperfections and so on. The inside of animal hides were first used… Paper made from wood pulp was well along when the Monastery Monks began to do their color illustrations – boarders were fairly standard – and within their illustrations – especially the color ones, no space was left untouched. These works would have light colored boarders. Many an illustration’s life began bounded in a book – later to be pilfered by criminals, and those who lust for what they cannot create for themselves. These pages got rolled, folded, hidden, sometime in caves, behind stones, under earth for periods, or open to elements in porous enclosed spaces, available to insects, rodents, and finally age. One of my works is a stack of parchments, by intention. So, in truth, most old parchments are monotoned – center to edge, except for their painting and calligraphy. Crumpling would destroy any old parchment – they would have been most damaged in their earliest times of pliability – before being lost, forsaken, or forlorn. Sometimes, to better protect a parchment of importance, it was rebounded, or rolled in other parchments or leathers – and indeed, the hides of animals themselves were still used as writing material and more often, as protective coverings for the more fragile documents and maps as they came to be known. The idea of hide usage is suggested in several works including the, “Canyonlands” piece. Even today – some artists buy materials from fabric markets and paint on the backside of those materials – as if they were man-made hide. This piece looks like such, but, actually, its rock with some bone…
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Canyonlands National Park, Utah, USA.
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