The colorful stone canyons of Grand Staircase - Escalante National Monument have a stark beauty, but in a few quiet, well-watered corners, a different, more fragile beauty can be found.
Broken Bow Arch in Willow Canyon, Grand Staircase - Escalante National Monument, Utah. Clicking on the photo will take you to a gallery of images of Willow Canyon on the Rommes Arts website. Photo: © Donald J. Rommes
My recent posts include a number of intimate photographs taken in meadows and along the side of the road. It's no secret that I enjoy photographing the fine detail of the flowers, stems, and leaves. Ordinarily, I don't show the meadow's surroundings in the photo, and I usually exclude the sky.
There's a whole world to be found within the borders of one of these "intimate" photographs—stems, leaves, flowers, and (sometimes) insects. The photograph is not about the broader relationship of the meadow to its surroundings. It is more about the relationship between the plants and insects in the meadow.
Arranging those relationships in a manner that is pleasing, harmonious, and even meaningful to the viewer is the essence of photographic composition. Sometimes, finding the "right" relationships can take quite a while. Sometimes, the "right" arrangement eludes me.
Narrows in Willow Canyon. Click the photo to go to the Willow Canyon gallery on the Rommes Arts website. Photo: © Donald J. Rommes
A couple of years ago, I was camped in a canyon in Grand Staircase - Escalante National Monument. The sandstone canyon has high, smooth, and colorful walls that make a sinuous course towards the Escalante River—now under the surface of Lake Powell.
The walls are very photogenic, and there is a big natural arch. In one memorable section of the canyon, the canyon narrows to the width of my outstretched arms and the knee-deep water is wall-to-wall. I spent the better part of a day photographing the canyon.
The following morning was sunny and warm. I hiked in the opposite direction, following the small stream that ran the length of the canyon. With the twists and turns of the high-wallled canyon, I was sometimes in the sun and sometimes in shade. Rounding a turn of the canyon, I was plunged again into shade where I saw these grasses on the stream bank.
Springtime cheatgrass and other tufted grasses in the shade of a high canyon wall. The grasses, which look so delicate here, quickly turn brittle and lose much of their color as the dry season progresses. Click on the photo to see the image on the Iris Arts website. Photo: © Donald J. Rommes
I am sure it doesn't look like it, but I spent an hour or two with these grasses, fiddling with the composition, waiting for a breeze to die down. In the end, I think I got several images of grasses that will work well on Iris Arts—something I never expected when hiking down this lovely stone canyon.
Same general location—a pleasing pattern and a wealth of detail to peruse. Click on the photo to see the image on the Iris Arts website. Photo: © Donald J. Rommes
Variation on a theme. Photo: © Donald J. Rommes
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