Tag: infrared black and white

  • Cathedral Illumination

    Cathedral Illumination

    This dramatic black-and-white infrared photograph captures the awe-inspiring grandeur of Cathedral Rocks rising above the Merced River in Yosemite National Park. Shot with an infrared-converted camera, the towering pines shimmer with an ethereal glow, while the river below reflects the light in soft, silvery patterns. The sky—streaked with wild, swirling cirrus clouds—adds a celestial energy that seems to radiate from the heart of the valley.

    The use of infrared transforms this iconic landscape into something both familiar and otherworldly. The foliage blazes with an icy brilliance, while the granite cliffs loom dark and textural, etched with time. There’s a surreal silence to the scene, as if nature itself has been paused in a moment of timeless reverence. Cathedral Illumination is not just a photograph—it’s a visual hymn to the spirit of Yosemite, seen through a spectrum that reveals what the eye alone cannot.

  • Desert Relic in Infrared

    Desert Relic in Infrared

    Just outside of Mexican Hat, Utah, along a quiet stretch of road near what appeared to be an abandoned building labeled “Cow Canyon Trading Post,” I came across this rusting beauty from a bygone era. The desert sun had long since faded its paint, shattered its glass, and stripped it of its purpose—but not its presence.

    Shot in infrared, the scene takes on an almost ghostlike quality. The car feels suspended between decades, its chrome grin peeking through the silence of red rock country. There’s a certain dignity in how it sits—worn but unyielding, a relic that still holds the road in its own way.

    These are the kinds of discoveries I treasure on my photography journeys: moments when time, texture, and technology come together to tell a story that’s part documentary, part dream.