In The Eye Of The Beholder
Art Vs. State Of The Art. Lepp offers two floral images—one is scanned film with soft effects and one is tack-sharp from edge to edge, front to back—as fodder for the discussion of nature photography...
View ArticleThe Spectrum Of B&W
Let It Go! The spring flower displays at The Butchart Gardens on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, look like the grounds of a "Frozen" ice palace when captured in infrared using an IR-converted...
View ArticleNot So Sharp?
George Lepp photographed this cactus patterned with fine needles and tiny flowers with a Canon EF 180mm macro at 1⁄45 sec. at ƒ/11. Nineteen stacked images rendered the subject needle-sharp from front...
View ArticleThe More Things Change
Nice And Slow. George Lepp's rendition of White Branch Falls in the Oregon Cascades shows milky, flowing water where, in fact, the falls rush, sparkle and spray everywhere. Canon EOS 5D Mark III, EF...
View ArticleTo Chimp, Or Not To Chimp
This chimp loved George Lepp's camera and clearly enjoyed playing photographer. If the chimp clicked the shutter, who owns the resulting image? The Hand That Rocked The Copyright World Making the...
View ArticleWinter’s Sparkles
Ice By Design. The delicate patterns of ice that form along the edges of small waterways are favorite winter subjects. George Lepp photographed these along a creek in Lamar Valley in Yellowstone...
View ArticleWork Around The Weather
Butterflies To Scale: At 4X, this image of a small section of a butterfly wing reveals the fascinating contours of its scales and vein structure. For Lepp, butterfly studies are complex studio...
View ArticleWhat’s The Best?
Ice Formations. This Arctic landscape of giant ice boulders is actually a small formation. Lepp achieved extraordinary detail and resolution from a consumer-level camera and lens combination, the...
View ArticleThe Look Of Spring
A montage of roses created with nine exposures on a single frame; for each capture, the handheld camera was repositioned within the composition. Canon EOS 5D Mark III, 180mm macro, 1⁄180 sec. at ƒ/8,...
View ArticleFrom On High
George Lepp captured this four-image panorama of central Oregon's Mount Washington from a Cessna 172 using a Canon EOS 5D Mark III with a Canon EF 24-105mm ƒ/4L lens at 85mm, 1⁄1000 sec., ƒ/13, ISO...
View ArticlePixel Wars And The High-Res DSLR: Pay To Play
Lepp photographed this peregrine falcon (a rehabilitated bird at Central Oregon's High Desert Museum) with the 50.6-megapixel Canon EOS 5DS. Note the high resolution of the cropped image and the...
View ArticleLook Sharp!
TOP: 11mm, 126 Degrees, Rectilinear Lens; ABOVE: 15mm, 180 Degrees, Fisheye Lens. I prefer a rectilinear lens, one that's corrected for both the verticals and horizontals in the frame. We get a lot of...
View ArticleKeeping The Wild In Wildlife
“Copter View”: The red lechwe, an elusive, swamp-dwelling antelope, is difficult to photograph in its own environment. A gentle approach from the air and long reach (400mm) captured this beautiful...
View ArticleGear To Go
Bristlecone Pine in Snow. This image of one specimen in an ancient grove was captured in a remote area of California’s White Mountains, where Lepp was camping. In field locations such as this,...
View ArticleBackground Check: Spring Cleanup
Lupine and Goldfields. In these two examples, Lepp used a longer lens (the Canon EF 180mm Macro) to photograph wildflowers at different ƒ-stops. At ƒ/5.6, 1/1000 sec., and ISO 200 (above, left), the...
View ArticleWorth The Effort
Balloon Classic. Lepp captured this panorama of a scene from the Colorado Springs Balloon Classic using a handheld Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III with a Canon EF 24-105mm ƒ/4L IS USM lens at 50mm. The...
View ArticleTelephoto Technique
Lilac-breasted roller. With birds, you never know when a close-up and personal opportunity will present itself. Lepp was working from a vehicle in Botswana, using a monopod-mounted Canon EOS-1D Mark...
View ArticleLight On Wildlife
Eyeshine On A Rufous Hummingbird. Photographed with a long lens and projected flash attached to the camera’s hot-shoe, this hummer shows some serious blue eyeshine, predictable when the light source...
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