Rocky
Lower Antelope Canyon's Dog
Page, Arizona

When I booked my trip to Southern Utah I never thought the following 2 things: that it would be snowing and that I'd return to Page, AZ. I had made a trip to Page a couple months earlier and taken care of Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and gotten great photos already -- no need to return so soon. Unfortunately the blizzard that blew into Bryce National Park caused most of the park to close. Since we planned to hike The Wave the following day we had 2 options: stay in Kanab, UT or stay in Page, AZ. It was only 10:30am when we left Bryce and there's nothing to photograph near Kanab so we decided we'd head to Page, pick up a permit for The Wave, and hit up Antelope Canyon/Horseshoe Bend. 

When we arrived at Lower Antelope Canyon I asked if there was a self-guided tour we could do by ourselves, since I already knew the place and didn't need a guide. The woman told us no, we'd have to go in with a guide and that we'd be the only ones on the 1.5 hour tour. I told her we had to go get our cameras and we could set out. When we got back and the guide realized we had tripods and fancy cameras he told us that we could venture in the Canyons for 2 hours by ourselves as part of their "photo-tour." Perfect! We literally had the entire Lower Antelope Canyon to ourselves for 2 hours -- we only saw people as we rushed out 1 hour and 50 minutes later!

My previous visit to Lower Antelope Canyon had been during the morning light. While I think that overall there was "better light" in the morning, the afternoon light was also spectaclar and slightly different. We only found good light in 2 or 3 places but in those places it was even more stunning than the morning light. Morning light brought mostly oranges and yellows but in the afternoon the purple colors came out! In one photo we could capture amazing purples, yellows AND oranges. Stunning!

I came to this spot towards the end of the canyon. The light was hitting the canyon walls beautifully and I noticed that the shape of this rock looked kinda like a dog or a wolf's face. You can make out the nose, eyes, and mouth in the rock in the center. I call this dog "Rocky": Antelope Canyon's spiritual guard dog! He played quite nice with us while we were exploring :)

Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S:
70mm, f/10, 1/5 sec, ISO 200, Tripod
NO HDR -- minor curves, dodge/burning only.
Lady in the Wind
Lower Antelope Canyon
Page, Arizona

Can you see the Lady in the Wind, with her hair blowing back over the rocks?

Before I discuss this photo I wanted to mention what I mean by "artograph". I personally believe, and many of you may disagree, that photography is a form of art and that each photographer can take his own artistic path in each of the photos he produces. I do not believe that photography must be realism. After all, our camera sensor doesn't have nearly the dynamic range of our eye and who can say if what our eye see's is reality? Our camera attempts to capture things as it see's, but it too makes decisions on what the scene is: it selects it's own white balance, contrast/saturation levels, etc. We then tweak those in post-processing to do whatever we want to do with a photo. 

Ok, now I'm rambling. Back to the point.... when I took these photos in Antelope Canyon I noticed that the white balance played an important role on the color in the photo. While playing with the White Balance on this photo I noticed that depending on what temperature I used I could either get purples, yellows, or oranges. The reason I call this an "artograph" instead of a "photograph" is because I exported this photo into Photoshop 3 times: each with different white balances, once to get purples, once to get yellows, and once to get oranges, and then blended them as I saw fit. 

Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 17-35mm f/2.8 ED-IF AF-S:
25mm, f/8, 1/4 sec, ISO 200, Feisol Tripod
Rocky
Lower Antelope Canyon's Dog
Page, Arizona


When I booked my trip to Southern Utah I never thought the following 2 things: that it would be snowing and that I'd return to Page, AZ. I had made a trip to Page a couple months earlier and taken care of Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and gotten great photos already -- no need to return so soon. Unfortunately the blizzard that blew into Bryce National Park caused most of the park to close. Since we planned to hike The Wave the following day we had 2 options: stay in Kanab, UT or stay in Page, AZ. It was only 10:30am when we left Bryce and there's nothing to photograph near Kanab so we decided we'd head to Page, pick up a permit for The Wave, and hit up Antelope Canyon/Horseshoe Bend.

When we arrived at Lower Antelope Canyon I asked if there was a self-guided tour we could do by ourselves, since I already knew the place and didn't need a guide. The woman told us no, we'd have to go in with a guide and that we'd be the only ones on the 1.5 hour tour. I told her we had to go get our cameras and we could set out. When we got back and the guide realized we had tripods and fancy cameras he told us that we could venture in the Canyons for 2 hours by ourselves as part of their "photo-tour." Perfect! We literally had the entire Lower Antelope Canyon to ourselves for 2 hours -- we only saw people as we rushed out 1 hour and 50 minutes later!

My previous visit to Lower Antelope Canyon had been during the morning light. While I think that overall there was "better light" in the morning, the afternoon light was also spectaclar and slightly different. We only found good light in 2 or 3 places but in those places it was even more stunning than the morning light. Morning light brought mostly oranges and yellows but in the afternoon the purple colors came out! In one photo we could capture amazing purples, yellows AND oranges. Stunning!

I came to this spot towards the end of the canyon. The light was hitting the canyon walls beautifully and I noticed that the shape of this rock looked kinda like a dog or a wolf's face. You can make out the nose, eyes, and mouth in the rock in the center. I call this dog "Rocky": Antelope Canyon's spiritual guard dog! He played quite nice with us while we were exploring :)

Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S:
70mm, f/10, 1/5 sec, ISO 200, Tripod
NO HDR -- minor curves, dodge/burning only.
Rocky Lower Antelope Canyon's Dog Page, Arizona When I booked my trip to Southern Utah I never thought the following 2 things: that it would be snowing and that I'd return to Page, AZ. I had made a trip to Page a couple months earlier and taken care of Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and gotten great photos already -- no need to return so soon. Unfortunately the blizzard that blew into Bryce National Park caused most of the park to close. Since we planned to hike The Wave the following day we had 2 options: stay in Kanab, UT or stay in Page, AZ. It was only 10:30am when we left Bryce and there's nothing to photograph near Kanab so we decided we'd head to Page, pick up a permit for The Wave, and hit up Antelope Canyon/Horseshoe Bend. When we arrived at Lower Antelope Canyon I asked if there was a self-guided tour we could do by ourselves, since I already knew the place and didn't need a guide. The woman told us no, we'd have to go in with a guide and that we'd be the only ones on the 1.5 hour tour. I told her we had to go get our cameras and we could set out. When we got back and the guide realized we had tripods and fancy cameras he told us that we could venture in the Canyons for 2 hours by ourselves as part of their "photo-tour." Perfect! We literally had the entire Lower Antelope Canyon to ourselves for 2 hours -- we only saw people as we rushed out 1 hour and 50 minutes later! My previous visit to Lower Antelope Canyon had been during the morning light. While I think that overall there was "better light" in the morning, the afternoon light was also spectaclar and slightly different. We only found good light in 2 or 3 places but in those places it was even more stunning than the morning light. Morning light brought mostly oranges and yellows but in the afternoon the purple colors came out! In one photo we could capture amazing purples, yellows AND oranges. Stunning! I came to this spot towards the end of the canyon. The light was hitting the canyon walls beautifully and I noticed that the shape of this rock looked kinda like a dog or a wolf's face. You can make out the nose, eyes, and mouth in the rock in the center. I call this dog "Rocky": Antelope Canyon's spiritual guard dog! He played quite nice with us while we were exploring :) Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S: 70mm, f/10, 1/5 sec, ISO 200, Tripod NO HDR -- minor curves, dodge/burning only." href="javascript:openLB(1585497242,'',XLarge,'',1024,682);">Rocky
Lower Antelope Canyon's Dog
Page, Arizona

When I booked my trip to Southern Utah I never thought the following 2 things: that it would be snowing and that I'd return to Page, AZ. I had made a trip to Page a couple months earlier and taken care of Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and gotten great photos already -- no need to return so soon. Unfortunately the blizzard that blew into Bryce National Park caused most of the park to close. Since we planned to hike The Wave the following day we had 2 options: stay in Kanab, UT or stay in Page, AZ. It was only 10:30am when we left Bryce and there's nothing to photograph near Kanab so we decided we'd head to Page, pick up a permit for The Wave, and hit up Antelope Canyon/Horseshoe Bend. 

When we arrived at Lower Antelope Canyon I asked if there was a self-guided tour we could do by ourselves, since I already knew the place and didn't need a guide. The woman told us no, we'd have to go in with a guide and that we'd be the only ones on the 1.5 hour tour. I told her we had to go get our cameras and we could set out. When we got back and the guide realized we had tripods and fancy cameras he told us that we could venture in the Canyons for 2 hours by ourselves as part of their "photo-tour." Perfect! We literally had the entire Lower Antelope Canyon to ourselves for 2 hours -- we only saw people as we rushed out 1 hour and 50 minutes later!

My previous visit to Lower Antelope Canyon had been during the morning light. While I think that overall there was "better light" in the morning, the afternoon light was also spectaclar and slightly different. We only found good light in 2 or 3 places but in those places it was even more stunning than the morning light. Morning light brought mostly oranges and yellows but in the afternoon the purple colors came out! In one photo we could capture amazing purples, yellows AND oranges. Stunning!

I came to this spot towards the end of the canyon. The light was hitting the canyon walls beautifully and I noticed that the shape of this rock looked kinda like a dog or a wolf's face. You can make out the nose, eyes, and mouth in the rock in the center. I call this dog "Rocky": Antelope Canyon's spiritual guard dog! He played quite nice with us while we were exploring :)

Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S:
70mm, f/10, 1/5 sec, ISO 200, Tripod
NO HDR -- minor curves, dodge/burning only.
Rocky
Lower Antelope Canyon's Dog
Page, Arizona


When I booked my trip to Southern Utah I never thought the following 2 things: that it would be snowing and that I'd return to Page, AZ. I had made a trip to Page a couple months earlier and taken care of Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and gotten great photos already -- no need to return so soon. Unfortunately the blizzard that blew into Bryce National Park caused most of the park to close. Since we planned to hike The Wave the following day we had 2 options: stay in Kanab, UT or stay in Page, AZ. It was only 10:30am when we left Bryce and there's nothing to photograph near Kanab so we decided we'd head to Page, pick up a permit for The Wave, and hit up Antelope Canyon/Horseshoe Bend.

When we arrived at Lower Antelope Canyon I asked if there was a self-guided tour we could do by ourselves, since I already knew the place and didn't need a guide. The woman told us no, we'd have to go in with a guide and that we'd be the only ones on the 1.5 hour tour. I told her we had to go get our cameras and we could set out. When we got back and the guide realized we had tripods and fancy cameras he told us that we could venture in the Canyons for 2 hours by ourselves as part of their "photo-tour." Perfect! We literally had the entire Lower Antelope Canyon to ourselves for 2 hours -- we only saw people as we rushed out 1 hour and 50 minutes later!

My previous visit to Lower Antelope Canyon had been during the morning light. While I think that overall there was "better light" in the morning, the afternoon light was also spectaclar and slightly different. We only found good light in 2 or 3 places but in those places it was even more stunning than the morning light. Morning light brought mostly oranges and yellows but in the afternoon the purple colors came out! In one photo we could capture amazing purples, yellows AND oranges. Stunning!

I came to this spot towards the end of the canyon. The light was hitting the canyon walls beautifully and I noticed that the shape of this rock looked kinda like a dog or a wolf's face. You can make out the nose, eyes, and mouth in the rock in the center. I call this dog "Rocky": Antelope Canyon's spiritual guard dog! He played quite nice with us while we were exploring :)

Nikon D700 w/Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S:
70mm, f/10, 1/5 sec, ISO 200, Tripod
NO HDR -- minor curves, dodge/burning only.
See photo in original gallery.