Highway 1, Sonoma County, CA
When you drive this road, you feel like you are at the #edge of the earth!
#photography #blueskyartshow
#sonomacounty #landscape #bluesky #monochrome
#landscapephotography #california #highway1
Posts by Christopher D Bingham Photography
Thank you!
Double Rainbow, Alexander Valley, Sonoma County, CA.
The Cabernet Sauvignon vines started budding out early this year!
Nikon Z8; NIKKOR Z 14-24 at 14mm
#new #blueskyartshow #sonomacounty #california #rainbow #winecountry#spring
Double Rainbow, Alexander Valley, Sonoma County, CA.
Spring in all its Glory! #new #blueskyartshow #sonomacounty #california #rainbow
Camp Fire, 99 miles from Paradise, CA. Nov 2018
Healdsburg CA
Overlooking the Stonestreet vineyards, wispy smoke vortices interacted with the sunrise during a brief break from the heavy smoke from the Camp Fire.
#background #blueskyartshow
#photography #nikon
#sonomacounty #landscape #Bluesky
Thank you! The prints of this are even better!
Sunrise, Chelan, WA
#background #blueskyartshow #photography #blackandwhite
#sonomacounty #landscape #bluesky #sunrise
#landscapephotography #naturephotography #lakechelan #washington
Shortly after sunrise, the fog begins clearing in the Mayacamas Mountains of Sonoma County. Prints available at Healdsburg Center For the Arts.
Fog Clearing Below Geysers Road, Sonoma County, CA
These hillside vineyards are part of the Alexander Valley appellation near Geyserville.
#background #blueskyartshow #nikon #landscape #sonomacounty #vineyards #sunrise
View North from Pt. Cabrillo, Mendocino, CA.
30 sec exposure w/ND10
#stone #blueskyartshow #landscape #mendocino #nikon
Lake Abert, is an alkali lake along Hwy 395 in South Central Oregon. It is so salty that only brine shrimp and alkali flies live there. That makes it a great stop for migratory birds on the pacific flyway. #horizontal #blueskyartshow #nikon #landscape #bluesky
Beautiful!
Thanks. I did a screen shot for you. It’s perpendicular to the road on the road to the light house.
Thank you!
Thank you!
This is below High Bridge above the Stehekin River in north cascades national park in Washington. It’s a really remote area either accessed by hiking about 20 miles, or taking a couple hour boat ride up Lake Chelan to Stehekin, then a shuttle to the site.
Sssh. The fishing is horrible there!!! Beautiful place to fly into tho.
That would be me.
This is just sunset reflecting off of the mist of a waterfall. It only occurs for two weeks in February when the angle of the sun is just right. If there are clouds, it doesn’t happen!
Totally real! Nikon Z8 with raw processing in Capture One.
Thank you!
Thank you!
If you have the luxury of 3 trips a year to Yosemite… early November for fall colors; February for winter/firefall; late April/early May for waterfalls, dogwood bloom and the opening of Glacier Point road. All of these are outside of typical tourist season. Mid week is even better.
Thank you!
Thank you!
Cabernet Sauvignon #flowing out of a tank being drained after primary fermentation. What appears to be a steady stream is actually a series of droplets when action is stopped with high speed strobe.
#blueskyartshow #nikon #wine #sonomacounty #healdsburg
Rainbow Falls at night, Stehekin, WA
There was a full moon helping out with lighting, but the 312 foot upper and lower falls are illuminated by a couple friends with flashlights.
#flowing #blueskyartshow #stehekin #northcascades #nikon #lightpainting #landscape #landscapephotography
Firefall, Yosemite 2/2025
Horsetail Falls, illuminated by the setting sun for a couple of weeks each February….
#flowing #blueskyartshow #nikon #yosemite #landscape #landscapephotography
Kokanee Salmon spawning in the Stehekin River. Sound on for a relaxing moment of zen!
#flowing #blueskyartshow #momentofzen
A lunar eclipse is when the moon falls in the earth’s shadow, so the earth is directly between the moon and sun. A lunar eclipse (total) makes the moon appear dark or red ("blood moon"). A new moon makes the moon invisible as its illuminated side faces away from Earth.
"On Feb. 28, we will see not one, not two, but six planets in the evening sky," writes Alyssa Lee on the space agency's "Watch the Skies" blog. "Mercury, Venus, Neptune, Saturn, Uranus, and Jupiter will appear shortly after sunset."