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Sarah Marino & Ron Coscorrosa Photography

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Do Not Delete: 4 Reasons to Keep Nearly All of Your Photo Files

August 30, 2024 Sarah Marino

A wildflower garden full of lupine, buckwheat, sage, and snowberry. Crested Butte, Colorado.

Earlier this week, I saw a post on a nature photography forum about how a forum member had just returned from a trip and as part of his culling process was deleting everything he didn’t immediately like. My reaction was NOOOOOOOOO! DO NOT DELETE!

Unless a file has a clear technical issue (extreme under exposure or is out of focus in a bad way) or was a clear mistake (tripping the shutter while carrying my camera around and creating a series of blurry photos of my feet), I have learned to save nearly all of my photography files for future me. Below, I’ll share four examples of why I am glad to have gotten into this habit in my early days as a photographer.

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In Landscape Photography, Nature Photography, Photography Tips, Small Scenes Tags Crested Butte, Colorado, Photo Organization
11 Comments

Iceland in Spring: New Portfolio Ebook From Ron

July 28, 2024 Ron Coscorrosa

In early June, we headed to Iceland for an 18-day photo trip. If you have visited Iceland yourself, you will not be surprised to hear that the weather was quite challenging and we had to completely change our plans in response. While we hoped to take our rental 4x4 campervan into the interior highlands, we ended up mostly sticking to the Ring Road because of rain, relentless wind, and quite a bit of late-season snow. Despite these challenges, we still had a lot of fun experiences, including visiting a puffin colony in the snow, photographing Iceland's incredible river deltas, and seeing a perfectly peak lupine bloom across the southern portion of the country (this non-native lupine is invasive but still quite beautiful to see). 

I have collected my photos from the trip into a 129-page PDF ebook portfolio, which you can download for free without any sign-up or checkout required. Below is the brief essay I include at the beginning of the ebook, along with a handful of the 100+ photos from the book.

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In Recent Photos, E-Books, Iceland
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Ron: Death Valley Winter - Just Rocks (3 of 3)

July 16, 2024 Ron Coscorrosa

This is the third in a series of three posts featuring my photographs from Death Valley National Park taken over the 2023-2024 winter season (first part here, second part here).

Death Valley is known for many things: the salt flats and polygons at Badwater Basin, the various sand dunes scattered across the park, and the impressive and colorful badlands. Perhaps less appreciated are the mountains, alluvial fans, and canyons spread across the park—and the rocks that comprise them.

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In Recent Photos, Small Scenes Tags Death Valley National Park, Ron Coscorrosa
1 Comment

Ron: Death Valley Winter - Lake Manly (Part 2 of 3)

June 16, 2024 Ron Coscorrosa

This is the second in a three part series of photos from Death Valley taken this winter (see first post here). This post is about Lake Manly.

Lake Manly was a permanent feature in Death Valley until it evaporated about 10,000 years ago and now only forms during periods of heavy rainfall. During Hurricane Hilary in August 2023, heavy rains repopulated the ephemeral lake, and atmospheric river events in January actually raised the water level. During a few wind events in late February, the lake blew to the north before resettling back south and finally fully evaporating by May 2024. Watching the lake move was a surreal experience. Photographer Jerry Dodrill shared a video of the lake actually moving on his Instagram page and you can view it here.

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In Recent Photos Tags Death Valley National Park, Mojave Desert, Desert Photography
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Ron: Death Valley Winter - The Diverse Desert (Part 1 of 3)

June 9, 2024 Ron Coscorrosa

Sarah and I spent almost ten weeks in and around Death Valley this winter in our trailer. Our first trip was a quick (for us) week-long visit in December to see the ephemeral Lake Manly before it evaporated. We followed that up with a longer eight-week trip starting in late January, during which our “ephemeral” lake refilled with several atmospheric river events in California. The winter weather was wet, providing many opportunities (lakes, wildflowers, and even fog), but it also closed the roads to many of the park’s further reaches.

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In Recent Photos Tags Death Valley National Park, Mojave Desert, Desert Photography
3 Comments

It’ll Be Prettier Soon: Eclipse Trip Recap and Photos

May 16, 2024 Sarah Marino

Soft mist rises below a row of spring trees at Virgil Point Campground on the morning of the 2024 total eclipse.

In 2017, photo friends invited us to camp with them in Wyoming to view that year’s total solar eclipse. We accepted the invitation, mostly expecting some fun social time and an interesting life experience. By the time the eclipse ended, Ron and I both felt like it was a truly transcendent moment—one of the most special occurrences a person can experience in nature—and we decided we would put extra effort into seeing eclipses in the future.

As nature photographers, we contemplate the light that comes from the sun more than most humans. Sunlight interacting with the landscape throughout the day creates our photographic opportunities yet the sun itself is rarely included in our compositions and most often feels like a distant abstraction. During a total solar eclipse, the moon slides in front of the sun and the two come into perfect alignment for a few short minutes. As the moon blocks out much of the sun’s light, we can observe some of the sun’s qualities in a way that is not typically possible, and as a result, experience a much deeper sense of understanding, connection, and appreciation.

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In Nature Photography, Recent Photos, Thoughts on Photography Tags 2024 Total Eclipse, Wichita Botanica, Oklahoma
6 Comments

(Photographic) Happiness = Reality - Expectations: February + March 2024 Monthly Review

April 2, 2024 Sarah Marino

Ripples form after a flash flood, with the milky flood water filling the depressions. Death Valley National Park.

Well, I missed my monthly update for February and lost all momentum with my weekly blog posts. The reasons: ephemeral conditions in Death Valley, finishing the second edition of our significantly expanded and fully revised Beyond the Grand Landscape ebook, getting a nasty cold, and saying yes to social time in the desert whenever an invitation popped up.

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In Monthly Update, Nature Photography, Field Practices, Thoughts on Photography Tags Death Valley National Park
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January 2024 Monthly Review

February 6, 2024 Sarah Marino

Light beams shine through heavy storm clouds, illuminating the Panamint Mountains. Death Valley National Park.

I’m sharing a wrap-up like this at the end of each month to help with accountability and discipline. The basic format: an inventory of how I spent the last month with regard to nature photography and our photo business, a casual discussion about the things that are on my mind, and a few non-photography recommendations at the end.

This could be a very short update since I focused on two things over the last month: 1) working on the fully revised and significantly expanded second edition of our Beyond the Grand Landscape ebook and 2) photographing, a lot.

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In Monthly Update Tags Death Valley National Park, Writing, Perfectionism, Beyond the Grand Landscape
11 Comments

Backyard Abstracts: Photos From My Ice Farming Operation

January 21, 2024 Sarah Marino

Over the last few years, we have occasionally put a tub of water in our backyard during colder weather to see if it might create some opportunities for photographing ice patterns. We never put much effort into this approach to photography because it seemed like we could usually find something more interesting in a natural setting. Enter Adam Gibbs and the preview pages for his new book, Land & Light. In one of the sample spreads, Adam shares a beautiful photo of frost patterns and describes the “ice farming” operation behind its creation.

This story made me decide to put a bit more effort into our own ice farming operation, especially since we were in the middle of a stretch of very cold weather. As I started experimenting with some new ideas, I hoped we might be able to create the conditions for frilly frost to form, like Adam showed in the photo in his book preview. Likely because of the humidity differences between damp Vancouver Island and dry southwestern Colorado, that frost never materialized as I had envisioned. With more experimentation, I eventually found an approach that created some tiny wild patterns.

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In Field Practices, Nature Photography, Small Scenes, Winter Photography Tags Ice Abstracts
9 Comments

Entering a Photo Competition? Consider This Advice

January 7, 2024 Sarah Marino

A lovely spiral aloe, referenced in the text below.

I have recently served as a judge for a few different photo club competitions (in addition to being a judge for five award seasons with international photo competitions) and continue to see the same issues pop up. Some of the issues are really basic, like dust spots and tilted horizons, while others are far more subjective. With these experiences in mind, I share some advice to consider when you prepare your next competition entry (or magazine submission, gallery show entry, portfolio, or even your next social media post). This article represents the perspective of exactly one judge—me—so don’t consider it a checklist but instead a single point of view on a complex topic.

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In Nature Photography, Photo Education, Thoughts on Photography Tags Photo Competitions
38 Comments

Sarah's 2023 Photography Year In Review

January 1, 2024 Sarah Marino

In this post, I share some highlights from 2023 along with some reflections on my current creative practices, thoughts about the direction of our photo business, some loose goals for 2024, and a short rumination about AI’s potential impact on my chosen career. If you are mostly here for the photos, you can skip ahead to the middle of the post. Before jumping into the text, I would like to thank you for being part of my photo community. I appreciate each of you and wish you the best for 2024!

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In Nature Photography, Monthly Update Tags Death Valley National Park, Anza Borrego State Park, Colorado, Alaska, Zion National Park
28 Comments

Ron's 2023 Recap

December 28, 2023 Ron Coscorrosa

While I am sometimes successful in avoiding cliches in my photographs, I am less successful in avoiding cliches for my blog posts. So here is my version of the yearly recap post!

The beginning of the year is a good time to reflect and ruminate on the past year, but since this is the end of the year, I’m going to skip all that and just share some photographs. These are not necessarily my favorite twenty photographs of the year but they are a diverse selection of the places we photographed and visited in 2023, arranged chronologically.

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In Nature Photography, Monthly Update Tags California, Colorado, Zion National Park, Alaska
5 Comments
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RECEnt INSTAGRAM photos

Autumn! Like most nature photographers, I have been happy to see hints of fall all around me over the last week or so. Here is a small selection of intimate landscapes and small scenes from Colorado last year.
A beautiful, lush field of lupine wildflowers outside of Crested Butte, Colorado. I'm so looking forward to teaching two summer wildflower workshops in this area with the Crested Butte Wildflower Festival next summer (link to more info in my bio). 🌺
I went to Alaska during peak fall colors and did as I always do: pointed my camera at mundane but beautiful things on the ground. I wrote about this trip for the most recent issue of Elements Magazine and covered the experience of traveling in Alaska
While traveling to Oklahoma for the total solar eclipse, we stopped at the Quivira National Wildlife Refuge in Kansas. In addition to seeing many birds, we also stumbled upon a grove of trees covered in beautiful orange, yellow, and blue-gray lichen.
This photo is from a wild weather day in Death Valley National Park and it is also the subject of my brand-new Bold Black + White video course. I created this course for Learn Nature Photography, which is a new collaboration with six insightful, insp
Some lovely sun beams in Death Valley, shining through very heavy storm clouds to illuminate the Panamint Mountains. I just shared a new blog post, my January month in review. I talk about our recent trip to Death Valley, why we keep revisiting the p
Backyard ice. Fancy patterns. ❄️
🥶 Seems like a good day to share a few favorite ice photos from Zion National Park.
I instantly adore every aquatic plant I’ve had the pleasure of meeting, including these from Mount Rainier National Park in autumn.
A small collection of newly processed photos from 2023, which was a good year overall. I wrote a longer wrap-up on our website, and you can find a link to it in my profile. Happy new year!
I’m writing an article about how centered compositions are PERFECTLY FINE in some situations, despite what the rules-oriented composition police might say. In looking for photos to go along with that article, I came upon this photo and it broug
Mountains made of water in Death Valley National Park.
 
 

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