Antelope Canyon Yin and Yang Acrylic Print
by Gregory Scott
Product Details
Antelope Canyon Yin and Yang acrylic print by Gregory Scott. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.
Design Details
Antelope canyon Yin and Yang
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (3)
Artist's Description
Antelope canyon Yin and Yang
About Gregory Scott
I'm a photographer, though sometimes I experiment in other media. My mother was an artist, and on school holidays, when she had classes at the art museum, I got to spend entire days roaming the galleries of the Cincinnati Art Museum. My twin sister is an artist, and my father took up photography about the time I did, when I was in college. I'm also a former machine tool programmer, database analyst, and mathematics and physics teacher, and those things undoubtedly have impact on my perceptions as well, as do my Christian perspective and philosophy. My favorite photographic subjects are hummingbirds, other birds in flight, and scenic beauty as seen in wilderness places, the national parks, and rural locations. As my physical health and...
$86.00
Gregory Scott
Yeah, Lower and Upper Antelope Canyon are easy to get to. Just a few hundred metres from the road, if that. You have to pay a small fee to shoot them, but they are on a heavily visited loop of national parks called the Grand Circle. They are so iconic and photographed by so many photographers that a few people have become bored by these photos, or of any slot canyon. Yet the quality of the light varies all day long, and it's almost hard to take a bad shot there. If you are there when there is a rain storm upstream, you must pay attention to the loud alarm that sounds to prevent you from drowning in the flash floods, which are obviously unsurvivable. It's not so much the perspective as the infinitely reflected and modulated light, though. I have spend a full day shooting there, from opening around 9 am to closing around 5 or 6 pm, and I assure you I never ran out of new angles, new light, each shot is a bit different than the others. I have at least 20 shots of one specific feature, an eye in the rock, and each shot is different. I and going again next time I am in the location, with a new approach: focus stacking, so you can take photos where everything is in sharp focus. Similar to HDR photography, it uses software to assemble sharp focus from a stack of focus-bracketed photos. Imagine this photo if every grain of sand were in sharp focus!
Jeff Swan
Awesome work Gregory!
Blair Wainman
Awesome perspective Gregory!! This must be a photographer's paradise for perspective!!