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One Night, Two Moons

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Gary Hart Photography: Through the Clouds, Tunnel View Moonrise, Yosemite

Through the Clouds, Tunnel View Moonrise, Yosemite
Sony a7R V
Sony 24-105 f/4 G
ISO 100
f/10
1/3 second

I wrapped up this year’s workshop schedule at the beginning of this month and am now enjoying a much anticipated Holiday breather before my schedule ramps up again in January. This isn’t exactly a vacation, because the end of the year is when all my permit reporting and next year’s permit applications are due, and my 2025 workshop prep starts to ramp up, but my schedule does get a bit less frenetic when the travel (and all its prep and recovery) is over.

As I often do when my travel schedule eases around the Holidays, I prioritize family over photography. That doesn’t mean no new pictures, but it does mean that most (all?) of the new pictures I share over the next couple of months will probably be pictures captured months, or even years, ago, but never got around to processing.

Going through my vast repository of unprocessed images is something I started doing while isolated during the early months of the pandemic (has it really been 4 1/2 years?!). I’d always been aware that I had lots of untapped gems languishing on my hard drive(s), but was nevertheless surprised by how much I enjoyed searching them out. Sometimes I’ll start by randomly picking a photo trip and scanning the Lightroom thumbnails for something that stops me, but the most productive approach has been going through my collection of already processed favorites to identify particularly special shoots, reasoning that there must certainly be more there. (I write more about this in my Back to the Future blog post.)

It always surprises me how much I enjoy revisiting past photo trips and workshops. Not only does the experience revive memories of special moments in Nature, lots of the best memories are of the people I was with. Sometimes that’s been other photo buddies, but since so much of my photography is centered around my workshops, the majority of those memories are actually my workshop groups.

Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, Half Dome, Yosemite

Moonrise, Half Dome, Yosemite

Case in point: The seed for this “new” image was my “Moonrise, Half Dome, Yosemite” image from my February 2024 Yosemite Winter Moon workshop. Going through this workshop’s image folder, all the cloud-induced stress surrounding this particular moonrise came flooding back. And with it also came memories of the euphoria we all felt when the clouds opened just enough, at exactly the right time, to reveal the Half-Dome/moon/sunset alignment I’d been thinking about for more than a year. (Read the details here: Moon Swoon.)

Within minutes, the moon had climbed into the rapidly thickening clouds, and it looked like the show might be over—until, shortly before darkness was complete (or at least too dark to photograph the moon and foreground in one frame), it rose into a patch of slightly thinner clouds and briefly reappeared.

My strategy for moonrises is to go long until the moon separates from the landscape, then go progressively wider as it rises. This evening I’d set up two tripods, one with my Sony α1 and 200-600 lens, the other with my a7RV and 24-105 lens. So when the moon made its brief return, I was instantly ready to start clicking.

I chose a vertical composition to emphasize the foreground and minimize the lateral aspects of the scene. I also tried a few that were wide enough to include more of El Capitan, but ultimately decided to process this one to avoid shrinking the moon too much with a wider focal length.

Viewing these two images together provides a fantastic opportunity to make a point I’ve tried to make many times before: how to photograph a large moon. Thanks to the continued emphasis (and hype) focused on the largely irrelevant “supermoon” phenomenon, many people seem to believe the size of the moon in the sky is the most import part of a large moon image. It’s not.

The size of the moon in any image is almost entirely a function of the focal length used, not the relatively small difference between a “regular” size moon and a supermoon. Compare the size of the moon in these two images, noting that they were captured from the same location, on the same night, less than 10 minutes apart. For the big moon image, I used a 450mm focal length that magnified both Half Dome and the moon and eliminated everything else. For today’s smaller moon image, I chose a 50mm focal length that enabled me to fit far more of the surrounding beauty, but also shrunk the moon.

I should add that as far as I’m concerned, the absolutely best light for photography is the shadowless light that starts 10-15 minutes after sunset. I captured my (wide) image about 15 minutes after sunset. To my eyes, the scene appeared much darker than what you see in the image. I had to be careful with the exposure to avoid blowing out the moon, making the foreground in my raw original nearly black, but by monitoring my histogram and knowing my camera, I knew that the shadows would be recoverable. And I think the thin clouds helped subdue some of the lunar highlights, enabling to give the scene a little more exposure.

I still have a few openings in my 2025 Yosemite photo workshops


The Moon Large and Small, from Full to Crescent

Click any image to scroll through the gallery LARGE

Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Cradled Crescent, Sierra Foothills Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Moonset, Oxbow Bend, Grand Tetons Gary Hart Photography: Rising Crescent, Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe Gary Hart Photography: Moon's Rest, Cloud's Rest, Yosemite Gary Hart Photo: Moonset, Manly Beacon from Zabriskie Point, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Dante's Moon, Badwater, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Red Moonrise, Sentinel Rock, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Big Moon Rising, Tunnel View, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sierra Moon, Mt. Williamson, California Gary Hart Photography: Parting the Clouds, Yosemite Valley Moonrise Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, El Capitan and Cloud's Rest, Yosemite Moon and Cactus, Hell's Gate, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Magenta Moonrise, Yosemite Valley, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Early Morning Moonset, Zabriskie Point, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Peek-a-Boo Moon, Merced River Canyon and Bridalveil Fall, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Crescent at Sunset, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Winter Moonrise, Merced River, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, West and East Mitten, Monument Valley Gary Hart Photography: Half Dome and Tiny Moon, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Winter Twilight Moonrise, El Capitan and Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Moonlight on the Water, Garrapata Beach, Big Sur Gary Hart Photography: December Moon, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Moongazing, Face Rock, Bandon, Oregon Gary Hart Photography: Winter Moonrise, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Big Moon, Valley View, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Cradled Crescent, El Capitan and Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Through the Clouds, Tunnel View Moonrise, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Heaven and Earth, New Moon and Venus, Sierra Foothills Gary Hart Photography: Lunar Reflection, Half Dome and Cook's Meadow, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Big Moon, Mt. Williamson, California Gary Hart Photography: Autumn Moonrise, Half Dome and the Merced River, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Winter Moon, Zabriskie Point, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise Through the Clouds, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Dawn Moonset, Mt. Williamson and the Alabama Hills, California Gary Hart Photography: Lunar Kiss, Crescent Moon With Half Dome and Sentinel Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunrise Moonset, Mt. Williamson, Alabama Hills (California) Gary Hart Photography: Winter Moon Reflection, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: New Moon and Oak, Sierra Foothills (California) Gary Hart Photography: Sunrise Trio, Crescent Moon Above El Capitan and Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Winter Moonrise, Full Moon and Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Moon Over East Mitten, Monument Valley Gary Hart Photography: Nightfall, Full Moon and Yosemite Valley, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Sunset Pastoral, Sierra Foothills Gary Hart Photography: Magenta Moonrise, Half Dome and the Merced River, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Moonset, Zabriskie Point and Manly Beacon, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Spring Moon, Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: New Moon, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Twilight Moon, Zabriskie Point, Death Valley Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise and Clouds, El Capitan, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Oak and Crescent, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, Sierra Foothills, California Gary Hart Photography: Moonrise, Horsetail Fall and Half Dome, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Mountain Nightfall, Olmsted Point, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Lunar Arrival, El Capitan and Clouds Rest, Yosemite Gary Hart Photography: Alone Together, Oak and Crescent Moon, Sierra Foothills, California

 

 

 


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