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Black and White – only because I felt like it

January 30, 2023 by John L. Dengler

You know how you yearn for chili or soup on the cold, blustery, gray days in winter? Well, I guess the same can be said about how a dark gray day like today affected my approach to today’s editing of images.

There’s no real story to the following photos, just some miscellaneous photos from a recent trip to Haines, Alaska, last August that I thought I would process in black and white. No highfaluting artist statements on the reason behind the conversion to black and white. It’s just because I felt like it. It is as simple as that.

Chilkoot Indian Association Trail -Haines

The Chilkoot Indian Association (CIA)Trail in Haines is a relatively new, in-town trail near the Southeast Alaska State Fairgrounds. While walking on the peaceful, easy-to-travel path, you feel like you are in the middle of nowhere when in reality, you are only a few blocks from homes and the Haines public school. If you are lucky, you might see a bear or moose that has retreated to the forest after sneaking into town. The trail is a very nice addition to Haines. Depending on where you are staying in Haines, it makes a nice stroll to and from the Saturday Farmer’s Market at the fairgrounds.

Common horsetail (Equisetum arvense) along the Chilkoot Indian Association Trail in Haines, Alaska. Common horsetail is a fern. Moose, caribou, sheep, and bears eat this plant.

Detail of grass in a wetland stream along the Chilkoot Indian Association Trail in Haines, Alaska.

The spectacular scenery of the Lynn Canal

The views from the Alaska state ferry on the four-plus hour trip from Juneau to Haines are spectacular. I’m always befudled to see people sleeping on the ferry when spectacular views like the below are for the taking (in addition to whales and other marine wildlife). I’m equally befuddled seeing the cruise ships travel this route during the dinner hour and late into the evening only so the passengers can get to the next port in the morning. I’d rather see views like the ones below than have extra time at a jewelry shop in port.

The Lynn Canal is not a man-made canal but rather a glacier-formed fjord. It is one of the deepest and longest fjords in the world. It is about 90 miles long, traveling from the Juneau area to Skagway over 2,000 feet deep. As a major shipping and transportation route, the fjord connects highway-isolated Juneau with Haines and Skagway. It was also a major water route during the Klondike Gold Rush.

Unnamed peaks (left) in the Tongass National Forest rise above Yeldagalga Creek next to the edge of Sinclair Mountain (right) as seen from the Lynn Canal near Haines, Alaska.

Davidson Glacier is framed by Talsani Island and the tip of the Chilkat Peninsula, in this view from the Lynn Canal near Haines, Alaska.

Davidson Glacier is framed by Talsani Island and the tip of the Chilkat Peninsula in this view from the Lynn Canal near Haines, Alaska.

There you have it. No color. Just black and white. Now time for some warm spicy soup.

LINKS

  • BLOG: Alaska travel tips
  • PHOTO GALLERY: Haines, Alaska
  • PHOTO GALLERY: Juneau, Alaska

Fine art print karma

January 31, 2014 by John L. Dengler

The evening sky reveals stars over the Lower Fox Creek Schoolhouse located in the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Kansas Flint Hills. The school, on the National Historic Register of Historic Places, was built on land donated by cattleman Stephen F. Jones. Built in 1882, the one-room school had its first classes in 1884. Typical enrollment was between one to 19 students of all grades. The school was closed in 1930 and restored in 1968 by the Garden Clubs in the Mid-East District of Kansas. The glowing light on the right is from the city of Emporia some 20 miles away to the east. The 10,894-acre Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is located in Chase County near the towns of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls. Less than four percent of the original 140 million acres of tallgrass prairie remains in North America. Most of the remaining tallgrass prairie is in the Flint Hills in Kansas. Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is the only unit of the National Park Service dedicated to the preservation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is co-managed with The Nature Conservancy. (John L. Dengler)

Yesterday was full of nice news. First I was pleased to hear that Morgan Stanley, the global financial services firm, purchased one of my images as a large 30 x 45” print for permanent display in one of their NYC conference rooms.

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Favorite images for your wall

The print, Lower Fox Creek School and Stars selected is one of my favorites from the tallgrass prairie in the Kansas Flint Hills.

Then I received a really nice note (and bottle of ice wine) from an international client who was fretting over an issue he had when placing an order for one of my fine art prints. I’ve always believed in treating people as I would want to be treated. The international client appreciated how I dealt with the problem. His kind and heartfelt words reminded me of my late father, a small retail business owner, who would have been proud of my handling of the situation and especially the response I received.

 


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Experience the ultimate in fine art presentation with acrylic face mount fine art prints

June 22, 2012 by John L. Dengler

acrylic face mount print, front

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I’m incredibly excited about this acrylic face mount print that I ordered for myself – it almost jumps off the wall! Without question acrylic face mounted prints are the ultimate in photograph presentation. This 30″x20″ photo of an amau fern taken at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island of Hawaii has the look of a wet print. The simple borderless presentation is offset from the wall. These acrylic face mount fine art prints are ready to hang. When you consider the cost of matting and framing a large print, the initially more expensive acrylic face mount prints become more comparable.


READ MORE about acrylic face mount prints and other available print options on my fine art print information page.

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Recent Dispatches

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