Ash Creek Photo

The Oregon Coast, Cascade Mountains, Columbia Gorge, and Canadian Rockies in Pictures

Doug Gorsline > There aren't many days when Mt. Robson is visible. I've probably been up this road a dozen times since about 1989, and this is the first time I've seen this much of the mountain, but the sunlight was weak on this fall afternoon. This photo is a good example of the importance of shooting in RAW mode versus JPEG. If I had shot this in RAW, I could punch up the vibrancy of the scene more than I've been able to do in JPEG.
There aren't many days when Mt. Robson is visible. I've probably been up this road a dozen times since about 1989, and this is the first time I've seen this much of the mountain, but the sunlight was weak on this fall afternoon. This photo is a good example of the importance of shooting in RAW mode versus JPEG. If I had shot this in RAW, I could punch up the vibrancy of the scene more than I've been able to do in JPEG.
Doug Gorsline > There aren't many days when Mt. Robson is visible. I've probably been up this road a dozen times since about 1989, and this is the first time I've seen this much of the mountain, but the sunlight was weak on this fall afternoon. This photo is a good example of the importance of shooting in RAW mode versus JPEG. If I had shot this in RAW, I could punch up the vibrancy of the scene more than I've been able to do in JPEG.
There aren't many days when Mt. Robson is visible. I've probably been up this road a dozen times since about 1989, and this is the first time I've seen this much of the mountain, but the sunlight was weak on this fall afternoon. This photo is a good example of the importance of shooting in RAW mode versus JPEG. If I had shot this in RAW, I could punch up the vibrancy of the scene more than I've been able to do in JPEG.
See photo in original gallery.

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