I bought my first camera in the eighth grade; I simply wanted one so I could
take some cloud pictures. At the time our yearly family vacation always involved a
camping trip to a national park. That's when my love of national parks
developed and my interest in photography really picked up. In high school I
also did some volunteer work in the national parks, again taking pictures
whenever I could. A similar scenario repeated during my college years; trying
to talk friends with cars into road trips to the national parks.
But it wasn't until I was gainfully employed after college that I was able to buy a car and start traveling in order to take
photographs. So, it's really been the last six and a half years or so that I've
been a serious photographer.
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Morraine
Lake at Banff National Park
photo property of Kim
Steinbacher
Q. Your web site includes primarily pictures of national parks, such as
Arches, Banff, Glacier, and Yosemite. What is it about photographing the
national parks that is so special to you?
It's the spectacular beauty of those parks that draws me in. How could a
person not be awe-struck by the scenery in those places? Photography has
always been a way for me to capture just a tiny bit of the feeling I have
while there and relive it later on. I can look at a photograph and be
transported back to the moment when I took it. I guess my brilliant answer
boils down to, "It's truly beautiful and I'm inspired to take pictures of
the scenery." I don't get that feeling with other subjects. In fact,
without that inspiration I'm a terrible photographer. You don't even want to
see what happens when I try to shoot sports or people. Let's just
say I'm sticking to landscape photography.
My web site is an outlet where I'm able to share those moments and landscapes
with friends, family, and web surfers from around the world. It's a real joy
to hear from someone that has enjoyed my photos, either as a reminder of their
own trip or because the beauty of the scene captivated them.
Q. Do you have a favorite park for photographing?
I'm going to cheat here. My favorite park to "visit" is Yosemite National Park. I feel so at peace there (that is, once I get away from the crowds)
and the hiking is unparalleled. But if we are talking strictly photography, I'd
have to say the parks in the Southwest. To have such diversity in scenery --
Arches, Bryce, Zion, Grand Canyon -- within a region is unbelievable.
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Last
light at the Grand Canyon
photo property of Kim Steinbacher
Q. You read different opinions on what it takes to get great pictures.
So, is it
art or is it science?
Oh, I'm terrible with science--and even worse with the technical side of
photography--so art it is! I have always felt whatever skills I exhibit as a
photographer relate more to my sense of composition and appreciation of color
rather than my ability to correctly set a shutter speed.
Clearly you will become a better photographer if you understand the basic
mechanics of the process--the relationship between aperture and shutter speed,
the effect a chosen aperture has on the depth of field, etc. But with the
prevalence of auto-everything cameras I think the success of a given
photograph can attributed to the artistic vision of the photographer.
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Norris Geyser Basin at Yellowstone
photo
property of Kim Steinbacher
Let me give you an example. In peak tourist months in Yosemite National Park,
Sentinel Bridge is jammed with tripod-toting photographers, all there to
capture Half Dome at sunset. Most photographers have a camera meter that will
give them a pretty decent reading. The originality comes into play when the
photographers decide how to compose their shots. One particular evening, when
there were only a few of us photographers remaining, we took turns looking
through each other's viewfinders. You know what? Every one of us had a
different composition of of the scene before us.
I can't do depth of field calculations in my head nor could I ever explain
it to anyone. Those lens tests is photography magazines? Greek to me. After
years of photography I have a reasonable level of technical competence that
simply comes with the territory. But for me it will always be more about the
art of making a picture instead of the science of technical prowess.
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