I photographed this view from Yovimpa Point in Bryce Canyon, assembling a multi-panel panorama to hold both the intimate texture of the hoodoos and the vastness of the distant horizon. The farthest high point visible lies more than eighty miles away — a reminder of scale I wanted to preserve without losing detail in the foreground. I was drawn to the contrast: the warm, carved rock faces against the cool, dense forest beneath them and the subtle color shifts as the landscape recedes.
This image is the result of a deliberate, tactile process — careful framing on location, multiple overlapping panels, and precise stitching in post to retain tonal fidelity and edge detail. My background in design and craft pushes me toward compositions that reward slow looking; this photograph is meant to be read slowly, to reveal texture and proportion over time. Archival printing options are available for collectors seeking a lasting, heirloom-quality piece.