2023 Photography Workshops

Colin D. Young Photography 2023 Landscape and Nature Photography Workshops

I will be leading five photography workshops in 2023.  Each will have a different focus and location, but they will all be intimate affairs, limited to only 6-8 participants each.  Photographers of all skill levels are welcome.  Whether you are a beginner just getting to know your new DSLR or mirrorless camera, an amateur looking to elevate your craft, or a seasoned photographer who just wants to explore the secrets of the Colorado Rockies or the red rock canyons of Utah, you will get something out each of these photo workshops.

  • Arches & Canyonlands Winter/Spring Workshop March 2-6, 2023 Moab, UT
  • Bryce Canyon Magic Light   May 11-15, 2023   Tropic, UT
  • Arches at Night Workshop   June 12-16, 2023   Moab, UT
  • Autumn Color in Rocky Mountain National Park Sept 24-28, 2023 Estes Park, CO
  • San Juan Mountains Fall Color Workshop   Oct 2-6, 2023  Ouray, CO

Arches & Canyonlands Winter/Spring Photography Workshop

March 2-6, 2023 – Moab, Utah

Spend a fantastic weekend exploring Arches, canyons, ancient rock art, the Colorado River, iconic movie and TV locations, and some of the best light for landscape photography in the world. The weather is cool and lovely in early March, with the snow-capped LaSal mountain peaks making a great background.We will visit a wide variety of great locations in Arches National Park and Dead Horse Point State Park, plus locations in both the Island in the Sky and Needles districts of Canyonlands National Park.

Click Here for Details

Bryce Canyon Magical Light

May 11-15, 2023 – Tropic, Utah

Explore the wondrous hoodoos of Bryce Canyon and the unique slot canyons of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument on a 5-day photo workshop is Southern Utah, home to some of the best light for landscape photography in the world.  This workshop sold out in 2022, so book your space soon!

Click Here for details.

Arches at Night Photo Workshop

Arches at Night Photo Workshop

June 12-16, 2023 – Moab, Utah

Arches National Park has been designated as an official International Dark Sky Park.  Spend 4 nights learning techniques to photograph the Milky Way against a wide variety of fascinating rock formations, including the largest collection of natural arches in the world. This workshop always sells out, so book soon!

Click Here for details.

Sept 24-28, 2023 – Estes Park, Colorado

Spend 5 days exploring glacier-fed waterfalls, alpine lakes and night skies from 12,000′ in rugged Rocky Mountain National Park. We will explore the Wild Basin, Glacier Gorge, Dream and Emerald Lakes, Trail Ridge Road, and other lovely locations inside and outside the park, high in the Rocky Mountains.

Click Here for details

San Juan Mountains Fall Color Workshop

October 2-6, 2023 – Ouray, Colorado – New Workshop! 

Based in picturesque Ouray, Colorado, we will visit a variety of great locations in the San Juan mountains for fall foliage, combined with classroom work to better your photographic craft. Locations will include, but not limited to: scenic highways, forest streams, aspen groves, mountain lakes and epic mountain overlooks, in areas near Silverton, Ouray, Ridgeway & Telluride, Colorado.

For more details about this workshop, Click Here

Bryce Canyon Magical Light Paricipants – 2022

All of these photography workshops are designed for photographers of all levels and skills, whether you are a newbie with a new DSLR or mirrorless lens, or an experienced pro that wants to get great advice on locations when visiting a bucket list national park or two. Please be sure to Contact Me if you have any questions regarding any of these workshops.

Rock Light Photo Tours

Rock Light Photo Tours – Moab, Utah

Big news!  My new website is live, so I can now officially announce Rock Light Photo Tours! I now offer customizable half-day, full day or multi-day private photo tours in Moab, Utah for individuals or small groups.  Excursions are designed to match your experience level, physical abilities, and interests. With input from you we can create a tour that suits your needs to get the shots you want!

Rock Light Photo Tours - Balanced Rock Milky WayI am a fully licensed and insured tour guide in Arches and Canyonlands National Parks. Other locations can include Dead Horse Point, Fisher Towers, Castle Valley, rock art sites, cottonwood canyons, and many other hidden gems in the area.  Utah’s Canyon Country has some of the best light for landscape photography in the world, and the area is also famous for its dark night skies!

On the tours, I offer hands-on instruction on how to read and shoot the light to make your red rock images pop, and get the most of your Moab photo tour experience.

Tour Options

Rock Light Photo Tours: Soda Springs Basin in Canyonlands National Park
Soda Springs Basin in Canyonlands National Park, Utah

Full day tours include sunrise/morning and afternoon/sunset sessions totaling 8-10 hours with a mid-day break.  1/2 day  tours include either sunrise or sunset.  Any of the following can be included in your tour options.  Assume 1-2 locations for a half day tour, and 2-4 for a full day tour.  Have specific destinations in mind not shown here?  Please let me know!  Once you have dates and some itinerary ideas in mind, fill out the contact form to Book a Tour, and I will get back to you ASAP with some possibilities.

Suggested options to include in your photo itinerary

  • Icons of Arches National Park (great introduction to the area)
  • Epic Canyon views from Canyonlands Island in the Sky & Dead Horse Point
  • White Rim Colorado River views in Canyonlands
  • Dead Horse Point – you simply have to see this!
  • Castle Valley, Fisher Towers, and the Colorado River (any West World fans out there?)
  • La Sal Mountains (good for a hot summer day or fall Aspen color)
  • Ancient Rock Art & Ruins in and around Moab
  • Bears Ears & Cedar Mesa ruins (full day – hiking required)
  • Night Photography

Explore the tour options, and send us the contact form to book a tour with your favorite dates and tour site requests, and we will endeavor to put together a unique Rock Light Photo Tour that will have you coming back for more!  Bring along a friend to make your tour more affordable!

Rock Light Photo Tours banner

How to Take Black & White Digital Photographs

Black & White: Colorado Clearing Storm
Colorado Clearing Storm

It was only a few years ago that professional and amateur photographers had to make a crucial decision at the beginning of a day of shooting regarding what kind of film they would shoot.  Color film?  Black & White?  Slide film?  Today, we can save those decisions until days or even weeks after we capture an image, and decide whether the final product will be a color or black & white digital photograph.  While this can make processing more complicated, it also opens up another layer of creative choice that we used to have to make in advance.

Capturing the Image

Marching Men Klondike Bluffs
‘Marching Men’ in front of the La Sal Mountains

marching Men Black & White
Marching Men Black & White

The first step is image capture.  Even if you choose a monochrome setting in camera, as long as you shoot in RAW, all of the color information will remain in the photo’s file, untapped.  Of course, the reverse is also true.  In the field you might be intent on capturing a beautiful color landscape image, but upon reflection, a conversion to black and white might be your ultimate choice.  Occasionally, I will get a client who asks if I can print a given color image in black and white, or vice versa, and I am able to make that happen.

This photo of the Marching Men in Arches National Park is a great example of an image that works well in color and black & white.  It is all about personal preference.

Lightroom Processing

Kaaterskill Falls Frozen Amphitheater

When I process images in Lightroom, I often hit the ‘Black & White’ button to temporarily convert the image.  For me, this serves two purposes.  First, it is often helpful to see an image in grayscale in order to adjust contrast, shadows, highlights and brightness.  A super colorful image can sometimes obscure these details, and in fact I may work in black & white for several steps before restoring the color.  As long as I work in RAW, the Lightroom  ‘Black & White’ and ‘Color’ buttons toggle color information on and off, non-destructively.  Once I have the tonal range I want, I can restore the color to see the final image.

Kaaterskill Falls Black & White
Kaaterskill Falls Frozen Amphitheater

The second reason I convert to black & white is that it can reveal something about the image that more powerfully conveys the scene, and it helps me decide if in the end it will be a black & white digital photograph.

Silver Efex Pro

Once I have decided to create a black & white image, and have the image adjusted for contrast and exposure in Lightroom, my next step for image processing happens within Photoshop Elements – specifically with the Silver Efex Pro plug-in.  Silver Efex Pro 2 is an incredibly powerful and versatile tool for processing digital images into fantastic black & white images. Originally created as part of the Nik Collection of plug-ins, it was bought by Google.  You would think that it would mean it is now more expensive, but the opposite is true.  It’s free! (thanks Google!)

Heart Lake
Heart Lake Dock Black & White

Unless the image is intentionally soft or out of focus, the first tool I utilize is the Structure tool, which adds local contrast to the images to really make the details pop.  Think of Structure as Lightroom Clarity and Photoshop Midtone Contrast, on steroids.  Next I adjust brightness and contract, and can tweak the tonality curve if necessary.  Then there are fun and powerful tools like color filters, that mimic the effects of the yellow or red color filters we used to use on the lens for black and white film.

Finally, if you are a fan of Ansel Adams’ Zone System (and who isn’t), there is an interactive graph that visually shows you which parts of the image are in which zones.

Grain & Toning

Speaking of black and white film, there are adjustments that mimic the contrast and grain of several types of black and white film. (Many of which aren’t even made any more!)  These are handy if you are trying to match the results of your favorite film, or just trying to add a bit of grain to make the image feel more ‘authentic’.

For a final touch, you can add toning.  I added a bit of sepia tone to the heart Lake Dock image, to give it a timeless, Adirondack feel. You can also add Selenium (great for winter scenes like the Kaaterskill Falls photo), copper (nice for red rock country images), and several others, all without the nasty chemicals!

Which Photos Should be Black & White?

I admit, I hold some nostalgia for the days of processing photos in my kitchen darkroom.  I spent many late nights dodging and burning, watching images slowly revel themselves in developer, working to get that perfect print.  Because of that experience, a black & white image sometimes reveals itself to me in a color digital image.  Printing in black & white is obviously a personal choice, so there is no right and wrong about which images should be color or not.

black & white: Sedona Rock Cairns
Buddha Beach Rock Cairns

black and White: Rock Cairns
Buddha Beach Rock Cairns – B&W

Take the rock cairns photo above.  When I capture an image with a lot of great texture, like that in the sandstone cairns, it is often complemented in black & white.  In the color version, the dark green trees in the  background are a bit distracting to me.  When I covert it to black & white, the texture pops (using Structure in Silver Efex Pro), and the focus on the foreground rock cairn, rather than the background trees.

Conclusion

Like most things in photography, you will learn much more by doing and repetition than by just reading a blog.  Go out, shoot some images, and play with converting them to black and white.  Go back to some of your favorite shots that contain good contrast and interesting textures, and play with converting them as well.  Make color and black & white prints of the same photo to see how they turn out (and play with different papers while you are at it.  My favorite papers are rag papers for black & white). Finally, if you have never worked in a darkroom, your Lightroom skills will improve immeasurably if you take a darkroom printing course.

As always, I’d love to hear your comments.  What topics should I address next?