Recently, I was reading “Inner Game of Outdoor Photography”, by the late Galen Rowell, and something he wrote struck a strong chord with me. In the chapter titled, “The Art of Fixing a Shadow”, he wrote that William Henry Fox Talbot, in 1839 while introducing his invention of photography, referred to it as the “art of fixing a shadow”. Upon reading those words, everything all my knowledge about photography suddenly melted together in harmony. Fixing the shadows is truly the art and essence of photography. The great landscape photographers have always been and always will be putting forth great effort to resolve the issues between light and dark, the highlights and the shadows. Rendering highlights into a pleasing picture is not difficult, ah, but making the shadows work, that’s the art.
This is what I find fascinating and rewarding about employing high dynamic range (HDR) techniques in my photographs. This technique is one I have only recently began exploring, but now there are so many, “Aha”, moments I have become intoxicated with the possibilities. For years I have studied and labored on efforts to solve the issue of correctly representing what I saw in both the highlights and the shadows. Most of these efforts met with disappointment and even the ones I considered successful failed to fully satisfy. HDR appears to be the answer with results that bring a great deal of satisfaction and peace with my efforts.



