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Fred Hanselmann of Rocky Mountain Photography with large format camera Fred Hanselmann

 

Joan Hanselmann, of Rocky Mountain Photography shooting at McDonald Lake in Glacier National Park
Joan Hanselmann

Selected Articles by Fred

SW Photo Shoot, 2010

Best Way to Frame

Gila Backpack

Depth of Field, Part 2

Shooting Wildflowers 2

Taking Sharp Pictures

Our Printing Papers

The Best Lamination

Our New Home in NM

The Trees are dying

The Glaciers are Melting

The Maroon Bells

How We Make Our Pics

Hand Held Cameras I

Wind River Odyssey

Buying a camera

Yankee Boy Basin

Digital Photog. 101, I

Digital Photog. 101, II

Digital Photog. 101, III

Digital Photog. 101, IV

Digital Photog. 101, V

Photograph Wildflowers

Depth of Field I

Crested Butte Wildflowers

Shrine Pass Wildflowers

Teton National Park

Last Dollar Road

Wind River Range 1

Wind River Range 2

Art and Photography 1

Rocky Mountain NP1

Rocky Mountain NP2

Glacier NP 1

Glacier NP 2

Composition 1

Composition 2

Street People

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Rocky Mountain Photography

Pictures of Wilderness America

 

Pictures of the Rocky Mountains | Pictures of Colorado | Pictures of the Southwest

Pictures of the Pacific Northwest | Pictures of New England | Pictures of National Parks

Pictures of Autumn | Pictures of Wildflowers | Panoramic Pictures

Extra Large Pictures | Articles about scenic photography and scenic places

Fred Hanselmann Photographing the Rocky Mountains in Colorado with a large format camera

 

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Teton Mountains of Wyoming reflected in still pond, Grand Teton National Park
Pictures of the Rocky Mountains

 

Bear Lake in Rocky Mountain Natlional Park in Colorado
Pictures of Colorado



Organ PIpe National Park, Brittle Bush and Organ PIpe Cactus
Pictures of the Southwest

 

 

New England Birch and Maple, Swift River, NH
Pictures of New England

 

 

Mount Rainier in the Pacific Northwest
Pictures of the Pacific Northwest


 

Water Lilies in Bloom in the Wind River Mouontains of Wyoming
Pictures of National Parks


 

Pictures of Autumn, Baxter State Park in Maine
Pictures of Autumn

 

Pictures of Wildflowers, Logan Pass, Glacier National Park
Pictures of Wildflowers

 

 

Classic Colorado Mountains with snow and Aspens, Dallas Divide, Colorado, Near Telluride, CO
All Time Favorite Pictures

 

 

Mount Sneffles in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado
Panoramic Pictures

 

 

Southwestern Dawn with Six Shooter Peak and Buttes in Canyonlands, Colorado

Extra Large Pictures

 

New Mexico Sunset in Placitas, NM
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Rocky Mountain Photography is Fred and Joan Hanselmann

Rocky Mountain Phototograpy is myself and my wife, Fred and Joan Hanselmann. We have been seriously photographing the Rockies and the Southwest since 1990. We currently live and work in our home in the Southern Sangre de Cristo Mountains near Albuquerque, NM. I am the guy on the left with the large format camera, taking pictures in Colorado. Joan is on the right, photographing with her medium format camera at McDonald Lake in Glacier National Park.

Fred Hanselmann Photographing in ColoradoBoth Joan and I have a great love for the mountains and rivers and deserts of the American west. I suppose this came from our childhoods. We both grew up in Wyoming and learned at an early age to love the wild places around us. Joan grew up camping and fishing and hiking with her family in the Wind River Mountains in the North-western part of the state.

I had similar experiences. When I was between ten and fourteen or so, my parents would often take my brother and I on a series of wonderful summer vacation trips to the great National Parks of the West.

Since we lived in Wyoming, one of the places we often visited was Grand Teton National Park. I can still remember one magic morning when we got up very early to go on a hike. We were walking around Jenny Lake shortly after dawn. The lake was absolutely still and mirrored the majestic Cathedral Group of the Tetons. Mists swirled above the lake and in the high peaks. The air was filled with the scent of pine and clean mountain water. I was absolutely enthralled. I vowed to come back. And I have. I've been back to the Tetons every year of my life since, except for a couple of years that I spent in the army. The Tetons have become a central and enduring part of my life.

Joan Hanselmann taking pictures in Glacier National ParkAnother formative experience happened on one of our visits to the Grand Canyon. We were on the North Rim at the beautiful old lodge there. I remember we were on some sort of overlook near the lodge, right on the the rim of the canyon. Someone was playing classical music on an organ. How the organ got to the overlook, I'm not sure. I guess the lodge did things more grandly in those days. I remember standing at the iron railing, overlooking the Canyon, watching the sun set into purples and mauves and golds and reds and being completely swept away. My mother tells me that I couldn't be budged from the place until the sun had completely set and it was dark.

And then there were countless fishing and camping trips in Wyoming that filled my mind with happy memories. The smell of sage, the sound of running water, the sight of white cumulus clouds floating high over blue peaks had a large influence on my developing mind.

I'm sure that all of these experiences played a large part in my decision to become a landscape photographer. These images of the beauty of the natural world, seen at an early age, have remained with me all my life. Perhaps by being a landscape photographer, I'm trying, over and over, to recreate the perfection of these early images.

 

 

 

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