photography

Joe Decker is having a 72-hour sale on nature photography.

Now, Joe is something of a cross between Ansel Adams and Galen Rowell. In other words, a hellaciously fine photographer of nature. And this sale includes many of his best pictures of glaciers, icebergs, moonrise, and the motion of light on water. Some are traditional landscapes. Others show the world almost as an abstraction, a texture, a pattern.

My brain seems to be crawling at quarter-speed today. Time-lapse photography might well show that it’s attempting to give me the finger.

However, these time-lapse photographs show amazing natural events. A lunar eclipse, a thunderstorm, a wildfire, growing mushrooms, a rotting apple, and more.

Some things take time. Others are fast, like Tweets, but can do a lot of damage as they go by.

The five worst Twitters ever. By worst they mean something like “causing most collateral damage.” Link courtesy zem42.

If you slow down high-speed phenomena, you can see extraordinary things.

Joe Decker’s book, Saga: Visions of Iceland, is well worth buying. (Or getting as a birthday present, which is how I got my copy from Debbie..) The photographs are superb as always, and the printing is up to his demanding standards. Seen through Joe’s eyes, the stark, dramatic scenery of Iceland becomes almost abstract.

Some images are subtle, nearly monochromatic studies in pure form or pattern, like Black Mud Swirls. The pure black volcanic sands are background and foil to incandescently verdant grass in Grass and Volcanic Alluvium. This high-contrast image with its expanses of deep black and subtle layering of light must have presented serious printing challenges, but it looks good on the page.

Others show sky and land bleakly glacier-colored, grey and blue; rainbows, waterfalls, quiet streams; sunsets as bright and ominous as new lava flows. Decker sees and conveys the beauty in small details and broad landscapes.

The book is hardbound with a dust jacket. Bonus: the author picture (taken by Josh Andrews) is a vivid and revealing portrait of Joe.

Joe Decker is an internationally known, award-winning nature photographer who just keeps getting better and better. Buy his work now, before the price goes to Ansel Adams levels. Yes, he is that good.

The greatest thing
in the world
is the Alphabet
as all knowledge
is contained therein
except the wisdom
of putting it together.
—from an old German bookplate