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Mesa

The Sun, Moon and Stars are there to guide us...
Mesa Arch
by Sandeep Thomas
  • Dennis Banks.

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After Bryce Canyon exploration and our brief stint with the cold we went on to Moab, UT. The gateway town to both Arches and Canyonlands-Island in the sky National Parks. On our first day we decided to tackle the popular destinations and visited one of the most famous geological formations, the Mesa Arch of Canyonlands. There is a pretty short hike to get to the arch which is actually not as huge as I envisioned it but spectacular nonetheless. The only problem is the number of people at location, being one of the most photographed locations in Utah and perhaps southwest itself it's pretty popular even on a cold December morning. Thankfully I am early enough to get a decent spot, I heard some photographer to my left camped out in the location since 4 am for a sunset at 7am.

Anyways we had a nice time talking to fellow photographers about the locations and had a blast sharing tips regarding techniques. I made this pano shot once everyone started to leave after the sun burst through the horizon. This is a four shot panorama of the whole arch, with the early morning sun providing amazing light on the valley below.

From its brilliancy everything is illuminated…
Mesa Arch
by Sandeep Thomas
  • Guru Nanak…

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Now let's move on to the customary shot of mesa arch, the sunburst through the arch just as the sun breaks the horizon. I had actually prepared for this a bit and through the use of this amazing app called photopills knew that the winter sun will rise to the right of the arch. So while most people were clamoring to get to the left of the arch, there were only a couple to the right side. Problem with staying to the left was that once the sun comes out you will only have a few minutes for sunburst as the arch is more open and the rising sun will soon overpower everything, while on the left side the arch opening is narrow so we had more flexibility to shoot the sunstar.

The one thing that surprised me most about the arch was how small it actually is, its tiny. Most of the photographers there were actually using fisheye lenses, I believe to accentuate the width of the arch and to get the whole thing in a single frame. But small or not this was a stunning sigh albeit a little crowded.

Glowscape [Explored]
Mesa Arch

*** Explored #8 on 11/5/2012! ***

One of the most popular scenes near Moab, Utah is sunrise at Mesa Arch in Canyonlands National Park. The previous...

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Mesa Arch
Mesa Arch

Canyonlands Nationalparc UT

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Window to Sunrise on an Alien World
Mesa Arch

Mesa Arch, Canyonlands National Park.

This is comprised of 5 RAW images exported to TIFF, each 1eV apart, layered and manually blended.

**Please...

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Mesa Arch
Mesa Arch
by Maurizio Fontana

USA 2011 - Canyonlands

Mesa arch sunrise
Mesa Arch

Prints and Downloads are available at my Website or feel free to contact me :)

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Mesa Arch
Mesa Arch

**Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

© All rights reserved**

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Mesa Arch, Moab
Mesa Arch

Mesa Arch, Moab

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White Mesa Arch - Arizona
White Mesa Arch - Arizona

Another early rise. Driving to the White Mesa Arch is not that easy, a labyrinth of sandy roads and in the dark it was even more difficult. But we...

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Mesa Arch
Mesa Arch
by Yi Jiang

Canyonlands National Park

Mesa Arch Sunrise
Mesa Arch

Second Place - Observations, Market Street Art Center, Lockport, NY, 2011. Exhibited - 2011 Oregon Salon of Photography.

Located some 2000 feet...

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The Lookout
Mesa Arch

Land of canyons illuminated by Moonlight, as seen through Mesa Arch, Canyonlands National Park, Utah, USA.

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Thanks to all Phoide contributors to Mesa!
Most notably Sandeep Thomas, Maurizio Fontana and Andrey Sulitskiy.