
Snowshoeing and Slow Photographing at 2’106 metres a.s.l., Furka, Swiss Alps. Photoessay. December 2018.
Continue readingThere are 95 posts filed in photography (this is page 5 of 10).
Snowshoeing and Slow Photographing at 2’106 metres a.s.l., Furka, Swiss Alps. Photoessay. December 2018.
Continue readingFurka Pass, Tiefenbach, Switzerland. Photoessay. December 2018.
[Pyrrhocorax graculus]
[as always: click to enlarge]
Photoessay. August 2018.
Some impressions of Edinburgh during Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2018.
[as always – click to enlarge.]
Photoessay. Applecross, Bealach na Ba, Scotland. August 2018.
After a stormy night in Applecross I wanted to pass the famous Bealach na Ba (meaning: Pass of the cattle) through the mountains of the Applecross peninsula.
Continue readingHow to digital detox in only three days?
Northwest Highlands of Scotland. August 18, 2018. Photoessay.
Starting after #TheBestHotChocolate at Balnakeil Bay in the rain, I turned to the South along Kyle of Durness and ended up with Prince’ Purple Rain at Kinlochbervie harbour.
While I appreciate many great things in modern digital photography it always draws me back to the soft, atmospheric look of the images of the good old film days – film is not dead! – as we all know.
Continue readingGarvault House – “Mainland Britain’s Most Remote Hotel” – considering that my day started at 2 a.m. (!) driving from Ehrendingen (near Zurich) to Basel Mulhouse EuroAirport – from there flying to Edinburgh, where I picked up my rental car after my arrival – it was still before 6 a.m., even before breakfast time (!) – then starting to the long drive from Edinburgh to the North, passing Inverness following the A9 road (Scotland), then following the North Eastern coast of Ross-shire and Sutherland, and finally the slowing down on the almost endless and narrow roads (A897 and B871) across the remote backcountry of the Scottish Highlands – well – considering this never ending journey – the Garvault House certainly is “Mainland Britain’s Most Remote Hotel”. Not only Britain’s … in my opinion 😉