Cerro Torre, night view with stars

Comments and questions about the photo essays published on JuzaPhoto.

Poston Fri Mar 12, 2010 10:57 am

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Shooting data: Cerro Torre, night view with stars - Canon EOS 1Ds Mark III, Canon EF 300mm f/2.8 L IS USM, 30" f/2.8, iso 200, tripod. El Chalten, Argentina.

The Canon 300mm f/2.8 is not the classic landscape lens. That said, sometimes the telephotos are the key for unique landscapes: if you are not satisfied by the result you get with wide-angles, try a longer focal to focus the attention on a detail of the landscape!

This photo is taken from the first viewpoint on the Cerro Torre, about 1 hour from El Chalten (1.30h if you have a ton of photographic equipment). I visited the viewpoint for the first time at sunset, with my travelmate Emanuele C. I immediately realized I needed a long lens - the mountain was quite distant. The sunset was not that great, the mountains were completely in backlight so it was not possible to appreciate the golden light of late evening. I absolutely wanted to take a good photo of Cerro Torre so I proposed to Emanuele to wake up at 4 a.m. next morning...eh eh...you can imagine his answer...but I really wanted that photo, so I decided to come back anyway. I thought that the sunrise was at 6 a.m. and I estimated about 1h 30' of walk, considering I had to walk in the night and I had done the trail only one time before, with daylight.

Next morning, I left El Chalten only with 1DsIII, 300 2.8, tripod and the awesome LiteXpress Workx 500 torch, a very powerful LED torch (thanks Sandro :-)). Of course there was nobody around...only silence, stars and a light wind! I walked fast and I arrived at the viewpoint at 5.15 a.m. ...wow! It was pitch black. Later, I discovered that sunrise was at about 6.50 a.m., so I had to wait almost two hours. I had not planned to take night photos, but since I was there...let's try! I mounted the 300mm on tripod and I tried to compose the photo. The viewfinder was pure black so I had to compose by trial and errors; the same for focus: I put the focus ring rear infinity, I toke a test shot, I moved again the focus ring by a little bit, another test shot, and so on, until I managed to get the image in focus. The camera was in manual mode; I set the aperture on f/2.8, exposure 30" and I tried various ISO settings - at ISO 200 I got the correct exposure. It was amazing! The mountains look a lot brighter than the scene I could see by naked eye, and the stars were rendered as star trails! One note: as always, judge the exposure by using the histogram. You should never thrust the image preview on the LCD screen of the camera because it is inaccurate, in particular for night photos, when the darkness of the surrounding environment makes the LCD screen look much brighter than usual.

After these night photos, I patiently waited for sunrise. It was fascinating to see the sky slowly turning brighter, and when the first rays of sun painted the mountain...wow! The colors were unbelievable! The Cerro Torre, painted by red, really looked like a mountain of Mars. The colors of the sunrise photos were so strong that during post processing I have had to reduce saturation - this is a very rare thing :-) For the night photo, instead, I have just increased a bit the contrast. The photo is a bit dark: it would have been very easy to increase the brightness, but I preferred to leave some darkness, to transmit the feeling of mystery an peace of the night.

One last thing: this is a 100% crop of the photo, to show you up close the top of the mountain. Cerro Torre is considered one of the most difficult mountains of the world by climbers: it is 3128 meters high and it has an almost vertical 1200 meters granite wall. On the top, there is the so-called "mushroom", an unstable formation of ice and snow that you can clearly see in this crop.

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respirándonos, miramos la campiña que adormece el sol,
los valles y los bosques y la humilde flor,
las islas navegando por la soledad...
Juza
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Poston Fri Mar 12, 2010 11:00 am

By the way, a group of Italian climbers recently reached the top of Cerro Torre, you can see their photos and report on NG: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adven ... estri.html and http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adven ... torre.html . More info about this fascinating mountain can be found on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerro_Torre
respirándonos, miramos la campiña que adormece el sol,
los valles y los bosques y la humilde flor,
las islas navegando por la soledad...
Juza
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Posts: 5391
Location: Italy

Poston Fri Mar 12, 2010 11:27 am

I really enjoyed reading that Juza. Both your account of how the photograph was taken and the incredible story of the how this peak was climbed, and the sad history behind it. I love mountains, but my attemtps to get up them always stops if there is any proper climbing involved, and scrambling is my limit (I'm not good enough with heights). So I find it amazing and awe inspiring that that someone would want to climb a peak like that. Some great info on taking shots at night and it is very useful because when I tried some night shots recently I had the same problems of not being able to focus, so it's good to see how you tackled it. There is fantastic detail in that 100% crop and it's a real testament to the 300mm f2.8 L and the 1Ds mkIII. So a great shot, of an amazing mountain, with an incredible story behind it.
SteB
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Poston Fri Mar 12, 2010 3:19 pm

great job juza, and hard work :) great result. thanks for share.
pbrandao
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Poston Sat Mar 13, 2010 1:27 am

A good narrative Juza, my son does a fair bit of lightning photography at night. He has made a marks on his lens barrel with white -out paint where true infinity is to help his set-up in the dark.
pointr
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Poston Sat Mar 13, 2010 8:23 pm

A very nice story and a superb shot, indeed.
Kudos for you to endure all that time alone up there and to be able to compose and focus that well under the given conditions.
The picture looks impeccable in terms of exposure and the mountains and sky behind it look most impressive. There is a definite benefit for not having any haze and/or light pollution :)
Personally, i might be inclined to crop out the right part (with the darker mountain) and maybe even go for a square format then...but this is just one idea...hope you don't mind :)
Anyway, great stuff! BRAVO!
horia
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