The Bow River and Mountain Peaks of the Sawback Range (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: It was definitely a beautiful day in May looking down the Bow River with the blue skies above and hillsides a tree stretching on the horizon...

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The Bow River and Mountain Peaks of the Sawback Range (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: It was definitely a beautiful day in May looking down the Bow River with the blue skies above and hillsides a tree stretching on the horizon...
My Drawings - Banff National Park Morants Curve by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: Morant's Curve and the Canadian Pacific Railway. For me, this has become an iconic and favorite overlook while spending time in Banff National Park. I recall first coming to this spot many a decade ago on a trip with a friend and her family back in the late 90s, While I didn't know much of the area back then, that has most definitely changed since then with about four visits! I never tired of seeing the Canadian Rockies and the national parks all around that area...I doubt I ever will! So that's the general story of this image and my love of the Banff area in Alberta. The image I posted is here on Flickr (www.flickr.com/photos/14723335@N05/23891815504/in/album-7...). For the painting portion of this image, this was another chance to practice (and even refine) some techniques on painting trees. When I first started on this, knew I wanted something different so that a nearby forest of trees didn't look like a blob but getting that has seemed easier said that done. It was then that I looked at a few other favorite painters and tried the technique I used here by not trying to paint out a tree but an outline of some and then using some broad and fine brush strokes to paint out different hues and shades. The look when standing back from the painting seemed to give a much better look and feel to actual trees. The other areas of the painting was stuff I'd been practicing on with a shimmering look across flowing waters and minimizing hues and shades used with clouds to make them more realistic. But the real fun part of the painting was doing something a friend and painter told me once in how you can paint anything...even if it wasn't there :-) So on that day, there wasn't a train from the Canadian Pacific Railway coming by, but it didn't stop me from imagining one and painting it. I used another image from a more recent trip to paint that portion. Not wanting to get bogged down in too many details with the box cars of a train, I focused more on a block-like and shapes with sharper edges. I could use slight variations of hues and shades to create an illusion details. In the middle foreground of the painting, you'll find that stick figure image of me "hiking" with my Cubbies hat, loving my time exploring the Canadian Rockies once again. Yes, I know...I was behind a camera and tripod that day, but I'd much rather be hiking in those mountains :-)
When I Am Around the Mountains, I Want to Reach Up and Touch the Skies Above (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: A setting looking to the southeast while taking in views from Morant’s Curve along the Bow Valley Parkway in Banff National Park. My thought on composing this image was to pull back on the focal length and have the mountains and forest filling up most of the image. I used the PeakVisor app on my iPhone to identify the specific peaks present.
By highway, love, and byway (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: A setting looking to the southwest while taking in views of ridges and peaks with Storm Mountain while at a roadside pullout along the Banff-Windermere Highway. This is in Banff National Park. The caption used is from a poem. Over the Land Is April by Robert Louis Stevenson
Roadways Should Have Mountains Beauty for Those Driving (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: At a roadside pullout along the Banff-Windermere Highway near the Castle Mountain Viewpoint. This is in Banff National Park with a view looking to the southwest to the ridges and peaks of Storm Mountain. With this image, I decided to include the road with all the signage and light poles to add perspective for the mountains towering above. I zoomed in with the focal length, so that I would include only the mountainside landscape to my front.
Storm Mountain as a Backdrop for a Forest of Evergreens (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: While at an overlook to the Bow River along the Bow Valley Parkway with a view looking to the southwest and a backdrop of ridges and peaks the Ball Range with Storm Mountain. This is a Banff National Park.
In My Mind Mountains Rise (Banff National Park by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: In My Mind Mountains Rise With an Afternoon Glow of Sunshine For me to stand in awe Charmed with woods An evergreen smell A Fresh Feel of Waters Flowing by to a distant place A Wednesday to Enjoy Even if only now in memories Another work of short poetry or prose to complement the image captured one afternoon at Morant’s Curve in Banff National Park. This is at an overlook along the Bow Valley Parkway with a view looking to the southeast. The downstream view is not the typical one at this location as most focus on looking to the mountains around the Lake Louise area with the Bow Range. But as I read a web article a few years back, it\'s important to look other directions and capture that beauty present.
When I Am Around the Mountains, I Want to Reach Up and Touch the Skies Above (Banff National Park) by Mark Stevens Via Flickr: A setting looking to the southeast while taking in views from Morant’s Curve along the Bow Valley Parkway in Banff National Park. My thought on composing this image was to pull back on the focal length and have the mountains and forest filling up most of the image. I used the PeakVisor app on my iPhone to identify the specific peaks present.