It seems we’re seeing more and more females come to the table as landscape/nature photographers as of late, but you’ve been doing this since 1992. Tell us about the early days being a female in the field, and what your’e seeing today.
I really didn’t give a second thought about being a female in the field of nature photograph when I started. While there were not that many women landscape photographers, there were some. When I was doing art shows many years ago I would see Anne Xu at the same shows with stunning landscapes of China and Dianne Poinski as well with her serene hand painted scenes. Plus there are women nature photographers, like Elizabeth Carmel and Linde Waidhofer that are doing incredibly well in the field.
I really don’t know why there were fewer women doing nature photography. Now I see even more women, young women too like Gabby Salazar, doing nature photography and I like that. Many women have asked me about safety since I often go shooting by myself, for both day and night. I usually say, well I have a metal tripod and it is just a big metal bat. You can go with someone for safety and invite a friend, family member or find someone in a local meet up group or photo club to go photographing with. It is fun to have company.
I changed from portraits to nature photograph in 2000 and didn’t really consider it a possibility as a way of earning a living doing it before that, but I should have. If you are a man or a woman, you can get out there, be in nature and enjoy doing nature photography.
So if we got our hands on your camera bag, what would we find in there?
I am going out to shoot landscapes next so my landscape gear is in the bag. Different things for different shoots, of course. I use the 200-400mm for wildlife but for Landscapes, my staples right now are the 16-35mm f/4, 24-70mm f/2.8 and 100-400mm f/4-5.6 or 70-300 f/4-5.6. Then I have a wide range of focal lengths. I usually bring another wide-angle lens such as 11-24mm f/4, 17mmTS f/4 or for stars 24mm f/4 is my favorite. I will bring the Canon EOS 5DS R for landscapes and the Canon EOS 5D mark III for night photography.
For accessories, my favorite is the Peak 4x loupe to be able to see the image on the LCD screen in bright light and for focusing or other detailed image review. You will find polarizers, graduated and solid neutral density filters too. Plus a rain jacket for the camera, water proof ground cloth and chamois to wipe the lens when it gets wet.