Fly Fishing Photography Prints

Still looking for a great gift for someone or something for yourself? How about a print? I have had many inquiries over the last week or so and have included print prices in this post. All prints are made on archival, museum quality, fine art papers. If you need help selecting a print for someone else, feel free to email me.

Rise Form. Late Fall. Silver Creek, Idaho

Here is a size & price list:

6" X 9" Print:  $80.00

10" X 15" Print:  $125.00

16" X 24" Print:  $220.00

24" X 36" Print:  $315.00

Email me at: ndprice@cox.net to order or with any questions. Print prices do not include shipping or sales tax.

Punta Mita, Mexico

Just got back from a trip down to Punta Mita and put together a dozen or so images.  Punta Mita is about 45 miles north of Puerto Vallarta and still has the small village charm. We were some of the very few gringos down there. Click on any of the images below to see a larger version.

Tzhaui, pronounced Sow ee, pictured above is a talented surfer coming in second place in the Men's Mexican National Championships in longboarding. He carries a huge smile and a perpetual stoke for the water.

Tzhaui

Street Food. Chicken & Corn Tortillas. Perfection.

A Punta Mita Face

Sunset. Punta Mita, Mexico

Putting It All Together.

Tzhaui

Punta Mita Street Life

Emma, A Talented Punta Mita Chef, Prepares Shrimp

The Next Generation.

Derek Elbert Finding His Line

The Villa

In Between Sessions. Andy Dorn Goes Poolside With The Stand-Up

Una Tienda. Punta Mita

Tzhaui. Speed Trim

Bull Moose

This moose was stuck in my back yard last night. Somehow got over the fence but couldn't get out... Anyway, I noticed him by my sliding glass window on the back deck around 6 am. He was surprisingly calm for the predicament he was in. I opened our back gate and a few minutes later he wandered out. The image is after he set himself free.

Bull Moose. Hailey, Idaho

Nikon D3s & Nikon 35mm Æ’2 lens

Image Details: Æ’2, 1/13th sec, 12,800 iso

Streamers, Storm & Silver Creek

We are in the middle of a relatively warm and super wet storm here.  Above 7,000 feet we are expected to get around four feet of snow.  Below about 5,700 feet it's been all rain so far and down around Picabo today there was heavy rain for a short period and broken stormy skies for the remainder.  Below are images shot today on Silver Creek.  It's streamer time down there.  Cloudy days are usually better.  Today was just OK but the wild skies and weather made up for it. We spent about two hours on the water.

Dan Higgins setting up for the next to-the-bank-cast.  Silver Creek, Idaho

Nikon D3s and Nikon 14-24 Æ’2.8 lens

Final Day On The Silver Creek Preserve

Today was the final day of the fishing season upstream of the highway 20 bridge on Silver Creek.  That includes the Nature Conservancy section and the Double R reaches. Fishing does stay open downstream of the highway 20 bridge through February.  The streamer fishing on this section can be stellar on warmer cloudy days...

Stalker Creek Rainbow

A late season rainbow released yesterday on the Silver Creek Preserve, Idaho.  A few Baetis here and there and lots of spooky hard to approach fish. Nikon D3s and Nikon 14-24 Æ’2.8 lens

Silver Creek Fall Baetis

A November Baetis. Nikon D3s and Nikon 105 Micro lens plus extension tubes.  Converted from RAW using NIK's Silver Effex Pro 2.

Dragonfly

OK, it's the time of year I generally go back through my images to mainly delete the garbage and get it off my hard drive and to make sure images are properly keyworded. I occasionally find an image or two I like though.  Here's one of a dragonfly taken on Silver Creek.  Nikon D200 & Nikon Micro 105 lens.

Dragonfly.  Silver Creek, Idaho

Rising Rainbow

I cannot imagine someone watching me get the shot below. I laid stomach down on a rocky steep bank of the Big Wood River right in front of a foam eddy that frequently has a bunch of feeding fish. Today there were enough midges to get the fish going and a few of those fish came within inches of the bank I was awkwardly perched on. The fish came by in front of me so close I needed my macro 105 lens. The minimum focus on my 200 mm lens is about six feet which is far too long. Over about 45 minutes time I had two fish cruise through the foam within about five inches of my front element.  Given the amount of foam in the eddy, the fish couldn't see me. I will certainly be heading back to this spot to try and get the perfect tail or fin slicing through the foam image...

A rainbow slices through a foam eddy on the Big Wood River, Idaho.

Nikon D3s, Nikon Micro 105 lens

November Baetis

The images below were taken today on Silver Creek. Pretty warm at the Creek when I was there; about 44 degrees but windy. The baetis came off anyway and there were fish up on them. This particular baetis was about a size #18. For all of you wanting one more day on the Nature Conservancy section, this is the final week of the season. Everything on Silver Creek upstream of the Highway 20 Bridge will be closed starting December 1st. 

I used the Nikon Micro 105 with an extension tube for these images.  Between 12:15 and about 1:30 there were a lot of baetis.

Click on any of the images to view a larger version.

The fish were far more skittish today and did not let me get very close.  I did manage to get a couple of frames just after a take or two.

Yellowstone River

Below is a three image panorama of the Yellowstone River near Pray, Montana. It was taken using the tilt and shift function on the Nikon 24 pc-e lens.  Putting together a panorama using a tilt/shift lens and utilizing the photomerge tool in Adobe's Photoshop is really painless.  The file size increases as well.  The image above is about 105 megabytes and 18 megapixels.  I tilted the lens down about 1 degree to maximize the depth of field.

Yellowstone River.

Will Price walks a ridge line.  Paradise Valley, Montana

Wind, clouds and grass.  Paradise Valley, Montana.

Rise & Water

A Silver Creek Rainbow slashes through early November, crystal clear, spring water.

ƒ2.8, 1/5000th of a second, iso 280, 200mm

 

ƒ2.8, 1/8000th sec, iso 280, 200mm

 

ƒ2.8, 1/2500th sec, iso 280, 200mm

Prior to taking the images above I waded about stomach to chest deep and the water got pretty close to the top of my waders.  No big deal.  Slow current.  Business as usual.  When I finished shooting I took 2 steps the wrong direction and went shoulder deep and filled my waders.  I had more fun stalking these fish with my camera than I could have ever imagined. 

I never used a polarizing filter as I wanted some reflection in the water and for the water to loose a little of it's often perfect transparency.

Nikon D3s, Nikon ƒ2.8 80-200 afs lens