Savanah – A Study in Autumnal Light and Contemporary Portraiture

Savannah R. McCarthy’s portrait near a lake in Fort Collins, Colorado, exemplifies the intersection of technical skill and environmental awareness. Utilizing a Sony A7ii and hybrid lighting, the photographer achieves a balanced composition. The image captures both the subject’s essence and the surrounding autumn atmosphere, showcasing the challenges of outdoor location portraiture.

Woman in a floral dress stands by a calm lake with autumn trees reflected in the water behind her.
Savannah R. McCarthy stands near a lake in City Park, Fort Collins, Colorado.

This portrait, positioned within Chapter 4 of the photographer’s Top 100 Journey—dedicated to studio, outdoor, and workshop portraiture—demonstrates a refined synthesis of technical precision and environmental awareness. Captured at City Park in Fort Collins, Colorado, the image presents subject Savannah R. McCarthy against a backdrop of autumn foliage reflected in still water, creating a layered composition that balances human presence with seasonal atmosphere.

The technical approach reveals deliberate choices in both capture and illumination. Utilizing a Sony A7ii paired with an 85mm f/1.8 lens, the photographer achieves the classic compression and shallow depth of field characteristic of this focal length, allowing the subject to emerge distinctly from the softened background. The addition of off-camera flash—a Godox V1s modified with a shoot-through umbrella—introduces controlled fill light that counters the warm, golden-hour ambient illumination without overwhelming it. This hybrid lighting strategy creates dimensional modeling on the subject’s face while preserving the environmental context that gives the portrait its sense of place and time.

The compositional structure follows conventional portrait wisdom while incorporating subtle complexities. Savannah’s central placement and direct gaze establish immediate connection with the viewer, yet her hand position and slight body angle introduce movement and naturalism into what might otherwise read as overly formal. The floral-patterned dress, with its earth tones and botanical motifs, creates visual harmony with the autumn setting—a choice that feels intentional rather than coincidental, suggesting collaborative styling decisions between photographer and subject.

What distinguishes this work within the broader context of Chapter 4 is its demonstration of location portraiture as a distinct discipline requiring different considerations than studio work. The photographer must contend with uncontrolled elements—changing natural light, environmental distractions, weather conditions—while maintaining the polish and intentionality associated with studio practice. Here, these challenges have been successfully navigated, yielding an image that feels both spontaneous and carefully constructed.

The color palette deserves particular attention. The warm golds and oranges of the background foliage, reflected and doubled in the water’s surface, create an enveloping atmosphere that could easily overwhelm the subject. Yet the photographer’s lighting choices ensure Savannah remains the primary focal point, her cooler-toned skin and the cream base of her dress providing necessary contrast. The post-processing work in Luminar 4 appears restrained, enhancing rather than transforming the captured moment—a hallmark of mature digital darkroom practice.

Within the photographer’s evolving body of work, this image represents a confident handling of outdoor portrait challenges that likely stems from the workshop experiences referenced in the chapter title. The ability to work efficiently with supplemental lighting in natural settings, to read and respond to environmental conditions, and to direct subjects toward authentic yet flattering expressions—these are skills typically refined through repeated practice and instruction.

As part of the Top 100 Journey project, “Savanah 06” occupies a space between formal portraiture and environmental storytelling. It succeeds neither purely as character study nor as landscape with figure, but rather as an integration of both impulses—a portrait that acknowledges its moment in time and place, capturing not just a person but an experience of autumn light beside still water.

Boulder Creek Long Exposure

The aerial photograph of Boulder Creek, captured with a DJI Mini 3 Pro drone, showcases a harmonious blend of long exposure techniques and modern technology. The composition balances flowing water and angular granite boulders, creating an abstract visual narrative that highlights the juxtaposition of motion and permanence in landscape photography.

Long-exposure view of flowing creek water cascading over large rocks in a narrow channel.
Long-exposure water flows over boulders in Boulder Creek along Boulder Canyon Drive, Colorado.

This aerial perspective of Boulder Creek represents a striking departure in both technical approach and creative vision, captured not with traditional camera equipment but with a DJI Mini 3 Pro drone equipped with a Freewell ND2000 filter. The photographer’s willingness to embrace emerging technologies while maintaining classical long exposure techniques demonstrates an adaptive practice that refuses to be constrained by conventional methodologies. Shot at 6.7mm with ƒ/1.7 aperture, 1/2 second exposure, and ISO 100, the image transforms cascading water and weathered granite into an abstract study of motion and permanence.

The aerial vantage point offers what might be termed a “god’s eye” perspective—looking directly down upon the creek as it navigates through massive boulders along Boulder Canyon Drive. This top-down orientation fundamentally alters the traditional landscape viewing experience. Rather than observing the scene from a human standpoint at creek level, the viewer hovers above, granted access to compositional relationships and water patterns typically invisible from ground perspective. The half-second exposure blurs the rushing water into silken ribbons that weave between dark stones, creating organic shapes that appear almost calligraphic against the textured rock surfaces.

The geological elements provide crucial counterpoint to the flowing water. Angular granite boulders, their surfaces marked by striations and mineral deposits, display warm ochre and gray tones that anchor the composition’s cooler water tones. These stones reveal billions of years of geological history—compression, uplift, erosion—rendered in layers and fractures visible even from the drone’s elevation. The photographer frames the scene to balance solid mass with liquid movement, allowing neither element to dominate but instead creating a dynamic equilibrium between opposing forces.

The technical execution demonstrates sophisticated problem-solving. Achieving long exposure effects from an airborne platform presents unique challenges—the drone itself must remain perfectly stable while the camera shutter stays open. The ND2000 filter proves essential, reducing light transmission sufficiently to permit a half-second exposure in daylight conditions without overexposure. At ƒ/1.7, the lens operates wide open, yet the minimal depth of field concerns inherent in macro or portrait photography become irrelevant when shooting from such elevation; everything within the frame exists at roughly equivalent focus distance.

Within Chapter 2—Florida Landscapes & Cityscapes—this Colorado waterway continues the photographer’s geographic expansion evident throughout this section of the Top 100 Journey. The consistent choice to photograph Rocky Mountain landscapes suggests deliberate exploration of environments radically different from Florida’s flat, subtropical character. Perhaps this juxtaposition serves the project’s broader narrative: an artist defining his vision through contrast, discovering what landscape means by experiencing its various manifestations across diverse topographies.

“Boulder Creek Long Exposure 001” ultimately represents the democratization of aerial perspective through consumer drone technology, married to time-honored long exposure aesthetics. The photographer recognizes that tools matter less than vision—that a small drone can produce work as artistically valid as traditional large-format equipment when wielded with intention and compositional awareness. The image stands as testament to adaptive practice in contemporary landscape photography, where technical innovation serves timeless artistic goals.

Night at the Marina: A Study in Urban Reflection

The photograph from Greg Urbano’s Top 100 Journey captures St. Petersburg’s Municipal Marina at night, showcasing a dialogue of architecture, water, and light. Through a long exposure, the image blends city and reflection, revealing duality in urban nature. Urbano’s technical choices highlight Florida’s beauty within its metropolitan context.

Nighttime long exposure photograph of the St. Petersburg, Florida skyline viewed from the Municipal Marina, with boats and colorful reflections on calm water.
Long exposure nighttime view of the St. Petersburg skyline from the Municipal Marina.

In this striking nocturnal composition from Chapter 2 of Greg Urbano’s Top 100 Journey, the photographer transforms St. Petersburg’s Municipal Marina into a stage where architecture, water, and light perform an intricate dialogue. Shot with a Nikon D610 at the wide end of an 18-35mm lens, the image demonstrates his evolving command of the Florida landscape—this time rendered not through the state’s iconic natural vistas, but through the geometry and luminescence of its urban waterfront.

The technical approach reveals deliberate choices that serve the image’s contemplative mood. A 150-second exposure at f/20 has allowed the photographer to capture not merely a moment but an accumulation of light and stillness. The water becomes a flawless mirror, its surface so calm that the distinction between city and reflection dissolves into symmetry. This extended duration smooths away any transient ripples, creating an almost surreal doubling effect where the marina’s vessels and the downtown skyline exist in perfect vertical equilibrium.

The color palette is equally considered. The twilight sky transitions from deep violet to warm amber along the horizon, providing a graduated backdrop that never competes with the main subject. The buildings’ golden illumination—ranging from honey tones to brilliant white—creates rhythmic vertical accents across the frame, while the marina lights introduce unexpected splashes of emerald and ruby that punctuate the composition with chromatic variety. These colored reflections stretch and shimmer in the foreground water, adding texture to what might otherwise be an overly static scene.

Compositionally, the photographer has positioned himself to maximize the reflection’s impact while maintaining architectural legibility. The yacht in the immediate foreground serves as an anchor point, its substantial form providing scale and depth to the scene. The vessel’s subtle green illumination connects it visually to the reflected lights while distinguishing it from the darker water surrounding it. Behind, the forest of masts creates a delicate counterpoint to the solid mass of the high-rises, introducing organic irregularity into an otherwise geometric composition.

What distinguishes this work within the Florida Landscapes & Cityscapes chapter is its meditation on duality—the way human development interacts with the natural world, specifically water’s capacity to both accept and transform urban light. The photographer has found in St. Petersburg’s marina a location where Florida’s maritime character persists even within its metropolitan context. The palm fronds visible at the frame’s edge remind viewers of the subtropical environment, preventing the scene from becoming generically urban.

The technical execution supports this conceptual balance. The ISO 160 setting has preserved clean shadows and prevented noise in the darker areas, while the narrow aperture has rendered sharpness from the foreground yacht to the distant towers. The starburst effects visible on some light sources—a result of the f/20 aperture—add a subtle decorative element without overwhelming the image’s naturalistic foundation.

Within his broader body of work exploring Florida’s diverse landscapes, this photograph represents an important expansion of scope. Here, the photographer demonstrates that the state’s visual poetry exists not only in its Everglades, beaches, and wetlands, but also in the moments when its cities pause and reflect—literally and figuratively—upon themselves. The result is an image that honors both the constructed and the elemental, capturing a Florida that is simultaneously modern and timeless.

Tampa Panoramic at Night: A Study in Urban Luminescence

The panoramic long exposure photograph of downtown Tampa captures its urban beauty at night from the University of Tampa. This 2014 composition emphasizes artificial light’s role in depicting the cityscape, blending architectural detail and varied illumination. It challenges perceptions of Florida, asserting urban environments as significant alongside natural landscapes, showcasing the photographer’s technical skill and versatility.

Panoramic long exposure composite of downtown Tampa, Florida, photographed at night from across the Hillsborough River, showing illuminated skyscrapers, waterfront reflections, and dramatic clouds.
Panoramic long exposure view of downtown Tampa at night, captured from the UT campus across the Hillsborough River.

In this commanding 2014 panoramic composite, the photographer captures downtown Tampa’s nocturnal identity with technical precision and compositional sophistication. Selected for Chapter 2 of his Top 100 Journey—Florida Landscapes & Cityscapes—the image represents a pivotal moment in his exploration of urban environments, where the built landscape becomes a canvas for light, reflection, and architectural rhythm.

The photograph was executed from the University of Tampa campus, positioned across the Hillsborough River to establish both physical and aesthetic distance from the subject. This vantage point proves strategic: the river functions not merely as foreground but as an active participant in the composition, its surface transforming into a liquid mirror that doubles the visual impact of the skyline. The long exposure technique smooths the water into a reflective plane, allowing the city’s illumination to paint streaks of gold, pink, and violet across the lower third of the frame.

What distinguishes this work within the chapter’s broader narrative is its treatment of artificial light as a defining characteristic of place. While Florida’s natural landscapes—its coastlines, wetlands, and subtropical flora—typically dominate photographic representations of the state, this image asserts the validity of the urban experience as equally worthy of documentation. The photographer approaches Tampa’s skyline not as an intrusion upon nature but as a distinct ecosystem of glass, steel, and light, possessing its own aesthetic logic and visual poetry.

The panoramic format extends the horizontal axis, emphasizing the sprawl and variety of Tampa’s architectural character. Twin residential towers anchor the composition’s center, their construction-phase lighting creating vertical counterpoints to the horizontal sweep of the skyline. To the right, a cylindrical high-rise glows amber, its illuminated facade creating a beacon within the frame. The building adorned with pink-magenta accent lighting introduces chromatic variation, preventing the warm-toned dominance from becoming monotonous. This diversity of illumination—commercial, residential, decorative—reveals the stratified nature of urban nightscapes, where different lighting purposes create unintentional visual harmony.

The technical execution merits attention. Creating a panoramic composite requires not only multiple exposures stitched seamlessly but also consistent exposure values across frames and careful management of the long exposure duration. The photographer balances ambient light with the stronger point sources of building illumination, preventing blown highlights while retaining detail in darker architectural elements. The clouded sky, rendered in motion-blurred copper tones, provides textural contrast to the sharp geometry below.

Within the context of the Top 100 Journey, this image demonstrates the photographer’s versatility in approaching Florida’s varied visual territories. While subsequent work in this chapter may explore the state’s natural drama—storm systems over the Gulf, the crystalline waters of its springs, the atmospheric density of its wetlands—this urban portrait establishes his comfort with diverse subject matter and technical approaches. The photograph argues for Tampa’s inclusion in the visual narrative of Florida, asserting that the state’s identity encompasses both wilderness and metropolitan sophistication.

The image remains a testament to the possibilities inherent in patient observation and technical mastery, transforming a familiar skyline into a study of light, color, and urban form.

The Gateway Image: Passagrille Jetty Silhouette and the Dawn of a Photographic Vision

In a 2014 photograph taken at Passagrille Beach, Greg Urbano captures a stunning sunset over the Gulf of Mexico, which inspires his beach photography. Featuring a silhouetted fisherman against an orange sky, the image combines technical skill and emotional depth, symbolizing Urbano’s artistic journey and his evolving relationship with landscape imagery.

Silhouette of a lone fisherman standing on a rock jetty at Passagrille Beach during an orange Gulf of Mexico sunset, photographed with a Nikon D7100 at 24mm.
A 2014 sunset silhouette of a fisherman on the rock jetty at Passagrille Beach, Florida.

In the context of Greg Urbano’s “Beginnings” chapter, this 2014 sunset photograph from Passagrille Beach holds particular significance—not merely as a technically accomplished image, but as a foundational moment that would shape the photographer’s artistic trajectory for years to come. The image captures that precise intersection where technical competence meets emotional resonance, creating what Urbano himself identifies as his “inspiration for years of beach photography.”

The compositional structure reveals a photographer already thinking in strong geometric terms. The jetty’s dark pathway cuts through the frame with striking linearity, creating a powerful visual corridor that draws the viewer’s eye toward the observation platform at the terminus. This use of leading lines demonstrates sophisticated spatial awareness, transforming the rocky breakwater into a narrative device—a journey into the sublime moment captured in the sky above.

What distinguishes this photograph from countless other sunset images is Urbano’s commitment to silhouette as an artistic choice. Shot at ƒ/11 with a relatively slow shutter speed of 1/20 second at ISO 100, the exposure prioritizes the spectacular gradation of color in the sky while allowing the foreground elements to fall into deep shadow. The lone fisherman—barely discernible yet unmistakably present—becomes an everyman figure, a contemplative sentinel witnessing the day’s transition. This human element, reduced to pure form, prevents the image from becoming merely a spectacular sky study; instead, it grounds the natural drama in human experience.

The technical execution warrants examination. Using the Nikon D7100 with a 10-24mm lens at its maximum 24mm focal length, Urbano captures an expansive view that encompasses both the architectural elements of the jetty and the full breadth of the atmospheric display. The cropped sensor’s field of view provides enough width to establish context while maintaining focus on the central narrative. The aperture choice of ƒ/11 ensures sharpness throughout the frame, from the textured rocks in the immediate foreground to the distant horizon where sea meets sky.

The color palette—ranging from deep oranges and burning yellows to subtle purples and grays in the cloud formations—displays nature at its most theatrical. Yet Urbano’s restraint in post-processing (evident in the natural tonal transitions) allows the scene to speak with authenticity rather than hyperbole. This restraint would become a hallmark of his approach, distinguishing his work from the over-saturated aesthetic that dominates much contemporary landscape photography.

Perhaps most revealing is Urbano’s own reflection on this image as inspirational—a north star that guided subsequent explorations. One can trace forward from this moment to understand his ongoing fascination with the Gulf Coast’s theatrical sunsets, his appreciation for human elements within natural landscapes, and his sophisticated use of silhouette as a storytelling device. The photograph represents not an endpoint but a beginning, a discovery of visual vocabulary that would be refined and expanded throughout his career.

In the broader context of the “Beginnings” chapter, this Passagrille jetty image serves as both literal and metaphorical gateway—the concrete walkway leading toward beauty, the artist’s path toward photographic maturity, and the viewer’s invitation into Urbano’s evolving body of work.

Lady in a Hat: A Study in Perspective and Presence

In 2013, Greg Urbano’s photograph “Lady in a Hat” encapsulated his experimental spirit in photography. Taken at a Veterans benefit car show in Florida, it features a classic car and a woman in a hat, illustrating the dynamic between subject and observer. This image showcases the evolution of Urbano’s artistry and HDR techniques, emphasizing compositional storytelling.

HDR photograph from a 2013 car show featuring a woman wearing a hat standing near classic vehicles, taken with a Nikon D5100 at 10mm.
A 2013 HDR photograph from a Veterans benefit car show at Bay Pines VA in Pinellas County, Florida.
Shot with a Nikon D5100.

In the early years of Greg Urbano’s photographic journey, there existed a willingness to experiment boldly with emerging digital techniques—a quality that would become foundational to his artistic identity. “Lady in a Hat,” captured in 2013 at a Veterans benefit car show in Bay Pines, Florida, exemplifies this experimental spirit while revealing an intuitive understanding of compositional storytelling that would define his later work.

The photograph presents a gleaming black classic car, its hood raised to display immaculate chrome and engineering, positioned at a dramatic low angle that transforms the vehicle into something monumental. But what elevates this image beyond typical automotive photography is the deliberate inclusion of a figure in the background—a woman in a distinctive hat, observing the scene. This compositional choice transforms what could have been a straightforward documentation of mechanical beauty into a meditation on observation itself, on the relationship between spectator and spectacle.

Urbano shot this image with a Nikon D5100 at 10mm, an ultra-wide focal length that creates pronounced perspective distortion. The technical settings—f/10 at 1/320s, ISO 160—suggest bright midday conditions, yet the photographer’s use of HDR processing pushes the tonal range far beyond what the camera captured in a single exposure. This was 2013, when HDR photography was experiencing widespread popularity in automotive and architectural work, and Urbano was actively exploring its possibilities. The processing intensifies the reflections on the car’s black paint, brings out texture in the engine bay, and maintains detail in both the bright Florida sky and the shadowed undercarriage.

What makes this image significant within the context of Chapter 1—Beginnings is not its technical perfection, but rather what it reveals about the photographer’s developing eye. The ultra-wide perspective could easily overwhelm the frame, yet Urbano maintains balance through careful positioning. The car dominates the foreground, grounded by fallen leaves and grass texture, while the human element remains present but unobtrusive in the middle distance. This suggests an emerging awareness of layered storytelling, of creating images that reward sustained viewing.

The title itself demonstrates artistic intentionality. “Lady in a Hat” redirects our attention from the obvious subject—the pristine classic car—to the peripheral human presence, suggesting that the photographer understood even then that compelling photographs often exist in the tension between primary and secondary subjects, between what commands attention and what quietly observes.

This photograph also documents a specific moment in Urbano’s technical education. HDR processing, with its characteristic emphasis on local contrast and detail recovery, taught photographers of this era to see scenes in terms of tonal relationships rather than single exposures. This training in visualizing extended dynamic range would later inform his approach to lighting and exposure, even when shooting single frames.

Within the broader narrative of the Top 100 Journey project, “Lady in a Hat” represents the necessary phase of bold experimentation that precedes refinement. It captures a photographer unafraid to push processing techniques to their limits, to shoot from unconventional angles, and to include elements that complicate rather than simplify the frame. These imperfect attempts, as Urbano himself acknowledges, formed the foundation for everything that followed—a reminder that artistic growth requires the courage to create before one fully understands how.

Under Golden Gate Bridge, 2010: Engineering as Art

In this 2010 photograph, Greg Urbano captures the underside of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge from Fort Point, showcasing its geometric elegance and structural beauty. This early work signifies Urbano’s evolving artistic vision, highlighting unique perspectives and the interplay of architecture and art, while demonstrating the potential of innovative photography tools.

Top 100 Journey – Early Vision

Upward view through the geometric steel framework beneath the Golden Gate Bridge from Fort Point, showing symmetrical orange-red trusses, concrete support pillars, and San Francisco Bay visible through the structure.
Beneath the Golden Gate Bridge from Fort Point, San Francisco – Architectural Photography 2010. Unique upward perspective capturing the intricate steel framework, geometric patterns, and engineering details of San Francisco’s iconic suspension bridge. View of San Francisco Bay through the International Orange structural beams and trusses.

This striking composition from 2010 captures the underside of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge from Fort Point, revealing an intricate world of geometric patterns and structural elegance that most visitors never encounter. The photograph represents a pivotal moment in Greg Urbano’s photographic journey—an early work that demonstrates his emerging ability to transform industrial architecture into compelling visual poetry.

Shot with a Samsung NX100 at 22mm, the image presents a masterclass in symmetry and depth. The famous International Orange paint transforms the steel framework into a chromatic study, its warm coral-red tones contrasting beautifully against the cool concrete of the bridge’s support piers. Through the latticed structure, fragments of turquoise water and distant mountains create a layered composition that draws the eye through multiple planes of depth.

What distinguishes this photograph is its unconventional perspective. Rather than capturing the Golden Gate Bridge from the typical vantage points—across the bay or from the Marin Headlands—Urbano positions himself directly beneath the structure, looking upward through its architectural skeleton. This choice reveals the bridge not as an icon but as an engineering marvel, a cathedral of steel where form and function merge into unexpected beauty.

The technical execution shows thoughtful consideration of exposure and composition. At ƒ/4.5 and 1/250s, the photographer maintains sharpness throughout the frame while preserving detail in both the shadowed steel and the bright sky beyond. The ISO 100 setting ensures clean image quality, allowing the intricate patterns of rivets, crossbeams, and diagonal bracing to remain crisp and legible. The 22mm focal length provides enough width to capture the structure’s overwhelming scale while maintaining proper perspective control.

The geometric complexity invites prolonged viewing. X-patterns and triangular forms repeat throughout the composition, creating a rhythm that feels almost musical. The vertical piers anchor the image, while the diagonal members create dynamic tension. This interplay between stability and movement, between the monumental and the intricate, gives the photograph its visual power.

Within the context of Urbano’s early photographic development, this image reveals an artist learning to see beyond the obvious. The decision to climb Fort Point, to look upward rather than outward, demonstrates curiosity and willingness to explore unconventional viewpoints. These qualities—the search for fresh perspectives, the appreciation of overlooked details, the ability to find abstraction within reality—would become hallmarks of his mature work.

The photograph also captures a specific moment in technological transition. The Samsung NX100, one of the early mirrorless cameras, represented new possibilities in digital photography. This image proves that vision matters more than equipment—that a photographer’s eye can create compelling work with whatever tools are available.

Ultimately, “Under Golden Gate Bridge, 2010” succeeds because it transforms a familiar landmark into something unfamiliar and wondrous. It asks viewers to reconsider what they think they know, to look more carefully at the structures around them, and to appreciate the unexpected beauty hiding in plain sight. For a photographer still finding his voice, it represents an important early statement: architecture can be abstraction, engineering can be art, and poetry can be found in steel.

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