Spring, certainly the prettiest time of year in Texas, is especially beautiful in the areas around Austin where Joe Englander has made his home. There are reasons the National Wildflower Research Center is located in Austin, and spring in the Hill Country is one of them: bluebonnets can be so thick that hills appear covered with water, and Indian paintbrush can be so red that sunsets seem to make the land catch fire.
This weekend session will be fast moving and instruction oriented. We will cover macro, light tents, reflectors, fill-flash, and many other useful and important techniques. We will have the opportunity to discuss wide-ranging topics necessary for successful photography. The session begins Friday afternoon and ends Sunday evening. If you are flying into Austin, please plan accordingly.
Wildflowers are wild and unpredictable. They move from location to location and sometimes don't appear at all. So these sessions are planned for the Texas Hill Country where will have opportunities for photographing Texana as well as Texas Wildflowers. Both are great subjects and provide lots of learning opportunities for both beginning and advanced participants.
This page requires frames for proper display. If your browser does not support frames, please see our text-only site for complete information about this workshop or tour.
If your browser does support frames and you reached this page directly through a search, it will look much nicer on the frames page.