Between Stone and Forest, Wind River, Washington, 2026
A black-and-white photograph of the Wind River moving through basalt, moss, and winter forest near Carson, Washington.
https://t.co/hC7GIPByev
#stevebisig#blackandwhitephotography#landscapephotography
Drawn Together, Capital State Forest, Washington
A black and white photograph of Porter Creek after steady rain, where moving water briefly gathers into balance before continuing downstream.
https://t.co/ouHvxqTOnx
Where the River Slows, Deschutes River, Tumwater, Washington
A quiet black and white photograph of the Deschutes River near Tumwater, where the current softens before opening into Capitol Lake.
New blog post:
https://t.co/4eTY2MrCO4
Fog filled the valleys while the ridges remained suspended above the clouds on the Olympic Peninsula.
I wrote a new blog post about photographing this shifting landscape and the quiet atmosphere that formed around it.
https://t.co/4caLJKWWFx
Descent Through Stillness, Olympic Peninsula, Washington
The moon had already crossed most of its path.
Hours after rising above the ridgeline, it slowly returned toward the trees. Quiet movement. Easy to miss if you weren't watching.
https://t.co/kNl1YSKRtj
The Shore Opens, Percival Cove, Olympia, Washington
A quiet transition along Percival Cove. Sometimes a landscape opens slowly, and the feeling changes before you realize it.
https://t.co/HkJNeGfmi0
#blackandwhitephotography#washingtonstate#pnw
Some rivers change direction quietly.
I photographed this winter scene along the Wind River in southwest Washington while exploring how movement, structure, and stillness work together in black-and-white photography.
https://t.co/AQ0BQKmxZK
Water was the only thing moving quickly that morning.
“Currents at First Light” explores the changing surface of a creek in Capital State Forest, Washington through black-and-white photography and long exposure.
New blog post:
https://t.co/Y1ugD7Am16
#blackandwhitephotography
Fog gathered slowly beneath the ridges on the Olympic Peninsula while the forest stayed suspended above it.
New on the blog:
“At the Edge of Stillness, Olympic Peninsula, Washington”
https://t.co/cohpxUVg5v
A narrow section of an Olympic Peninsula creek where the water compresses before opening again downstream.
Part of a larger study of how flow and structure change within the same landscape.
https://t.co/B6RhEkuRjJ
Some moments don’t announce themselves.
Silent Ascent shows the moon rising over a forested ridge on the Olympic Peninsula. Quiet. Slow. Easy to miss if you’re not looking.
See the full image and story:
https://t.co/yeYn16biUw
Edge of Still Water, Percival Cove, Olympia, Washington, 2026
A quiet shoreline along Percival Cove, where winter branches press into the fog and the water holds a soft reflection.
https://t.co/zclMXYI2bb
A new photograph and short reflection from a morning along a creek after heavy rain.
It’s about movement, and how things begin to settle if you stay with them.
https://t.co/dE9SncEiaP
The moon stayed longer than expected.
A quiet moment before sunrise on the Olympic Peninsula, where nothing moved, and everything felt settled.
I wrote about this scene and what drew me to it:
https://t.co/XMM0cC91Pz
The photographs people live with the longest are rarely the loudest.
They’re the ones that feel steady. Familiar. Grounded.
A simple guide to choosing photography for your home:
https://t.co/N89l3FlxlC
Most people don’t choose a photograph because it matches a wall.
They choose it because something in it stays with them.
I wrote a simple guide to choosing black and white photography for your home:
https://t.co/N89l3FlxlC