William Neill
William Neill, an American photographer and resident of Yosemite National Park area since 1977, is a renowned nature and landscape photographer. Neill's award-winning photography has been widely published in books, magazines, calendars, posters, and his limited-edition prints have been collected and exhibited in museums and galleries nationally. Neill has received the Sierra Club's Ansel Adams Award for conservation photography.
Neill's assignment and published credits include National Geographic, Smithsonian, Natural History, National Wildlife, Conde Nast Traveler, Gentlemen's Quarterly, Travel and Leisure, Wilderness, Sunset, Sierra and Outside magazines. Also, he writes a regular column, On Landscape, for Outdoor Photographer magazine. Feature articles about his work have appeared in Life, Outdoor Photographer, and Communication Arts. His corporate clients have included Sony Japan, Canon USA, Nike, Nikon, and The Nature Company.
He is the photographic author of many books, including The Sense of Wonder, The Tree, By Nature's Design, The Color of Nature, Traces of Time, Yosemite: The Promise of Wildness, Landscapes Of The Spirit, William Neill – Photographer, a Retrospective, and Light on the Landscape.
April 10, 2011 at 10:58 AM
Thanks Donnie.
April 8, 2011 at 10:04 PM
I love thi shot.
March 30, 2011 at 11:15 PM
Seriously underpriced – maybe.
I just downloaded Meditations in Monochrome, to complete my collection of your ebooks. On the once-through-quickly it looks nice. I’ll chew on it over the months to come. But the price… I’d easily pay $20, when I decide that I want such a book. $10, $15, $20 wouldn’t make a difference once I decide I want it. That would be in my “price of a pizza” category. But then, I had previously decided that I wasn’t going to get that one, at least not last time I was buying. But when you dropped the price to $5, it was just a matter of how long it took me to find the time in my schedule. “Price of an ice cream cone” does not have to make it past my budget censor. If I want it, I get it, no deliberations needed.
So, I value the ebook way more then $5, but the price was such that I spent the money when I hadn’t before. (That $10 price was making it likely, but $5 pushed it over into the “just do it now” category.) May you make a big wad of money from however you price things.
March 28, 2011 at 10:34 AM
Thanks for the feedback!
March 27, 2011 at 1:05 PM
It’s funny. As I look at this I seem get the same feeling that I might have if everything were tack sharp. I am relieved of examining every little thing for sharpness, though. It seems to capture the essence of the scene with the parts that would not contribute.
March 24, 2011 at 2:23 AM
I like this. Very ephemeral.