Artwork by Peter Thoeny
Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
The silken fog by Peter Thoeny
Breaking rules on New Year's eve by Peter Thoeny
The morning fog may chill the air, I don't care by Peter Thoeny
How I wish you were here by Peter Thoeny
Seasons fireballs by Peter Thoeny
The fog kept on rolling in by Peter Thoeny
Chilling at Half Moon Bay by Peter Thoeny
Super bloom in California desert by Peter Thoeny
Miner's Club, cash only by Peter Thoeny
Mind your own business by Peter Thoeny
Stop. Look. Enjoy. by Peter Thoeny
Dreaming about the Extraterrestrial Highway by Peter Thoeny
A burning sensation is near by Peter Thoeny
Downtown Gotham City by Peter Thoeny
Standing strong for thousands of years - monochrome by Peter Thoeny
San Francisco skyline and SCU Lightning Complex by Peter Thoeny
Things left unsaid by Peter Thoeny
We'll never know if the escape was successful by Peter Thoeny
A million light reflections pass over me by Peter Thoeny
Fishing at sunset by Peter Thoeny
Would you like to buy a gift for your wife? by Peter Thoeny
Walking into a brighter year ahead of us by Peter Thoeny
Pilgrimage through the silent cemetery by Peter Thoeny
Hand-rolling the tea leaves the traditional way by Peter Thoeny
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About Quality HDR Photography
Peter Thoeny loves to travel and is fascinated with photography since high school in Switzerland. He first used a simple camera on his trips abroad, then for many years shot manually with a Rollei 35. Film was expensive in those days, and when traveling on a shoestring he had to carefully use and compose the shots. He learned to compose images when he did charcoal drawings and paintings while visiting Italy and other places in Europe. Peter now lives in the Silicon Valley for 18 years, and is an instructor at the Digital Photo Academy teaching photography in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Peter loves to travel with a small camera bag. He mostly uses a Sony A7 II and a Sony A6000 mirror-less camera with a variety of prime lenses. He usually takes bracketed exposures and processes RAW images to get most out of a camera. Peter uses Photomatix Pro for HDR processing on a Macbook Pro. After that he mainly uses Pixelmator for final touches.
"Photography, as a powerful medium of expression and communications, offers an infinite variety of perception, interpretation and execution." ~ Ansel Adams
Inspired by this quote, Peter strives to compose photos that tell a story and evoke emotions. His motto is 20% gear, 40% composition, 40% post-processing. Peter specializes in quality HDR (High Dynamic Range) photography, which is his passion for the last 3 years. He uses HDR processing mainly to work around the technical limitations of cameras by carefully post-processing images with the goal to reconstruct the feeling and the emotions he had while taking the exposures. His images don't have this typical "HDR look" - most of the time you can't even tell they are HDR processed. The main purpose of the processing is to be able to look at an image on screen or print, and see what the human eyes actually saw out in the field - the best cameras, screens and prints are still no match to the quality of human eyes.
Photos are released under a royalty-free or rights-managed license for commercial use, and the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license for non-commerical use. Note on copyright infringement for improper use of the artwork: Depending on infringement, settlements claims will be in the range of US$5,000 to $20,000, plus legal fees.
Many more HDR photos are listed at Peter's Flickr stream - contact Peter if you like to get a print of an image not listed here, or you like to get a license for commercial use.
Peter's other passion is to deploy collaborative technologies at the workplace, with the goal to make work more effective and transparent. He is the founder and CTO of TWiki.org, inventor of structured wikis, and co-author of the Wikis for Dummies book. Leading the open source TWiki project for many years, he learned to teach and learn in a collaborative way. He loves to teach photography in the same way.