Seascapes
Ocean. Waves. Light. Coastal seascapes from California and Hawaii—dramatic Pacific sunsets, waves transformed into silky motion through long exposure, the Golden Gate Bridge meeting the sea. Time-lapse photography that turns water into art.
**China Beach Perfection** Waves crashing around rocks at China Beach with the Golden Gate Bridge in the distance beneath a vibrant, dramatic sky—one of my absolute favorite captures. China Beach offers an intimate perspective on the Golden Gate Bridge that few other locations provide. You're at sea level with the Pacific Ocean at your feet, rocks providing foreground interest, and the iconic bridge towering in the distance. When all the elements align—dramatic waves, perfect light, spectacular sky—this spot delivers some of the most dynamic coastal photography anywhere in San Francisco. I waited for the waves to crash around these particular rocks, timing the shot to capture that explosive moment when water meets stone. The sky cooperated with brilliant colors that only happen when atmospheric conditions are perfect. The Golden Gate Bridge anchors the composition in the distance, connecting the raw power of the ocean with the engineering marvel of the bridge. This image represents everything I love about shooting the California coast—the interplay of ocean, rock, sky, and that iconic bridge. It's chaotic and serene, powerful and beautiful, all in one frame. **Absolute favorite. China Beach magic. California coast at its most dramatic.**
**Crissy Field Textures** Sunset over San Francisco Bay with the Golden Gate Bridge in the distance—wind-sculpted sand ripples at Crissy Field Beach creating intricate patterns in the foreground. Crissy Field offers a different perspective on the Golden Gate Bridge—calmer, more contemplative than the dramatic wave-crashing spots. What makes this location special are these wind-created patterns in the sand, miniature dunes sculpted by the constant bay breeze. The ripples create natural leading lines that draw your eye toward the bridge in the distance. I positioned myself low to emphasize the sand texture, letting the ripples dominate the foreground while the bridge and sunset provide context and drama. The late afternoon light rakes across the beach at a low angle, highlighting every detail in the sand patterns—shadows and light creating depth and dimension in something as simple as wind-blown beach. This is the gentler side of San Francisco's waterfront. Not crashing waves and rocky shores, but soft sand, calm bay water, and the bridge standing sentinel in the golden hour light. **Quiet beauty. Textured foreground. Crissy Field at sunset.**
**Golden Stream** Ocean Beach at sunset—a stream from the Pacific flowing across the sand like liquid gold, massive rocks in the distance silhouetted against the vibrant golden sky. Ocean Beach is San Francisco's wild western edge, where the Pacific meets the city in dramatic fashion. This evening, the receding tide created a perfect stream cutting through the sand, and the low-angle sunset light transformed that water into flowing gold. It's one of those moments where natural elements align to create something almost surreal—water that looks like molten metal flowing toward the ocean. The composition came together naturally: the golden stream creates a strong leading line, drawing your eye from the foreground through the frame to the silhouetted rocks and the vibrant sunset beyond. The wet sand reflects the sky, doubling the golden tones and creating this cohesive warm palette throughout the entire scene. Ocean Beach offers endless photographic possibilities, but this particular combination—the stream, the rocks, the golden light—represents that perfect convergence of tide, light, and timing that landscape photographers chase. **Liquid gold. Ocean Beach sunset. Nature's alchemy.**
**Elements Aligned** Golden Gate Bridge to the right, vibrant sunset to the left, Marin Headlands and fog in the distance, with a river flowing to the ocean in the foreground—all the elements of a San Francisco coastal sunset in one frame. This composition captures the complete Bay Area coastal experience. The Golden Gate Bridge anchors one side, the dramatic Pacific sunset dominates the other, the Marin Headlands rise in the background shrouded in fog, and a stream cuts through the beach leading to the ocean. It's everything that makes this coastline special, all converging in a single image. I positioned myself to balance all these competing elements—giving each its space while creating a cohesive composition. The stream provides that crucial foreground interest and leading line, pulling your eye through the frame. The fog adds atmospheric depth, the bridge provides iconic recognition, and the sunset delivers the color and drama. Timing was critical: the light had to be right, the tide had to create that stream, the fog had to be at the perfect density. When all these variables align, you get moments like this—complete, balanced, quintessentially San Francisco. **Complete composition. All elements present. Coastal perfection.**
**Sun Star at China Beach** The setting sun perfectly aligned behind a rock pillar at China Beach—creating a dramatic sun star as waves crash around the formation, backlit by golden hour light. This shot required precise timing and positioning. I needed the sun to drop to exactly the right height—low enough to be partially obscured by the rock, creating that starburst effect, but high enough to still provide dramatic backlighting. The waves had to crash at the right moment, adding dynamic motion and spray. Everything had to align within a window of maybe five minutes. The sun star effect happens when you shoot directly at the sun with a small aperture—the camera's lens blades create those radiating light spikes. Combined with the silhouetted rock pillar and the explosive waves, it creates this dramatic interplay of light, stone, and water. The backlighting turns the spray into glowing mist, adding an ethereal quality to the raw power of the ocean. China Beach delivers again. Same location as another of my favorites, but an entirely different mood—more about light and timing than composition and sky. **Perfect alignment. Sun star magic. Light meets stone meets water.**
**Maui Golden Hour** Classic Hawaiian sunset—palm tree silhouetted against golden hour light, calm ocean, pristine Maui beach. This is the Hawaii of postcards and dreams, and it's real. A solitary palm tree leaning toward the ocean, soft sand, gentle waves, and that specific quality of golden hour light that only exists in the tropics. Maui's west-facing beaches deliver these sunset moments with remarkable consistency—warm light, calm water, and palm trees providing that quintessential island silhouette. I positioned myself to use the palm as a natural frame and focal point, its curved trunk creating elegant lines against the glowing sky. The calm ocean provides simplicity and serenity—a stark contrast to the dramatic crashing waves of California's coast. This is a different kind of coastal beauty: peaceful, warm, inviting rather than wild and powerful. Sometimes landscape photography is about capturing the iconic for good reason. This scene is classic Hawaii because it represents what makes the islands special—that perfect intersection of tropical beauty, golden light, and ocean tranquility. **Island paradise. Golden hour warmth. Classic Maui.**
**Fire and Water** Past sunset at Crissy Field—deep reds and oranges painting the sky, mud ripples with a stream reflecting the vibrant light like molten color, Golden Gate Bridge silhouetted in the background. This is the magic that happens after the sun drops below the horizon. Most photographers pack up when the sun sets, but often the most dramatic colors arrive in those minutes immediately after—when the sky explodes into deep reds and oranges that feel almost unreal. The stream cutting through Crissy Field's mudflats became a mirror for this spectacular sky, reflecting those intense colors across the textured foreground. The mud ripples add critical texture and depth, creating patterns that lead your eye toward the bridge. The Golden Gate Bridge becomes a dark silhouette, its iconic form recognizable even in shadow. The interplay between the textured earth, the reflective water, and the explosive sky creates layers of interest throughout the frame. This is patience rewarded. Staying past sunset, waiting for that post-sunset glow, being in position when the sky delivers its final dramatic show. **Post-sunset magic. Deep fire tones. Patience rewarded.**
**Blue Hour Bay** Earlier in the evening at Crissy Field—blue hour light mixing with orange sunset glow, the Golden Gate Bridge spanning the bay, beach and water in perfect tranquility. This captures that transitional moment between day and night, when the sky holds onto both warm sunset tones and the deep blue of approaching darkness. Blue hour is one of landscape photography's most magical times—the light is soft and even, colors are rich but not harsh, and there's a peaceful quality that daylight doesn't have. The bay was remarkably calm, creating subtle reflections of the bridge and sky. The beach in the foreground provides grounding and context, while the bridge connects the composition across the middle ground. The color gradient in the sky—from warm orange near the horizon to deep blue overhead—creates natural depth and atmosphere. Blue hour doesn't last long, maybe 20-30 minutes depending on conditions. You have to be in position, ready, waiting for that specific quality of light. This is the calm, contemplative counterpoint to the dramatic post-sunset reds—same location, same evening, entirely different mood. **Blue hour serenity. Transitional light. Bay Area calm.**
**Kirby Cove Sunrise** Explosive sunrise from Kirby Cove—dramatic sky painted in brilliant colors, waves crashing onto the beach, Golden Gate Bridge towering directly above. Kirby Cove requires commitment. The steep mile-long hike down from the road in pre-dawn darkness, carrying all your gear, knowing you'll have to climb back up—it's not for casual photographers. But when you arrive at this hidden beach beneath the Golden Gate Bridge and witness a sunrise like this, every step is justified. This morning delivered everything: the sky erupted in vibrant colors—oranges, pinks, purples painting the clouds in layers. The Pacific waves rolled in with perfect rhythm, crashing onto the beach and adding dynamic motion to the scene. And the bridge, towering directly overhead from this unique vantage point, provides that iconic San Francisco element that makes the location unmistakable. Being beneath the bridge rather than viewing it from afar creates an entirely different perspective—intimate, powerful, immersive. You feel the bridge's massive scale, hear the waves crash, watch the sky transform. This is one of my absolute favorite shooting locations. **Worth the hike. Explosive color. Kirby Cove magic.**
**The Photographer** Waves flooding around rocks at Baker Beach during sunset—a fellow photographer perched on a distant rock, capturing their own vision of the Pacific's power. This image captures what draws us to coastal photography. That lone figure on the rock, surrounded by churning surf, camera in hand, chasing the same perfect light and dramatic moment I was pursuing. We're all out there together—photographers scattered along the coast, each finding our own angle, our own composition, our own relationship with the ocean's beauty and power. The flooding waves add drama and movement, rushing around the rocks while the photographer remains focused on their shot. Sunset light bathes the entire scene in warm tones, turning the water golden and silhouetting the distant figure. It's a reminder that these moments aren't just about the landscape—they're about the human desire to capture and preserve beauty. Baker Beach attracts photographers for good reason. The combination of accessible coastline, dramatic waves, rock formations, and the Golden Gate Bridge creates endless possibilities. Sometimes the best shot includes acknowledging that we're all out here, doing the same thing, chasing the same light. **Fellow traveler. Shared passion. We're all chasing the light.**
**Tower Reflected** Golden sunset at Crissy Field—the Golden Gate Bridge's north tower perfectly reflected in the shallow waves, doubled in the water's mirror. Reflections at Crissy Field are tricky. The bay water is rarely still enough to create perfect mirror images, and the sandy bottom creates sediment that can cloud the water. But on this evening, conditions aligned: the tide was right, the water was calm enough, and the wet sand created a reflective surface that captured the bridge's north tower in stunning detail. I positioned myself low to maximize the reflection, letting the foreground water dominate the lower half of the frame. The golden sunset light illuminates both the actual tower and its watery twin, creating symmetry and doubling the visual impact of the bridge's iconic form. The gentle waves add just enough texture to make it interesting without destroying the reflection. This is the patient photographer's reward—waiting for the exact moment when tide, light, and water surface all cooperate. Crissy Field can deliver these reflection opportunities, but you have to be there at precisely the right time with the right conditions. **Perfect reflection. Golden light. Patience rewarded.**
**Soft Simplicity** One of my favorites—the Marin Headlands hills meeting the bay, captured in soft, gentle tones. Pure minimalism. Sometimes the best photographs are the quietest ones. No dramatic sunset, no crashing waves, no bold colors—just the gentle contours of the Marin Headlands rolling down to meet San Francisco Bay in soft, muted light. This is landscape photography stripped to its essence: land, water, atmosphere, and that specific quality of softness that only happens in certain light conditions. The simplicity is what makes this work. The hills create elegant curves against the calm bay, the soft light eliminates harsh contrasts, and the overall effect is meditative rather than dramatic. It's a photograph that asks you to slow down, to appreciate subtlety, to find beauty in restraint rather than spectacle. I captured this during one of those o