AMERICAN LANDSCAPES IV
PRINT RELEASE | WINTER 2025
December 13-14, 2025 | 36 HOURS
Begins Saturday, December 13th at 12-noon Eastern Time
Ends Sunday, December 14th at midnight Eastern Time
Select images, meticulously chosen from Daniel Shippey’s landscape & travel portfolios.
All prints signed & numbered by Daniel Shippey
— CLICK ON IMAGES FOR PURCHASE INFO & VIEWING —
Autumn Grist Mill — West Virginia
It’s no secret that West Virginia is one of my favorite states. It’s hard to believe I took this photo over six years ago in the Fall of 2019. Autumn in the Alleghenies is a beautiful display of fall colors. The Glade Creek Grist Mill at Babcock State Park is probably one of the most photographed places in the state but it draws me back periodically.
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8×12 Image Size - 10×14 Overall Size
14×20 Image Size - 16×22 Overall Size
18×28 Image Size - 20×30 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$50-$200
The Temple of the Sun and Moon - Utah
The Temple of the Sun and Moon - We drove our 4x4, high clearance truck up the Cathedral Road from Utah-24 to access Cathedral Valley. We rolled slowly over rough and rocky roads. Occasionally we would cross down and through sandy dry washes where water once flowed. It took us over two hours to reach the site. These giant eroded sandstone monoliths arose before us from the valley floor like an ancient place of worship. After parking, we hiked about a mile, right in between the features to this vantage point. It was hot and the sun was going down quickly and it was perfect. It is estimated that less than 1% of visitors to the Capitol Reef National Park make the lengthy backcountry journey to Cathedral Valley.
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14×20 Image Size - 16×22 Overall Size
17×25 Image Size - 20×30 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$125-$175
Steamboat Point - Utah
The ghost town of Giles, Utah, once existed between the base of Steamboat Point and the Fremont River. Steamboat Point is a commanding rock formation overlooking a remote stretch of terrain called the Blue Valley. Giles grew out of stubborn hope along the ever-flooding Fremont River. For a short time, it was a thriving community: Ranchers, farmers, and families carving out a life in this rugged landscape. Repeated floods carved away fields and destroyed bridges, wearing down the resolve of its residents. Eventually, hope was lost. Today, Giles exists as a ghost town, leaving only traces of its former self behind. Its story is written in scattered foundations, weathered timbers, and the abandoned farm equipment resting beneath the silent immensity of Steamboat Point.
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14×22 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
Color and Black & White Versions Available
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$100
The Labyrinth - Utah
Wind, water, and time have sculpted the Paunsaugunt Plateau into a surreal dreamscape. High above the surrounding desert, its rim opens into the bewildering amphitheaters of Bryce Canyon. From the edge, the terrain seems to drop away into a fragmented labyrinth of stone fins and spires. Thousands of slender hoodoos fill the void below. Up here, there is a sense of being suspended between two worlds: The lush alpine stillness above and the sculpted, otherworldly labyrinth below. Each world feels self-contained yet inseparably linked, shaped by ancient forces far older than memory.
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14×22 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
18×28 Image Size - 20×30 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$100-$200
Sleeping Bear Dunes - Michigan
Massive wind-shaped sand cliffs tower dramatically over the deep blue waters of Lake Michigan. From the top, it is 600 feet to the shore below. The dunes shift and ripple with time. To the west are the vast waters of the lake, the rolling hills of Leelanau County to the east, and the sound of waves crashing faintly below.
Native legends offer various stories as to how the dunes became known as the Sleeping Bear. One account tells the story of a mother bear and her two cubs who were forced into the waters of Lake Michigan in a desperate attempt to escape a raging forest fire in modern-day Wisconsin. The mother and her two cubs swam very far toward the other side, but eventually the cubs grew weak. She encouraged them, saying, “Try hard, the land is not far!” The mother reached the opposite shore first and climbed to the top of a high bluff to watch and wait for her cubs. However, the two cubs never appeared, having drowned within sight of land. The Great Spirit then created two small islands in remembrance of the cubs, which are North Manitou Island and South Manitou Island. And so, the mother still rests atop the dunes to this day, longing for her lost children.
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14×22 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
18×28 Image Size - 20×30 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$100-$200
Shafer Canyon Overlook — Utah
The Shafer Canyon Trail cuts a pale, dusty line across the vast red-rocked landscape of Canyonlands National Park. The trail begins far below the Island in the Sky mesa and winds across the open desert floor, appearing almost impossibly small against the immense scale of the canyon.
To me, this image conveys the staggering scale and solitude of Canyonlands. It's a place where landscapes stretch for miles, roads seem tiny, and the desert feels both vast and timeless.
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12×20 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$100
Winter Fortress - New York
Driving east from Buffalo, NY, we eventually encountered the Genesee River and the dramatic expanse of Letchworth State Park. This image captures the Upper Falls transformed into a winter fortress of snow and ice.
On this clear afternoon, the temperature hovered at a bitter 13 degrees Fahrenheit, and the gorge had settled into a sculpted, otherworldly stillness.
The waterfall itself continues to roar and churn, but everything surrounding it has frozen into heavy, terraced formations. The cliffs on both sides are coated in thick layers of ice, each ledge built up by the relentless spray. Long icicles—some stretching more than ten feet—hang in dense clusters that merge into solid walls of pale blue and white. A cloud of mist rises where the falls crash into the Genesee River, catching the muted winter sunlight and drifting upward like smoke.
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14x22 Image Size - 16x24 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$125
Twin Horizons - Colorado
At first glance, it looks like a classic alpine scene: Rugged mountain peaks catching warm, golden sunlight under a sky brushed with soft clouds. But the striking effect comes from the mirrored composition—the effect is achieved in-camera without editing. The mountain ridge and sky are reflected vertically—top and bottom—yet the center is filled with dark, gently rippling water. The reflection is not a perfect mirror; instead, the water distorts and softens the shapes, creating an abstract texture.
The upper half feels crisp and luminous: sunlit summits, vivid blue sky, and bright cloud formations. The lower half turns that clarity on its head—literally—with the inverted landscape submerged in shadowy water, the ripples breaking the reflection into shimmering fragments.
Overall, the image blends realism with abstraction, turning a familiar Rocky Mountain vista into something more ethereal—like a portal or a folded landscape where sky, stone, and water converge.
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14×22 Image Size - 16×24 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$125
Bentonite Blue - Utah
This solitary bentonite hill reveals muted bands of lavender, ash gray, pale blue, and rust. The desert holds its distance. No trees interrupt the view, no shadows demand attention. Only the slow language of geology speaks—layer upon layer of time laid bare beneath an open sky.
In this quiet place, the land does not perform. It simply exists, luminous and understated, inviting the viewer to slow down and listen to the earth thinking.
4x4 is recommended to reach this site and the broader depths of Cathedral Valley. Even off-road vehicles be warned—bentonite clay turns into a sticky, peanut butter-like consistency when water is added. It's always smart to check on road conditions before venturing out into remote areas.
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16×24 Image Size - 18×26 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$150
Great Lakes Pathway — Michigan
This pathway looks like countless others found along ocean shores, a narrow ribbon of sand shaped by wind and footsteps. But here, the water lapping at its edge is fresh, not salt—a quiet reminder that this shoreline belongs to the Great Lakes. Despite its inland location, the scene carries the familiar rhythm of a coastal beach. The photograph was taken along Au Train Bay, where Lake Superior stretches outward with a presence that feels more like a sea than an inland body of water.
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9×12 Image Size - 11×14 Overall Size
12×20 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$50-$100
Hueco Tanks — Texas
Hueco Tanks is a stark, high-altitude desert basin in West Texas, just east of El Paso. These massive granite boulders and low domes dominate the terrain and are clustered together like a natural fortress emerging from the Chihuahuan Desert. The rock is deeply pocked in places, shaped by many years of weathering. At sunset, the landscape glows warm and golden under the Texas sun.
The site takes its name from huecos, meaning natural hollows and basins worn into the granite that collect rainwater. These pockets are scattered across the rock faces and ledges, creating rare sources of water in an otherwise arid environment.
Indigenous peoples took refuge here for thousands of years, leaving behind incredible pictographs painted beneath rock overhangs and inside sheltered alcoves. Animals, symbols, and human forms still mark the stone.
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12×20 Image Size - 14×22 Overall Size
17×25 Image Size - 20×30 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$100-$175
Dead Tree — Georgia
This old dead tree stands alone in an open field in Thomas County, Georgia. Located only a few miles from the Florida state line, this is tree is about as far south in South Georgia as you can get. I’m not sure what kind of tree it was, how long it has been dead or how it died. I do know that even in death it is still a beautiful sight. I could not have asked for a better sunset to capture this moment.
This is the only returning print option in this release. All of the other photo prints below are brand new.
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12×18 Image Size - 14×20 Overall Size
14×22 Image Size - 16×24 Overall Size
Giclée Printed on Moab Natural Rag Archival Paper
$75-$125