Friday, February 21, 2020

Albany Pine Bush Sky [Series]















Albany Pine Bush Skies [Series]
Albany Pinebush Preserve
Albany, New York 

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Dunham Creek | 02.16.2020


Dunham Creek | 02.16.2020
Grafton Lakes State Park
Grafton, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved

On-location in Grafton, New York | 02.16.2020


On-location in Grafton Lakes State Park
Grafton, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved

Skies of the Albany Pine Bush


Skies of the Albany Pinebush 
Large Format Poster

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved


Thursday, February 13, 2020

After the Storm | 02.08.2020


After the Storm | 02.08.2020
Halfmoon, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved



Fresh Snow | 02.07.2020


Fresh Snow | 02.07.2020
Halfmoon, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved



On Location | Albany Pine Bush Preserve


On-Location | 02.06.2020
Albany Pinebush Preserve
Albany, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved



Monday, February 3, 2020

Daybreak Pinebush | 02.03.2020


Daybreak Pinebush
The Albany Pinebush Preserve
Albany, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved

Light + Fog | 01.30.2020



Light + Fog | 01.30.2020
Tomhannock Reservoir
Valley Falls, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved


Driftwood Dinosaur | 01.30.2020


Driftwood Dinosaur | 01.30.2020
Tomhannock Reservoir
Valley Falls, New York

© 2020 John Bulmer Photography + Nor'easter Films
All Rights Reserved

Behan Communications: A Year in the Park: What Caught Our Eye






As featured in Behan CommunicationWhat Caught Our Eye, February 1, 2020

A YEAR IN THE PARK: John Bulmer has been a professional photographer since 1999, but he and photography go back much further than that.  His dad is a photographer, too, and John grew up with a darkroom in the basement and “endless hours’’ in a hunting blind with a camera waiting for a deer to come along or in a rowboat waiting for a beaver to surface. He remembers being bored to tears then. Now, he says, “I realize it taught me the patience that’s required to get past the obvious images and angles and capture something unique and memorable.’’ As a child, John discovered Grafton Lakes State Park, all 2,500 acres on the plateau between the Taconic and Hudson Valleys and came to know it well. “I have a long history with the park in every season and all sorts of weather conditions. All these years later, the park still shows me new things with each visit. I firmly believe our state parks and public lands are treasures that need to be protected and secured for future generations (and) compelling photography helps further that cause by highlighting the beauty and fragility of places like Grafton.’’ On average, John shoots in various locations like Grafton 40 to 50 times per year. He makes a special point to shoot in less-than-ideal weather conditions that present the opportunity to capture Grafton’s many moods. “Shooting a subject in all varieties of conditions and times of the day is an enduring lesson I learned in art school: It’s really the only way to tell the story of anything properly.” With pride, we present John Bulmer’s A Year in the Park.