Yosemite National Park, California, United States | 'Where Granite Meets the Sky'
Yosemite is one of those places that makes even seasoned travelers go quiet. Carved by glaciers over millions of years, the valley floor cradles a landscape so monumental it feels almost fictional: sheer granite walls rising thousands of feet, waterfalls threading down mossy cliffs, and meadows that glow a luminous gold in late afternoon. The Ahwahnechee people lived here for centuries before John Muir famously championed its protection, and the park became one of the first in the world to be set aside for public enjoyment in 1864. There is a reverence built into this place, a collective hush that visitors from every corner of the earth seem to share the moment they round the bend and see El Capitan for the first time.
Painting Yosemite means wrestling with a palette that shifts dramatically from season to season and hour to hour. The foundational tones are cool and mineral: blue-grey granite, pine shadow, and the pale silver of snowmelt streams. Come spring, a wash of soft sage and wildflower yellow breaks through the valley floor, while autumn deepens everything into amber, burnt sienna, and warm ochre. The waterfalls themselves catch the light like spun glass, demanding the most delicate wet-on-wet technique to capture their movement without overworking the paper.
