Frank Jensen Photography - Image Gallery   Image Gallery
  Frank Jensen Photography 20000511
 :: about  :: galleries  :: services  :: products  :: contact ::
 Start
 
Action Shots
Utah Cowboy - FJ_0023_LE
This photograph is an in motion shot at slow shutter speed.  The picture was taken with a 150mm lens on a Hasselblad camera to emphasize the movement. Buffalo Round Up - FJ_0236
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he’d reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He’d missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in   present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other... In Pursuit - FJ_0284
The story goes, Brigham Young laid out the main thoroughfares of what was to be downtown Salt Lake City wider than needed to be to quell the profanity of mule skinners as they maneuvered their heavy freight wagons through city streets.  True or not, Salt Lake has some of the widest boulevards of any of the western cities, and that is fortunate, for the population of the Great Salt Lake City area now stands at over a million.  The City itself is laid out in a grid pattern, sandwiched between t... The Chase Is On - FJ_0285
The story goes, Brigham Young laid out the main thoroughfares of what was to be downtown Salt Lake City wider than needed to be to quell the profanity of mule skinners as they maneuvered their heavy freight wagons through city streets.  True or not, Salt Lake has some of the widest boulevards of any of the western cities, and that is fortunate, for the population of the Great Salt Lake City area now stands at over a million.  The City itself is laid out in a grid pattern, sandwiched between t... More Coming Soon!
Architecture More» 
LDS Temple - FJ_0272
The story goes, Brigham Young laid out the main thoroughfares of what was to be downtown Salt Lake City wider than needed to be to quell the profanity of mule skinners as they maneuvered their heavy freight wagons through city streets.  True or not, Salt Lake has some of the widest boulevards of any of the western cities, and that is fortunate, for the population of the Great Salt Lake City area now stands at over a million.  The City itself is laid out in a grid pattern, sandwiched between t... Out Of Gas - FJ_0473_LE
In 1876 Jerome was a cluster of canvas and board shacks perched on Cleopatra Hill, above some the richest copper deposits in the Arizona Territory.  With the boom came a motley mix of miners, freighters, gamblers, saloonkeepers and prostitutes, as well as respectable gentry, preachers, wives, and children. They were American, Mexican, Croat, Italian, Chinese, and others.  Through the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the mines prospered, and a town of brick and frame buildings replaced the ... Mission At Las Trampas - FJ_0243
Before the American Revolution, before the Declaration of Independence from England, the Spanish missions had firmly established Spain’s presence in North America.  Built of materials of the land, mud and brick and raw timber, many still survive as icons of New Mexico’s past.  The two mission churches I happened upon while touring New Mexico seemed to me a study in contrast.  One, the gleaming white San Geronimo de Taos, is the centerpiece of the thriving Taos Pueblo.  The other, locked in th... Cross At Las Trampas - FJ_0244
Before the American Revolution, before the Declaration of Independence from England, the Spanish missions had firmly established Spain’s presence in North America.  Built of materials of the land, mud and brick and raw timber, many still survive as icons of New Mexico’s past.  The two mission churches I happened upon while touring New Mexico seemed to me a study in contrast.  One, the gleaming white San Geronimo de Taos, is the centerpiece of the thriving Taos Pueblo.  The other, locked in th... San Geronimo Mission - FJ_0245
Before the American Revolution, before the Declaration of Independence from England, the Spanish missions had firmly established Spain’s presence in North America.  Built of materials of the land, mud and brick and raw timber, many still survive as icons of New Mexico’s past.  The two mission churches I happened upon while touring New Mexico seemed to me a study in contrast.  One, the gleaming white San Geronimo de Taos, is the centerpiece of the thriving Taos Pueblo.  The other, locked in th...
Entertainment
Whirling Rides At The Utah State Fair - FJ_0287
The story goes, Brigham Young laid out the main thoroughfares of what was to be downtown Salt Lake City wider than needed to be to quell the profanity of mule skinners as they maneuvered their heavy freight wagons through city streets.  True or not, Salt Lake has some of the widest boulevards of any of the western cities, and that is fortunate, for the population of the Great Salt Lake City area now stands at over a million.  The City itself is laid out in a grid pattern, sandwiched between t... Salt Lake City Arts Festival - FJ_0304
The story goes, Brigham Young laid out the main thoroughfares of what was to be downtown Salt Lake City wider than needed to be to quell the profanity of mule skinners as they maneuvered their heavy freight wagons through city streets.  True or not, Salt Lake has some of the widest boulevards of any of the western cities, and that is fortunate, for the population of the Great Salt Lake City area now stands at over a million.  The City itself is laid out in a grid pattern, sandwiched between t... Park City Arts Festival - FJ_0305
Park City is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow. Park City is also known for other festivities.  The Sundance Film Festival is held in Park City and in the summer the town has a well renowned Arts Festival.  This is a photograph of an entrancing sculpture taken at the festival with a 35mm Nikon camera. More Coming Soon!
Fauna More» 
Migration - FJ_0235
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he'd reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He'd missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other, ... Snowy Egret In Flight - FJ_0237
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he’d reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He’d missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in   present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other... Tundra Swans In Flight - FJ_0238
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he’d reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He’d missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in   present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other... Seagulls In Flight - FJ_0239
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he’d reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He’d missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in   present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other... Flock Of Seagulls - FJ_0240
When famed mountain man Jim Bridger sampled its salty waters he thought he’d reached the Pacific Ocean.  How wrong he was. He’d missed the ocean by some 500 miles and instead was looking upon the barren expense of the Great Salt Lake.  The Lake, which is 76 miles long and 30 miles at its widest point, is a remnant of one of two ice-age lakes, which filled the Great Basin 25,000 years ago.  One of them, Lake Bonneville in   present day Utah was named after the surveyor who mapped it. The other...
Flora More» 
Evening Primrose - FJ_0034_LE
This Photograph was taken at first light with a Mamiya 645 camera on a tripod using a Macro lens to capture the detail. Joshua Tree - FJ_0059_LE
The Joshua Tree (Yucca Brevifolia) may have loomed like a prophet of doom to those pioneers venturing onto the southern deserts of Utah, Nevada, and California.  The tree’s twisted branches rise no more than fifteen feet while in the spring its tips are bright with clusters of bell-like cream-colored flowers.  The extreme southwestern tip of Utah represents the northernmost limit of its habitat. Joshua Tree - FJ_0060_LE
The Joshua Tree (Yucca Brevifolia) may have loomed like a prophet of doom to those pioneers venturing onto the southern deserts of Utah, Nevada, and California.  The tree’s twisted branches rise no more than fifteen feet while in the spring its tips are bright with clusters of bell-like cream-colored flowers.  The extreme southwestern tip of Utah represents the northernmost limit of its habitat. Quaking Aspen - FJ_0069_LE
Summer’s “first green is gold, her hardest hue to hold,” wrote the poet Robert Frost.  So it is with the Aspen. Also known as the quaking aspen, or white aspen for the color of its bark.  It grows in thickets across the mountain fastness of the West, dobbing the breast of the peaks with spring green, and in the autumn with flamboyant hues of yellow and red.

This photograph was taken using a Hassleblad Superwide camera in the autumn of 1978.
Quaking Aspen - FJ_0070_LE
Summer’s “first green is gold, her hardest hue to hold,” wrote the poet Robert Frost.  So it is with the Aspen. Also known as the quaking aspen, or white aspen for the color of its bark.  It grows in thickets across the mountain fastness of the West, dobbing the breast of the peaks with spring green, and in the autumn with flamboyant hues of yellow and red.

This photograph was taken using a Hassleblad Superwide camera in the autumn of 1978.
Landscapes More» 
Fisher Towers - FJ_0032_LE
This photograph was taken in the early morning to catch the reflection on the river, and the highlights on the towers.  The image was captured with a Nikon 35mm camera using a 35 to 80mm zoom lens. Coyote Gulch III - FJ_0368_LE
Coyote Gulch is located in Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.  A favorite place for hikers; they can experience the beauty of the water cascading over the slick rock. The monument is a spectacular gorge emptying into the Escalante River Canyon. Hikers into the gulch will find Jacob Hamblin Arch and Coyote Bridge, two of the area’s most impressive natural rock spans.  At the gulch’s mouth is Stevens Arch, perched hundreds of feet above the canyon floor. Anasazi “Ancient Ones” ... Days End - FJ_0389_LE
Described by Mark Twain as “the loveliest fleet of islands that lies anchored in any ocean,” geographically it is the most diverse island of the archipelago, with magnificent beaches, deserts, rainforests, volcanoes and snow capped mountains.   The exact date of the first inhabitants is unknown and probably will remain so forever. But sometime after the beginning of the Christian era, Polynesians first set foot on these islands. Linguistic and cultural evidence suggest that the first inhabita... Capitol Dome - FJ_0007_LE
Capitol Reef National Park is a wrinkle in the earth’s crust, carved by the forces of erosion into grand cliffs, pinnacles, great buttes, and deep canyons.  Its rock walls are stained by “desert varnish” in hues of greens and tints of red, while reefs of clay banded by intense hues of purple appear to emerge from the very depths of the earth.  It was these banded formations, so magnified at first light, or at sunset that purportedly caused the ancient Anasazi Indians who inhabited the region ... Lone Rock-Padre Bay - FJ_0014_LE
When I first saw Lone Rock in 1960, it was a solitary monolith that towered over Wahweap Creek, a minor side canyon that emptied its muddy contents into the Colorado River above the dam site.  Today it is mostly buried by the waters of Lake Powell, a lone sentinel amid the expanse of Padre Bay.  Also lost is the crossing where the padres Escalante and Dominguez traversed what was then an intractable wilderness in the year 1776.
Native American Architecture More» 
Poncho House Ruin - FJ_0063_LE
Today, Poncho House may not be standing.  The photograph of these fragile ruins was take in 1962 when much of the Pueblo dwelling site lay in rubble.  Only part of what may have been a tower remains standing, bolstered by a shear-overhanging cliff.  The ruin is in the 4 corners area of southeastern Utah within sight of Monument Valley.

The image was captured with a Hassleblad superwide c camera.
Perfect Kiva - FJ_0141
In the Hopi language, Kiva means, “underground structure”.  The prehistoric Anasazi and Mogollon cultures used kivas, first noted in 900 A.D.  Today, the Puebloan people, specifically the Rio Grande Valley, Acoma, and Hopi groups use them for ceremonial purposes.  The National Park Service, allowing people to climb inside, has partially restored the “Perfect Kiva” in the Grand Gulch of Southern Utah. Hovenweap National Monument - FJ_0017_LE
It was William H. Jackson, a pioneer photographer, who in 1874 photographed a small cluster of ruins in the southeastern corner of Utah and applied the name Hovenweap, a Ute Indian word meaning “deserted valley.”  The people who abandoned this site as well as numerous others across the four corners region were the Anasazi, “The Ancient Ones”, who’s descendants are the modern-day Pueblo.  For 2,000 years they farmed the semi-arid valleys of the San Juan River, living in small villages, growing... Poncho House Ruin - FJ_0061_LE
Today, Poncho House may not be standing.  The photograph of these fragile ruins was take in 1962 when much of the Pueblo dwelling site lay in rubble.  Only part of what may have been a tower remains standing, bolstered by a shear-overhanging cliff.  The ruin is in the 4 corners area of southeastern Utah within sight if Monument Valley.

The image was captured with a Hassleblad superwide c camera
House Ruin (Cropped) - FJ_0062_LE
Today, Poncho House may not be standing.  The photograph of these fragile ruins was take in 1962 when much of the Pueblo dwelling site lay in rubble.  Only part of what may have been a tower remains standing, bolstered by a shear-overhanging cliff.  The ruin is in the 4 corners area of southeastern Utah within sight if Monument Valley.

The image was captured with a Hassleblad superwide c camera
Native American Rock Art More» 
Fighting Figures Petroglyphs - FJ_0129
The Glen Canyon Recreational Area offers opportunities for water recreation as well as backcountry adventures.  The area stretches for hundred of miles offering scenic vistas, geologic wonders, and archeological sites, as seen in this photograph of the “fighting figures” petroglyphs. Grand Gulch II - FJ_0132
The Grand Gulch in Southeastern Utah is remote and rugged and is assessable only on foot or with the use of pack animals.  This photo shows pictographs made by the Anassazi “Ancient Ones” inhabitants of the area between 700 and 2,000 years ago.  The earliest inhabitants of the area were believed to be the Basket Weavers whose culture developed into the Pueblo culture. Grand Gulch - FJ_0133
The Grand Gulch in Southeastern Utah is remote and rugged and is assessable only on foot or with the use of pack animals.  This photo shows pictographs made by the Anassazi “Ancient Ones” inhabitants of the area between 700 and 2,000 years ago.  The earliest inhabitants of the area were believed to be the Basket Weavers whose culture developed into the Pueblo culture. Newspaper Rock III - FJ_0136
Newspaper Rock State Historical Park in Southern Utah is in close proximity to Canyonlands National Park. The Petroglyphs etched into the rock records historical symbols dating back perhaps as far as 2,000 years. The rock art represents the Fremont, Anasazi, Navajo and Anglo cultures.  They are universal symbols found in many areas of the United States.  This panel represents one of the best displays of rock art to be found and can be seen just northwest of Monticello, Utah. Newspaper Rock II - FJ_0137
Newspaper Rock State Historical Park in Southern Utah is in close proximity to Canyonlands National Park. The Petroglyphs etched into the rock records historical symbols dating back perhaps as far as 2,000 years. The rock art represents the Fremont, Anasazi, Navajo and Anglo cultures.  They are universal symbols found in many areas of the United States.  This panel represents one of the best displays of rock art to be found and can be seen just northwest of Monticello, Utah.
Natural Wonders
Flowstone Shields - FJ_0361
Lehman Cave is the centerpiece of the Great Basin National Park.  Discovered in 1885 by one Absalom Lehman, a local rancher and miner, the cave as Lehman Cave National Monument preceded the park by several decades. Unlike many limestone caverns, which have a number of levels, this cave is a single cavern, which extends a quarter of a mile into the limestone and marble flanks of the Snake Range in Nevada. Seeps of surface slightly acidic surface water has dissolved the soluble rock over hundre... Lehman Cave - FJ_0362
Lehman Cave is the centerpiece of the Great Basin National Park.  Discovered in 1885 by one Absalom Lehman, a local rancher and miner, the cave as Lehman Cave National Monument preceded the park by several decades. Unlike many limestone caverns, which have a number of levels, this cave is a single cavern, which extends a quarter of a mile into the limestone and marble flanks of the Snake Range in Nevada. Seeps of surface slightly acidic surface water has dissolved the soluble rock over hundre... Lehman Cave Stalactites - FJ_0363
Lehman Cave is the centerpiece of the Great Basin National Park.  Discovered in 1885 by one Absalom Lehman, a local rancher and miner, the cave as Lehman Cave National Monument preceded the park by several decades. Unlike many limestone caverns, which have a number of levels, this cave is a single cavern, which extends a quarter of a mile into the limestone and marble flanks of the Snake Range in Nevada. Seeps of surface slightly acidic surface water has dissolved the soluble rock over hundre... Heart Of The Cave - FJ_0364
Timpanogas Cave National Monument is easily the jewel of the Wasatch.  The cave lies high on the west-facing flank of the Wasatch Range, some 15 miles southeast of Salt Lake City in American Fork Canyon.  Its soluble rocks are largely limestone, deep-water deposits which date from 500 to 300 million years when much of the west was buried by the sea.  Some of its five limestone caverns contain exquisitely preserved ancient coral. The cave’s unusual heart shaped stalactite is its best-known fea... More Coming Soon!
Recreation More» 
Fisherman - FJ_0028_LE
This photograph was taken on the Green River in Southern Utah.  The photograph was taken in the very early morning.  This photo was shot with a Maymiya 645 camera, with a 35mm lens. Boating On Lake Powell - FJ_0167
Lake Powell extends from the Glen Canyon Dam in northern Arizona to deep inside the canyon lands of southeastern Utah. It was John Wesley Powell, the reservoir’s namesake, who in 1869 first began an extensive exploration of the Colorado, naming the Glen Canyon for the rich tapestry if its plant life, which he thought reminiscent of Scottish glens. Today’s explorers, boaters, hikers, campers, unlike Powell, have access to some 2,000 miles of shoreline opened by the lake.  Although such activit... Skiing The Powder At Snowbird - FJ_0204
Snowboird is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm. Snowbird Powder Skiing - FJ_0205
Snowbird is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm. Downhill Skiing At Alta - FJ_0208
Alta is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbasin, Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains and Alta are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm.
Sports More» 
Alpine Skiing At Snowbird - FJ_0064_LE
Snowbird is one of eight ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with ski able snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera was a Mamiya 645 with a 50mm lens.  Powder Skiing At Alta - FJ_0198
Alta is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm. Big Air At Snowbird - FJ_0196
Snowbird is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm. Powder Buster At Snowbird - FJ_0197
Snowbird is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm. Skiing The Powder At Regulator Johnson - FJ_0199
Snowbird is one of the ski resorts along the Wasatch Front noted for their champion powder.  Frigid air moving out of the northwest colliding with moist air from the south creates just the right mix to blanket the mountains with skiable snow.  Of the Utah resorts, Alta is the oldest. Pre-dating World War Two. Snowbird, Park City, and Power Mountains are considered world class.  The camera used was a Nikon 35mm.
Transportation More» 
"Jupiter" Wheel Detail - FJ_0418_LE
Have you ever wished to see, touch, and know more about things from the past? At Golden Spike National Historic Site you can. Here, where the Nation's first Transcontinental Railroad was completed on May 10, 1869, reside exact replicas of the two steam engines that met at the Golden Spike Ceremony. The story of "Jupiter" and "119" is a fascinating, continuing chapter in American and railroading history. Promontory Summit in northern Utah has experienced a rich, colorful history, yet it remain... Heber Creeper - FJ_0419_LE
The Heber Creeper today is Utah’s only operational scenic railroad, winding its way from yards in mountain-surrounded Heber Valley to Vivian Park, alongside the Provo River.  It’s a 36 mile round trip as the locomotive pulls its load down the canyon and pushes it up the canyon on return.  The Creeper’s beginnings were somewhat more auspicious as a spur of the Denver & Rio Grand Railroad. At the turn of the century the Heber Valley was a productive agricultural area requiring a railroad to get... Train Wheel Detail - FJ_0420_LE
The Heber Creeper today is Utah’s only operational scenic railroad, winding its way from yards in mountain-surrounded Heber Valley to Vivian Park, alongside the Provo River.  It’s a 36 mile round trip as the locomotive pulls its load down the canyon and pushes it up the canyon on return.  The Creeper’s beginnings were somewhat more auspicious as a spur of the Denver & Rio Grand Railroad. At the turn of the century the Heber Valley was a productive agricultural area requiring a railroad to get... WaterTower - FJ_0421_LE
Of Colorado’s scenic narrow gauge railroads, the Cumbres and Toltec is the longest and highest, running from Antonito in southeastern Colorado’s San Louis Valley, some 64 miles to Chama in northeastern New Mexico.  In doing so, it labors to the summit of Cumbres Pass, 10,015 feet above sea level, and then descends along a steep 4 percent grade, crossing the Colorado border no less than seven times, before arriving in Chama. The railroad was built originally to serve the silver mining camps in... Train To Yesterday - FJ_0426_LE
In 1962, on assignment in Colorado, I had the privilege of riding the small, open motorized rail car ahead of the train on the 45-mile tourist run from Durango to Silverton.  For me it was an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take pictures of the vintage steam train at various stops on its 45-mile run to the historic mining camp.  The driver's job was to look for obstacles on the tract ahead of the train. The railway follows a winding course through the Animas River Gorge on its approach to t...
Top 10 Photos
 Sorted by popularity
Search gallery
Color B&W
  
Quick Search Links
Show All Photographs
Go To Stock Gallery
  A
  Landscap
  Landscapes
  W
  Landscape
  19
  5
  CANYON
  Utah
  2
  9
  3
 Links sorted by popularity
  Get Notified
We are continually adding new products and photographs to this site.

If you would like to be notified when these changes occure, please supply your first name (optional) and email below.


Name: (optional)
Email:
Labelled with ICRA
Digimarc Digital Watermarking | Get more information on how to digitally watermark imagesImages on this site protected with Digimarc Digital Watermarking
Winner of the Profotos Pro Site Award
Copyright © 2002 Frank Jensen Photography, Phoenix Quest Software, Inc. , All Rights Reserved.
Digimarc and the Digimarc logo are registered trademarks of Digimarc Corporation. The "Digimarc Digital Watermarking" Web Button is a trademark of Digimarc Corporation, used with permission.
Site designed, hosted and opperated by Phoenix Quest Software, Inc. under licence from Frank Jensen Photography