Spitzkoppe rises 700 meters above the Namibian plain as an inselberg — an island mountain, a granite mass left behind when th...
Photo ID: CF000087_1_TIFF_(16-bit)_2026-04-03_10.14.36_SpitzkoppeEye
Autore: Provenance: Cambo 400 | Phase One IQ3.100 | Zeiss 150mm
Stato del file: Definitivo
dimensione del/della Photo: 84.4 Mpixel (241 MB non compresso) - 12250x6890 pixels (103.7x58.3 cm a 300 ppi)
Parole chiave del/della Photo: alba, cielo, cielo rosso, crepuscolo, grotta, natura, tempo libero, tramonto
https://d38zjy0x98992m.cloudfront.net/019d505c-b36e-7b02-8dcc-8be225c0c9a3/CF000087_1_TIFF_%2816-bit%29_2026-04-03_10.14.36_SpitzkoppeEye_uxga.jpghttps://www.hammondraffetto.art/it/-/galleries/landscape/-/medias/019d505c-b36e-7b02-8dcc-8be225c0c9a3/pricehttps://www.hammondraffetto.art/it/-/galleries/landscape/-/medias/019d505c-b36e-7b02-8dcc-8be225c0c9a3/price

Spitzkoppe rises 700 meters above the Namibian plain as an inselberg — an island mountain, a granite mass left behind when the softer rock around it eroded away over 700 million years — and through its natural arch, known as "The Eye," the plain and sky beyond frame themselves in a circle that feels less like geology and more like intention. The arch is large enough to walk through, which means the photographer can choose their position inside the arch to frame whatever the far side offers: in this image, the plain extends to the horizon, and the arch becomes a lens. Made on medium format, the image holds deep shadow inside the arch and full Namibian daylight beyond — a contrast of perhaps twelve stops — without losing detail in either. The rock itself is the oldest visible surface on earth.