Taos Print and Photography Services

Taos Print and Photography Services Photography art gallery and high-quality, fine art printing and digital capture services. All of our print products are made in the United States.

Taos Print and Photography Services provides high-resolution digital photography services and an associated fine art gallery. Taos Print and Photography Services provides fine archival print services using Epson 11880 large format printers and archival Epson inks. We print on a number of archival media including the finest watercolor paper, canvas, and metallic papers. We also provide options for

exhibition of images for single use presentations and long-term display including mounting prints to foam-core, canvas stretching, and fully framed prints. In addition, our primary photographic focus is scenic, landscape, wildlife, architectural, and aerial photos. We specialize in multi-image panoramic photography for those images that cannot be captured in a single shot. Our photography services may be used for print, web, advertising, and archive purposes. Our high-resolution cameras and technical Photoshop expertise allow your vision to become reality. Combining over ten years of professional photographic and printing experience, Taos Print and Photography Services team members have worked with the National Forest Service, Western National Park Association, Public Lands Interpretive Association, Bureau of Land Management, University of New Mexico, U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich's office, US Department of the Interior, and many state and local agencies. Promotional imagery of our photography services can be tailored to your needs and provided by request. We produce mid-resolution files for optimized viewing on large or small computer screens to show excellent details and maximize video.

October 17, 2024 - The Comet from Taos, NM
10/18/2024

October 17, 2024 - The Comet from Taos, NM

These eyes have seen a lot of loves. But they're never gonna see another one like I had with you ~B. Cummings, R. Bachma...
10/16/2024

These eyes have seen a lot of loves. But they're never gonna see another one like I had with you ~B. Cummings, R. Bachman

Taos, NM Aurora!
10/11/2024

Taos, NM Aurora!

The great Butterfly Nebula in Scorpius!Well I kinda got anxious about my smart telescope's FOV (field of view) not givin...
07/30/2024

The great Butterfly Nebula in Scorpius!
Well I kinda got anxious about my smart telescope's FOV (field of view) not giving me the full wingspan, so I elected to make some creative adjustments to the night sky...

The East Veil Nebula is part of the famous Cygnus Loop, a region of ultra ionized gas spread across the Northern Hemisph...
07/09/2024

The East Veil Nebula is part of the famous Cygnus Loop, a region of ultra ionized gas spread across the Northern Hemisphere's night sky like neon plum jelly on hot pink tasty toast and topped with icy marsh mellow brightness. This is a two panel (12 minutes total exposure time) image taken with my home smart telescope in Taos, NM. Edited in PS.

The prancing Eagle Nebula and the Pillars of Creation! Located about 7000 thousand Light Years from our nearest and dear...
07/01/2024

The prancing Eagle Nebula and the Pillars of Creation! Located about 7000 thousand Light Years from our nearest and dearest Sun, this ionized gas formation gained fame and fortune on season 17 of Dancing with the Stars, and although losing in the semi-final round to preserved tree sap (aptly named Amber), the performance was heralded as one the greatest explosive interstellar dust routines in recent galactic history - mixing Oxygen Moonwalks, Shorty-George Sulfur, Gancho de Nitrogen and Heel Turning Hydrogen in twirling magnitudes stretching nearly 5 light years tall! That means if you drove from the bottom to the top at 100,000 MPG it would still take you several binge watching lifetimes to get through just one episode! That's a lot of Carrie Ann and Derek beaming into your eye sockets...be careful out there!
~ Eagle Nebula and the Pillars of Creation, 25 minutes of data collected from my home smart observatory in Taos, NM.

Vega is one of the closest Stars to Planet Earth. And it is one of the most popular, more so than Betelgeuse, Sirius, an...
06/21/2024

Vega is one of the closest Stars to Planet Earth. And it is one of the most popular, more so than Betelgeuse, Sirius, and Michael Jackson. The king of Pop was always jealous of Vega because though he could Moonwalk, Vega could spin so fast! In fact, it is continually spinning more than 100x faster than our home Sun. Also, though MJ was the center of his brother's band, 14,000 years ago Vega was the center of EVERYTHING Earth, making it our North Star at that time. So there is a reason the #1 popStar of all time is a VEGAN!
~ Vega, 4 minutes integration time, taken on my Smart Telescope from my home observatory in Taos, NM

With a great deal of gratitude to those who have helped us on our journey, I give to you the Common Waxbill. A beauty an...
06/06/2024

With a great deal of gratitude to those who have helped us on our journey, I give to you the Common Waxbill. A beauty and stunning creature in any environment. Unfortunately, in Hawai'i, as with many of the islands around the globe, this species has been released into the wild. Meaning it is non-native. Humans have brought it here captive, and through either escape or neglect, they have propagated outside their cages and eeked out an existence. More unfortunate though is the fact that there are currently more invasive species than endemic ones on the islands. It is believed more than 50 species have become extinct since the first settlers arrived, and through habitat devastation, predator introduction, and disease, many are in a state of severe endangerment. Over 150 species have been introduced to the islands, many as game or pet birds. These birds along with feral cats and mongoose make resources scarce and life difficult to an area with no natural predators. In fact, a single species of bat is the only mammal to ever live on the islands prior to European travel here. With luck the natural populations will maintain balance...

As Promised to my Astro-loving friend Paul Pulaski I imaged M13 last night from my new home smart telescope lab in Taos,...
04/08/2024

As Promised to my Astro-loving friend Paul Pulaski I imaged M13 last night from my new home smart telescope lab in Taos, NM. This is 10 minutes of data collected in the RGB spectra, processed internally by the telescope realtime, and lightly edited in PS this morning. Set up time was 3 minutes from unpacking the 3 lb. scope to the initial capture, and less than 2 minutes of final tweaking on my computer before uploading here.
Now for the good/bad news:
Messier 13 or the Hercules Globular Cluster-F@©l{ has so many densely packed Stars they are bouncing off each other like old geezers moshing in the pit of a S*x Pistol's reunion tour. Edmond "the comet" Halley first discovered he could no longer attend such reckless and intentional engagements and set out to prove a catalogue of night sky objects was far more profitable than rock 'n roll. He died poorer than Beethoven, yet not before counting to 110 and hobbling around from a fractured tibia sustained at the aforementioned concert.
Our brilliant ancestors decided it was best for our future offspring to be invaded by aliens from M13, so in 1974 they beamed all our genetic information, all Earthly languages, and every lego model instruction guide toward this region in space. So tell your grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's grandkid's great grand kids to be expecting Herculean dominance soon.

Address

Taos, NM

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 5pm
Sunday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

(575) 425-1587

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Taos Print and Photography Services posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share