The Photographer
True Nord
Minnesota — Boundary Waters to the North Shore
The Approach
How TJ Works
No helicopter rides, no drone reveals. Just boots, a canoe, and the willingness to be out there when the light is right.
Pre-dawn Access
Most of the best images happen in the first 30 minutes of light. That means being in position — on the water, on the rock — before the sun clears the horizon.
Shoulder Seasons
May and October are Minnesota's secrets. The crowds are gone, the light is low and warm, and the landscapes are doing something extraordinary.
Natural Light Only
No flash, no artificial light. Everything you see in the prints is exactly how it looked — the way Minnesota actually presents itself on a good morning.
Minimal Processing
TJ's editing philosophy: correct, don't fabricate. Color is true to the scene. No sky replacements, no composites — what you see is what was there.
Human-Scale Access
Most locations are reached by foot, canoe, or ski. If it took an hour of paddling to get there, that's part of what you're hanging on your wall.
Long Game
Some locations get revisited 10–15 times before the right frame appears. The patience is part of the practice — and it shows in the final image.
The Kit
Equipment
The tools matter less than the conditions — but for reference, here's what's in the bag.
— Add your camera body here
— Add your wide lens here
— Add your tele lens here
— Add your macro lens here
— Add your tripod here
— ND, polarizer, GND
Where TJ Shoots
Minnesota Locations
The state has more wild places than most people realize — these are the ones that keep pulling Tyler back.
Boundary Waters
The BWCA is TJ's primary subject — 1.1 million acres of canoe country with no roads, no motors, and some of the darkest skies in the Midwest.
North Shore
150 miles of Lake Superior shoreline from Duluth to Grand Portage — waterfalls, sea caves, and a coastline that looks nothing like the rest of the Midwest.
Gunflint Trail
The corridor between Grand Marais and the BWCA — moose country, classic boreal forest, and remote lakes that don't show up in most travel guides.
Iron Range
Minnesota's mining heartland — open pit mines at dusk, boreal landscapes, and one of the best places in the state to catch winter's frozen geometry.
Voyageurs National Park
A water-based park accessible mostly by boat — sprawling lake systems, ancient Canadian Shield, and beaver ponds tucked into the interior trails.
Seasonal MN
From spring ice-out to fall color to mid-January cold — Minnesota's dramatic seasons are the subject as much as any specific place.