Threads: the thread where everything is decided (spotting, testing & drops)
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On Threads , I share what often precedes the final photo: scouting , B&W tests, abandoned framing, format surveys, and drop announcements (limited prints in Dibond aluminum). This is our “workshop” channel: fast, raw, useful for choosing your mountain decor (Mont-Blanc, Écrins, Valais, Dolomites, wildlife).
Join the conversation → @aluartmountains
Field Chronicles (very short format)
08:05 — 6 min window of light on the ridge.
08:17 — Vertical pano test / horizon ±1°.
09:02 — Fox sighted, focal length 200–300.
17:46 — Alpenglow: 4 shots, promising B&W.
These quick notes help you understand why an image works—or doesn't—before it's printed in aluminum.
Creative sprints (48 hours to choose a board)
- Day 1: I post 3 proposals (winter landscape, wooded vertical, glacial panorama).
- You vote for the format (large single, diptych, triptych).
- Day 2: I show the matte Dibond aluminum rendering ready to hang.
Threads Surveys | Format & Hanging Tips
Style book: three atmospheres tested
Manufacturing notes (what I retouch — or not)
Managing white on snow
I preserve "clean" snow without crushing the reliefs. The matte finish of the Dibond aluminum limits reflections.
Panoramas & verticals
In the living room, a large single format visually “calms” a wall; in the hallway, I prefer vertical.
Black & white
I keep a sustained density in the shadows to avoid a “grey” rendering under natural light.
Teasers & drops (limited editions)
The first information (quantities, formats, priorities) goes on Threads before the store.
Quick questions, quick decisions
- Triptych 3×40×60 or large single 100×150?
- Golden autumn vs. black and white for a very bright living room?
- Reflections of a lake: panoramic or tight vertical?
Reply on Threads | Decorating Guide




