Photographing a Winter Snow Storm in Mammoth
I’ve spent a lot of time in Mammoth over the years, mostly chasing snowstorms and long days on a snowboard. When a real storm rolls in, the town changes completely. Roads disappear, buildings soften, sound drops, and everything starts to feel slower and heavier. Those are the days I usually trade the board for a camera because the mountain tends to shutdown during heavy storms.
These images were made during an active winter snow storm in Mammoth, California. Not the postcard version of winter, but the kind where visibility comes and goes, snow stacks up faster than you expect, and the landscape feels stripped down to its essentials.
Living and Riding Through Winter Storms in Mammoth
If you spend enough winters here, storms stop feeling like events and start feeling like part of daily life. You wake up early to check the wind, ride when it’s good, wait it out when it’s not, and move through town while everything is still half-buried.
That familiarity makes it easier to photograph in tough conditions. I’m not chasing drama — I’m paying attention to how snow reshapes familiar places. A parking lot becomes abstract. A road turns into a line of tone and texture. Scale shifts constantly as the storm moves through.
Photographing Snow, Wind, and Scale
Winter storm photography is less about spectacle and more about restraint. Snow simplifies scenes, but it also hides detail. Light flattens quickly. Wind erases edges. The challenge is working within those limits without forcing a moment that isn’t there.
Most of these photographs were made quietly, between riding and driving, while the storm was actively changing the landscape. I’m drawn to scenes where human presence feels temporary — plowed roads, snow-covered buildings, tracks that won’t last long.
Why Winter Storm Photography Matters
Severe weather has a way of revealing place. In the mountains, storms expose how people build, move, and adapt. They show scale in a way clear days don’t. For editors, designers, and brands, winter storm imagery can communicate isolation, endurance, calm, and intensity without explanation.
These photographs aren’t about tourism or ski culture. They’re about atmosphere and environment — images that work as visual anchors in editorial layouts, books, campaigns, and long-form storytelling.
Editorial and Commercial Licensing
This series of winter storm photographs from Mammoth, California is available for editorial and commercial licensing. The images are well suited for magazines, books, outdoor and lifestyle brands, environmental storytelling, and large-format applications where mood and scale matter.
If you’re looking for cinematic winter imagery made from lived experience rather than a one-day shoot, I’m happy to help you find the right images or build a custom edit for your project.
Images from this series are also available as fine art prints. Contact me for details.
Sierra Nevada Resort covered in snow after a winter storm
Schat’s Bakery in Mammoth, California covered in snow
Photograph of a record breaking snow storm in Mammoth Lakes, CA
Streets covered in snow after a record storm in Mammoth Lakes, CA
A-Frame Liquor covered in snow after a winter storm in Mammoth Lakes, CA
A basketball hoop sticking out of a snow bank after a record breaking storm in Mammoth,CA
Photograph of a car covered in snow after a storm in Mammoth Lakes, CA
Snow storm in Sierra Nevada Mountains in California
Photograph of a Mammoth California restaurant covered in snow
Photograph of Mammoth Liquor covered in snow after a record breaking storm