Wyoming Photography Spots: 4 Field-Guided Locations

Wyoming is two parks doing the heavy lifting — Grand Teton and Yellowstone. Mormon Row barns with the Tetons behind them is the most-photographed composition in American landscape work, and there’s a reason. Wide aperture won’t help you here; this is f/11, tripod, and patience country.
Photo Spots in Wyoming
Every spot below is a field guide — vantage point, best time of day, lens recommendation, parking and access notes. Click through for the full breakdown including GPS coordinates and gear specifics.
Grand Teton
Yellowstone
Photography Technique for Wyoming Conditions
Most Wyoming compositions reward a deliberate technical setup. For landscape work in the harder light here, lean on tripod long exposure at f/8-f/11 to keep both foreground and far ridges sharp. Bracket your exposures — the dynamic range in sunrise and sunset frames often exceeds what a single capture can hold. For darker scenes, control your noise floor through ISO discipline and consider shutter-speed control for water, clouds, and motion. Finish in Lightroom with restrained edits — most of these locations photograph better with subtle tone work than with heavy preset stacks.
What to Pack for Wyoming Photography
Wyoming conditions favor a lightweight kit you can hike with, plus enough range to cover landscape and detail work. The combination below is what working travel photographers carry for trips like this.
- Sony A7 IV body at B&H — strong dynamic range for sunrise/sunset latitude
- Sony 16-35mm f/4 G at B&H — wide enough for sweeping landscapes, sharp corners
- Peak Design Travel Tripod at B&H — collapses small enough for carry-on
- K&F Concept ND Filter Kit on Amazon — long-exposure water and cloud work
- SanDisk Extreme Pro 128GB SD card on Amazon — backup cards for multi-day trips
- Wyoming photography tours and experiences on Viator — local guides who know the access and timing