Regional Collection

Rocky Mountains

Fourteeners, alpine cirques, and the Continental Divide — the backbone of North America rendered as contour line art from real USGS elevation data.

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Colorado Fourteeners

54 peaks above 14,000 feet — each with a contour signature as distinct as a fingerprint.

Pikes Peak
Colorado · 14,115 ft
America's Mountain. The peak that inspired "America the Beautiful" — a massive uplift with sweeping contours visible from the Great Plains.
Maroon Bells
Colorado · 14,163 ft
The most photographed peaks in Colorado. Twin pyramidal summits of deep-red mudstone create dramatic, angular contour patterns.
Mt. Elbert
Colorado · 14,440 ft
The highest peak in the Rockies. Deceptively gentle slopes that climb to Colorado's rooftop — a broad summit with wide-spaced contours.
Longs Peak
Colorado · 14,259 ft
Rocky Mountain National Park's crown jewel. The Diamond face drops 1,675 feet in tight, near-vertical contour lines.
Capitol Peak
Colorado · 14,131 ft
Colorado's most dangerous fourteener. The infamous Knife Edge traverse shows as a razor-thin ridge between sheer contour drops.
Mt. Sneffels
Colorado · 14,158 ft
The crown of the San Juans. Jagged summit spires and deep couloirs translate into dramatic, tightly-packed contour relief.

The Tetons & Wyoming

No foothills, no warning — the most abrupt mountain front in North America.

Grand Teton topographic contours
Grand Teton
Wyoming · 13,775 ft
Seven thousand feet of vertical rise from the Snake River plain. The Teton fault block creates the most dramatic contour gradient in the Rockies.
Wind River Range
Wyoming · Gannett Peak 13,804 ft
Wyoming's highest and wildest range. Glacial cirques, alpine lakes, and the largest glaciers in the American Rockies outside Alaska.
Yellowstone Caldera
Wyoming · 7,700–11,358 ft
A supervolcano's terrain. The caldera rim traces a massive oval in contour lines — one of the largest volcanic features on Earth.
Devils Tower
Wyoming · 5,112 ft
A volcanic neck rising 867 feet from the Belle Fourche River valley. Concentric rings of tight contours around an impossibly steep monolith.

Montana & the Northern Rockies

Glacier-carved wilderness stretching to the Canadian border.

Glacier National Park
Montana · Going-to-the-Sun
The Crown of the Continent. Arêtes, cirques, and hanging valleys carved by ice — the textbook of alpine glacial landforms in contour.
Beartooth Plateau
Montana · Granite Peak 12,807 ft
Montana's highest point rises from a vast alpine plateau. The Beartooth Highway traverses terrain that reads like a topographic masterclass.
Bob Marshall Wilderness
Montana · "The Bob"
Over a million acres of unbroken wilderness. The Chinese Wall — a 1,000-foot limestone escarpment — draws a dramatic line through the contours.
Bitterroot Mountains
Montana / Idaho Border
The Idaho-Montana divide. Deep canyons, jagged granite spires, and some of the most remote terrain in the Lower 48.

Utah & the Desert Rockies

Where the Rockies meet the Colorado Plateau — canyon country in contour lines.

Wasatch Range
Utah · 11,928 ft
The dramatic east wall of the Salt Lake Valley. Some of the steepest accessible terrain in North America — and home to legendary ski resorts.
Zion Canyon
Utah · Angels Landing
Navajo Sandstone walls dropping 2,000 feet to the Virgin River. The contour lines stack so tight they nearly merge — pure vertical terrain.
Uinta Mountains
Utah · Kings Peak 13,534 ft
The only major east-west range in the Rockies. Kings Peak is Utah's highest — a broad, remote massif with alpine lakes and glacial cirques.
Flaming Gorge
Utah / Wyoming
Red Canyon's thousand-foot walls carved by the Green River. Vivid geology rendered in contour — layers of time visible in every line.

The Backbone of a Continent

The Rocky Mountains stretch over 3,000 miles from New Mexico to British Columbia — the Continental Divide that splits North America's watersheds and defines its western character. From Colorado's fifty-four fourteeners to the Teton Range's sheer fault-block escarpment to Glacier's ice-carved cirques, no mountain system on Earth offers more topographic variety per mile.

Our prints are generated from 1-arc-second USGS 3DEP elevation data (roughly 30-meter resolution), the same dataset used by the US Geological Survey for their topographic maps. Each contour line traces a path of equal elevation — the tighter the lines, the steeper the slope. A gentle fourteener like Mt. Elbert reads as wide, open contours; the Diamond face of Longs Peak compresses into near-vertical bands.

Seven style presets let you match the art to your space: minimal black-and-white for a modern study, vintage paper tones for a lodge, bold color for impact. Every print is rendered individually for your chosen coordinates — no two are identical.

Can't find your peak above? Use the studio to search for any location — any trailhead, any summit, any ridgeline in the Rockies. Prints start at $29 with free worldwide shipping.

Your Summit. Your Wall.

Search for any Rocky Mountain location — or explore the studio to create something entirely your own.

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