View allAll Photos Tagged SUNRISE
Sunrise at home. Some sunrises are colourful and some are just blah. I tend to miss most of the good ones (nothing to do with wanting to stay in bed ofcourse). Pretty hard to predict, and sunsets seem even more difficult. Then there are the times when you pack up and think you've wasted your time, only to find that 3 minutes later the sky fires up with unbelievable colour, but you are now not in position for a shot.
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Captured this beautiful sunrise this morning after dropping the kids at school. It made me think of all that has been going on and the things we take for granted. No matter what happens, every day is a new beginning, always remember that.
On a very clear morning yesterday, I had to stop and get this image of the sunrise. The mountains are the Sierras. We have had some winds in the Central Valley and most of the smoke from the fires are gone now. But, you can still see some remaining smoke just above the Sierra horizon. It truly was a beautiful and spiritual morning!
Another very early start (shot taken at 5:09am) to capture the sunrise at Sawley, Nottinghamshire.
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D7K_4917: Exposure at 0519. Sunrise at 0521. We are looking ENE across the Canada-U.S.A. border to the San Juan Islands.
For weeks, there had been a persistent pattern of dawn clouds blocking the sun on the eastern horizon. This morning was cloudier than most, but with a thinning where the sun was to rise.
Capturing the sunrise from Putty Beach in the Bouddi National Park on the Central Coast, NSW, Australia.
For the last several years, my kids and I have flown out to Loudoun County Virginia to spend some time with some very good friends who live on 11 acres of some of the most gorgeous real estate in the Western Hemisphere. While I was out visiting my friends last year, I had the good fortune of being able to meet up with Mike Besant who took me up to Skyline Drive in the Shenandoah National Forest for a day of shooting. This year, we were joined by George Fletcher, who is another amazing photographer from the area. George lives right down the road from where I was staying (insanely jealous!) and we set off together at 3:30 AM to try to make it up to Skyline Drive before the sunrise.
On our way there, I was pulled over by Virginia's finest, but they let me off with a warning after doing 38 in a 25. (These people are serious about their speed limits in Virginia!) This put us behind just a bit, and the sky was already getting light as we made our way into the park. Mike told us he would meet us at the first Eastern Overlook, but we missed that spot in the early morning light and kept driving to the next overlook, which was Indian Run. At that moment, I slammed on the brakes and pulled over. Before we had really said two words to each other, both of us were out of the car grabbing our tripods and running to find a spot to shoot as we looked down over an ocean of clouds below us. Our shots kept changing every few seconds as the clouds were billowing around the hilltops below under a steady breeze. We spent the next 30 minutes or so shooting furiously before remembering that we still had not found Mike yet. After we traded a couple of texts, we found out that Mike was back at the other over look and drove back to meet him. We spent the rest of a very incredible day shooting around the park and didn't make it back to Loudoun County until nearly 11 PM. It was an exhausting day (going DOWN the 2.5 mile hike to White Oak Falls was cake, but the 2.5 miles coming back up nearly killed me.) Special thanks to both of them for allowing me to hang out with them for the day. I consider both of them to be amazing photographers and it was fun to pick their brains over the course of the day.