View allAll Photos Tagged clouds
I've looked at clouds from both sides now
From up and down, and still somehow
It's cloud illusions I recall
I really don't know clouds at all
~Judy Collins
Would you like to come cloud watching with me?
We can while away the afternoon
Just to step out of time is all we need
Looking out for the other rule
Cos there’s no place
I’d rather be
There’s no one
I’d rather see
Would you like to come cloud watching with me?
We can watch the world roll on by
Dreaming up all the endless possibilities
Staring into the open sky
Would you like to come cloud watching with me?
We don’t have to talk at all
If we lie on our backs in the green green grass
I guarantee there’s no way to fall
Cos there’s no place
I’d rather be
And there’s no one
I’d rather see
And together watch the blues get blown away
Cos there are so many clouds in the sky today
~ Abby Dobson; lyrics from "Cloud Watching"
CS4 Adobe Photoshop Accented Edge
IJburg, Amsterdam, Augustus 2020
Nikon D800
Nikon AF-S Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED
© 2012-2020 Oguzhan Ceyhan. All rights reserved.
An image from New Mexico, where after getting slammed by super high winds and a generous helping of small pea to marble sized hail by the shipload the storm finally passed... and I had to stop for this.
As dawn breaks over North Texas, a wind turbine on the University of North Texas campus rises tall against the sky.
Photographed from A12 Prout's Island a Cumulonimbus Cloud over Sesekinika Lake in Sesekinika in the Township Grenfell in Northeastern Ontario Canada
Infamous for bringing heavy precipitation and storms, cumulonimbus clouds are huge clouds that can spread between the differing levels of the troposphere, towering up into very high altitudes (you can’t really miss them). Their tops seem to resemble an anvil.
©Copyright Notice
This photograph and all those within my photostream are protected by copyright. They may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written permission.
My new Sony a6000 arrived today and it was put to the test capturing the clouds of threatening Monsoon storms over PHX.
Polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) are clouds in the winter polar stratosphere at altitudes of 15,000–25,000 m (49,000–82,000 ft). They are best observed during civil twilight, when the Sun is between 1 and 6 degrees below the horizon, as well as in winter and in more northerly latitudes.[1] One main type of PSC is made up mostly of supercooled droplets of water and nitric acid and is implicated in the formation of ozone holes.[2] The other main type consists only of ice crystals which are not harmful. This type of PSC is also referred to as nacreous (/ˈneɪkriəs/, from nacre, or mother of pearl, due to its iridescence).
source: wikipedia
Un mar de nubes es una acumulación horizontal de estratocúmulos a baja altura (aproximadamente entre los 500 y los 1.500 m), causada por vientos cargados de humedad en su sector inferior. Ello explica el fenómeno de la inversión térmica, merced al cual se registran temperaturas más altas por encima de la cota de los 1.500 m que en el tramo inferior cubierto por el mar de nubes.
The cloud is wrapped around the mountain as if to give it a big hug. I took this shot in the morning along the Icefields Parkway in Banff National Park.
What crazy world do we live in?
Google for "cloud" and you won't find anything on the first page of what was meant by "cloud" 10 years ago.
Late afternoon sky with clouds and a sunburst. The Tokina 12-28 at 12mm aimed at the sky gives almost a fisheye effect. Five exposure HDR processed with Nik HDR Effex Pro 2
Back in Sydney this afternoon, and there was a 'weird' light and cloud formation over Sydney Airport...
Foto protegida pelo Art. 7 da Lei de Direitos Autorais - Lei nº 9610/98 inciso VII
Proibida a cópia ou reprodução total ou parcial, salvo sob autorização por escrito.
I stood in water near to the top of my wellingtons. I was then able to capture the Lowfield Heath Windmill, its reflection and the reflection of the dramatic dark clouds in the water.
On our only full day in Singapore we visited Gardens By The Bay for the second time. It really is a remarkable place and perhaps this dome is the piece de resistance; an artificial mountain created inside a glass dome that resembles the conditions you would find in a cloud forest.
The Cloud Forest is higher but slightly smaller of the two domes at 0.8 hectares (2.0 acres). It replicates the cool moist conditions found in tropical mountain regions between 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) and 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) above sea level, found in South-East Asia, Central- and South America. It features a 42-metre (138 ft) "Cloud Mountain", accessible by an elevator, and visitors are able to descend the mountain via a circular path where a 35-metre (115 ft) waterfall provides visitors with refreshing cool air.
The "Cloud Mountain" itself is an intricate structure completely clad in epiphytes such as orchids, ferns, peacock ferns, spike- and clubmosses, bromeliads and anthuriums. The design by Grant Associates was inspired by the Maiden Hair Fungus and consists of a number of levels, each with a different theme, including The Lost World, The Cavern, The Waterfall View, The Crystal Mountain, The Cloud Forest Gallery, The Cloud Forest Theatre and The Secret Garden.
One from a couple of months ago, square crop with Trevose Lighthouse in the distance.
Best to view in Lightbox, press L.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Zeiss ZE 21mm f2.8 Distagon T*ZE
Exposure 1/8 second @ f/16
Filter used 2 stop soft grad
Thank you for the kind comments they are much appreciated.
Images for sale Photobox
© Martin Mattocks Photography