View allAll Photos Tagged dawner
Love the pink hue the world gets just before the sun comes up on a cold morning. Greater Prairie Chicken at his lek. This particular chicken didn't take part in the lek activities most of the morning. He sat there and just watched. Maybe he didn't feel good :)
I go to the gap in the hedge as often as I can -- I love starting the day by watching the sun appear over the horizon. It seems to tell me that I'm still alive. We've had quite a few days lately where the sun was obscured by the cloud cover. On this day I was lucky.
With homes nestled around a confined bay and atop wave-washed boulders facing the Atlantic, Peggy's Cove is renowned for its gorgeous and distinctively East Coast profile.
Even though this quaint fishing village has been declared a preservation area, the local fishing community is nevertheless very active.
Thanks for your visit, wishing you a happy new week!
Can you find him? :)
Canon EOS 6D + Canon EF 35mm f/2.0, 35mm, f/5.6, 1/500sec, iso 200
found the reason for the lack of exif data - they were deleted during export. I will be more attentive in the future :)
Dawn on 29/09/19 in Turunc, Turkey
Some days its just worth getting up very early and seeing what opportunities Nature brings your way.
I always thought dawn and the sunrise here would be stunning and it really was.
Dawn & poem. Tuscany.CF011538
Ogni giorno è diverso dall’altro, ogni alba porta con sè il suo speciale miracolo, il suo istante magico, in cui si distruggono gli universi passati e nascono nuove stelle. I Navajo,infatti, insegnano ai loro bambini che ogni mattina il sole che sorge e’ un sole nuovo. Nasce ogni giorno, vive solo per quel giorno, muore alla sera e non ritornera’ piu’. Dicono ai loro piccoli: Il sole ha solo questo giorno, un giorno. Vivi bene la tua vita in modo che il sole non abbia sprecato il suo tempo prezioso.
Hello everyone,
Thank you so much for your visit and support ..
All Right Reserved. Pictures can not be used without explicit permission by the creator .
Fabrizio Massetti.
'Aurora' is the Latin word for dawn, and the goddess of dawn in Roman mythology and Latin poetry.
The attributes of Aurora are a torch, symbol of light, either carried by her or for her by a companion; the eagle, which hunts by day; the flowers that open with the early sun; a vessel for pouring out dew; and the morning star.
WE can thus see here many attributes of nature related to photography especially light, wildlife, flowers, the early sun, dew drops and so on.
🎧 "Aurora" (David Scott, 2019): www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTubTVyFCKc&list=RDhTubTVyFCK...
Canon EOS 7D Mark II
In Explore. Highest position: 13
The dawn sun shines through the pink lookout tower at the harbour entrance to Cardiff Bay, three fishermen are standing on the jetty beneath.
My passionate dawn of love and glory. Love for nature, the gentle flowing waters and the landscape. The glory of capturing the magical moments of dawn. Knowing that it all fades so quickly. This photo was taken five minutes following "Dreamscape" and the palette of hues shifted much warmer.
The fifth photo from the "Watercolor" series.
One from deep in my archives...
Lovely mauve/blue/purple tones this fine morning at Glacier's Two Medicine area.
Two Medicine acquired its name from Blackfeet legends. According to one story, two Piegan tribes planned to meet for a medicine ceremony in the valley. Failing to find each other, they both celebrated independently. In another version, two lodges for the sun dance sat on either side of Two Medicine Creek. Either way, the name stuck.
Welcome SPRING!
Have a most wonderful weekend!
After through the Panama Canal, the Pacific Ocean greeted us with rain, storm clouds and the dawn of a new day.
marbled white at dawn. I had to bump up the iso untill 1250 before i was able to get a sharp result.
op veler verzoek ;-) dan weer eens een vlinderfoto. De kleuren in de bokeh zijn de kleuren van de lucht een half uurtje voor zonsopkomst.
Each day is a new creation.
Dawn is the most exhilarating time to be taking photographs. Perhaps it's just perception, but everything happens so quickly. Much more so it seems than with sunsets which seem to linger in the summer sky.
This photograph almost didn't happen. The night before at the little historic town of Swansea on Tasmania's east coast it was a literal white out. A marine layer had rolled in during the afternoon with a cloud cover down to several hundred metres. Sunset was out. So I set the alarm to be up as early as possible and first indications were not good.
A little time after I took the blue shot there appeared a little break in the cloud cover. In an instant the light broke through in one majestic burst (the sun was still below the horizon). If you look closely you'll see Venus peering through at us as well. The lights of Coles Bay and the outline of the Freycinet Peninsula can also be seen. And just as quickly it seemed to disappear as the hole in the clouds closed again.
Perhaps the creation of the earth looked something like this. Strangely, the music I would set to this creation scene is Mozart's "Requiem in D" (K626). I love the music, but there is also something uniquely linked in the concepts of death and rebirth. One day dies only to be born anew at the dawn of New Light.
This image selected this week as the winner of the Outdoor Photographer "Great American Landscape" contest. Also selected this week at the best landscape in the contest by Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge.