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Butterfly Effect by Masamichi Shimada & Light Art Collection, part of Lightscape at Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Photo by Liz Ligon.
I couldn't resist either.
Seen on Leisurely Grass', Wedgeh's, Xie Kitchen's, Miss Modular's, Marie's, fran_e's, Christin White's, Jodi C's, Cybermelli's, Minklet's, Helena's, Cindy/Elita's, Shershe's and Dolly Hex's photostreams!
My plane was heading east, so this clearly shows the windward side with snow and leeward side all dry!
I love long exposures. They're fun :)
I totally disappeared from the shot but there my silhouette is hiding in the glass of my lens XD
I had taken a picture for today, but it sucks. This happened by accident. I'm pretty happy with it.
Fr: J'avais pris une photo aujourd'hui, mais elle etait plutot nulle. Celle-ci est un accident. Elle me plait assez.
Early season lake effect rain and snow vents see the "snow" portion of the event taking all the glory, people often don't really see the effects closer to the lake.
This photo was taken near Minesing which is about half way between Wasaga Beach and Barrie. This was the transition zone between rain, ice pellets and snow. Closer to the lake the precipitation was building, little was falling but what did make it down was almost purely rain, further inland it was a mix of rain and ice pellets.
In the photos you can actually see some of the accretion on the ground (bottom right). But what makes this photo so interesting is you can see the supercooled cloud bases lower and begin to produce snow as opposed to rain or ice pellets if you look from left to right.
Basically as the convective rain bands moved inland and the freezing levels lowered with distance from the lake couple with further cloud cooling, eventually the convective graupel/rain/ice pellets would be mixed out and dumped (about where I'm sitting) and the precipitation would fall all as snow further east in Barrie and closer to highway 11.
Sometimes described as a jello effect, the Rolling shutter effect is causing by the camera sensor scanning the scene line by line and getting caught out by a fast moving object, effect is often worse on lower end cameras, I have found my £50 Camp snap camera used here particularly slow when processing an image.
Web description
The rolling shutter effect is a type of image distortion that occurs when a camera’s sensor captures an image or video frame progressively, rather than all at once. Most commonly found in cameras with CMOS sensors, rolling shutter works by scanning across the scene—usually from top to bottom—capturing each row of pixels at slightly different times. As a result, if the subject or camera moves quickly during this process, fast-moving objects can appear skewed, wobbly, or warped. This effect is especially noticeable with rapid motion or flashing lights.
In contrast, cameras with a global shutter expose the entire sensor simultaneously, avoiding these distortions. While rolling shutter can lead to unwanted artifacts, it is widely used due to its cost-effectiveness and other technical benefits in most consumer cameras