View allAll Photos Tagged inversion
Some of you may recall I uploaded a panorama last week of the cloud inversion I saw over the poppy fields.
I wasn't terribly happy with that, I took it down in the end and had a fresh look at the photos I took. I was disappointed with them largely, they all looked really washed out and hazy. I think my cheap telephoto lens has seen better days and I may need to invest in a new one. Also having spent more time in the field opposite I had time against me with the light getting brighter so my settings weren't right.
This one looked the best so I have done some serious editing. There were terrible dust spots so this included a complete sky replacement (trying to keep it natural as there wasn't really much of a sky on the day) also endless tweaking with the colours.
I will send off for a print of it to see how it looks.
The view from the top of Arundel Park is very special indeed and on this day it had the extra ingredient of the low lying mist below me
A temperature inversion in the Derwent Valley below Curbar Edge.
An image taken in September 2014 with an Olympus OM4 on Agfaphoto Precisa CT100 film.
An early start on the mountain bike, as it looked promising for an inversion. Fantastic conditions with both Edale and Hope Valley in cloud. Wonderful experience. Then I rode down into the freezing fog! Fantastic views from Hope Cross too.
Exceptionally busy up on Mam Tor, but fairly quiet on the ridge.
Cloud Inversion from Latrigg
A beautiful morning in the lakes yesterday, up at Latrigg looking down on the cloud inversion.
Latrigg, Lake District, Cumbria
Please feel free to share with your friends and family should you wish.
© Brian Kerr Photography 2015
This was the view I had at a recent sewing retreat. The largest bump on the horizon is Denali (Mt. McKinley) and all the other squares on the horizon are mountains also. Clouds made them look like blocks. We had an inversion - warm air trapped cold air and kept the cold air (and all the pollutants) below. The higher up you go, the warmer it is. Since I was on Mt. Aurora, it was more than 30 degrees warmer than town.
#FlickrFriday
#Inverse
(with apologies to Bill Bryson )
SMC PENTAX (K) 50mm f1.2 with Raynox 150 close-up attachment
This is from a "happy accident" discovery as I was heading to find a waterfall that I actually never found. The Apple Maps app on my phone took me up this very backroads journey which at some point opened up to see the whole Willamette Valley of Oregon in an inversion of clouds. The surrounding hillside looked like this. All said and done, l'd safely say, I didn’t mind at all not getting to the waterfall.
Note - I did finally get to the waterfall a few weeks later, and it also was very worth the journey.
A lovely recent inversion over the Carse looking towards The Trossachs. A 9 shot stitched panorama from the drone camera.
One week left to register for my Artist Talk associated with my exhibition at the John Wesley Powell River History Museum. You can sign up with the link below. The talk will include poetry, a little bit of history, a little bit of science, a little bit of philosophy, and my personal experiences with water's footprints and how they all inform my artistic practice. Hope you can join us next Tuesday, February 22, 2022 at 6 pm MST.
us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEqduqgrzsuEtSPHlrdQjqO...
Truth be known I've been coming to this location a fair few times now over the last two years, and only under inversions as I wanted an inversion wrapping around Chrome Hill. I think I would have preferred a little less of an inversion here to reveal more of the landscape, but nevertheless, I'm sharing it so I must be happy with it.
This is pre-dawn on Hollins Hill. a somewhat unloved location, in my opinion, this vantage gives great views down the Dove Valley.
I was happy to stand and watch the morning's inversion pushing and pulling along the valley, it was great to watch. (should have done one of those fancy time-lapse) You can see the difference from my previous upload within the space of 20 minutes and how much the scene changed.
I also used the hawthorn tree in the near foreground to give a bit of scale, I did however struggle to pull some colour out of this landscape.
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Driving over Hartside Pass in Cumbria on a foggy day this stand of trees was revealed in the distance.
Shenandoah National Park, VA
A two image stitch of a winter morning sunrise over a cloud inversion at Thornton Hollow Overlook in the north district.
THANKS FOR VIEWING!
Explored! #261, Oct. 6, 2009. Thanks!
Played around in Photoshop w/the inversion tool, etc... sometimes I just don't know when to quit. Your honest opinion is entirely desired... (Thanks to my Flickr Friend Icon_st www.flickr.com/photos/abolichi_phule/3985976114/ for the idea to try this...)
Recent clear weather and sharply dropping temperatures at night have created temperature inversions around us, with a cold layer of air trapped under a (relatively) warmer layer aloft as the sun rises.
This has given us inversion mirages in all directions, the light in the cold areas against the ground is bent, as if the ground rises to meet us. The effect is that we 'appear' to be living in a bowl.
In fact, this road does not rise upward ahead, it is completely flat as it disappears around yon corner a few miles up the road.
As soon as the sun also warms the cold layer of air trapped against the ground, this mirage and all others like it disappear,