View allAll Photos Tagged rays
The sun was setting fast, getting dark ( and cold ) :) the last rays hit the top of the trees for a moment, then it was gone.
yh : ray.truly168
Mưa !
Là Lá La .....
Tôi yêu MM :x.....
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Jesse...
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Mấy ngày thác loạn vui vẻ đầy mất ngủ :))
How is your holiday weekend going? We are enjoying long overdue relaxation time. Let me leave you with the morning image of the near by Ukrainian St. Joseph Church shot from a few miles away during the morning golden hour! What do you think?
From Wikipedia: "Crepuscular rays (more commonly known as sunbeams, sun rays, splintered light, or god rays), in meteorological optics, are rays of sunlight that appear to radiate from the point in the sky where the Sun is located. Shining through openings in clouds (particularly stratocumulus[citation needed]) or between other objects such as mountains, these columns of sunlit scattering particles are separated by darker shadowed volumes. Despite seeming to converge toward the light source, the rays are essentially parallel shafts of sunlit and shadowed particles. Their apparent convergence is a visual illusion from linear perspective. This illusion is the same as railway lines or long hallways appearing to converge at a distant vanishing point.
Seen on the Tasman Sea.
Lucky again! This made it into flickr Explore on 7 February 2019, the second of two Explore photo from me on the same day, I'm amazed and truly grateful to everyone, many thanks
I was asked a few days ago what I considered to be more important, the journey or the destination.
My reply was that it is the company, the people you travel with, that's the most important.
I don't think I need to introduce the location, but here's some technical info:
Nikon D750, f/11, 2.5sec, ISO100, 24mm, Gitzo tripod.
Tried this in black and white, too. Turns out sun rays are pretty no matter what you do, but I like color the best. Thanks for viewing. Looks best large.
Explore, Jan 20. THANK YOU.
An archival shot from last autumn in The New Forest.
Holmsley, The New Forest, Hampshire
Nikon D610 / Nikon 70-200@125mm / f/8 1/15th / Lee Landscape Polarizer
This late season severe thunderstorm was unusual because while it generated lots of lightning, it was all in-cloud. Additionally, the thunder was continuous and heard as a low rumble for an hour!
The heavy rain shaft dropped about an inch in 15 minutes while the sun was generating crepuscular rays. I received only a trace of rain since I was at the edge of the storm. Taken at 4:28PM.