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AirCenter Scottsdale
Business Aircraft & Jet Preview 2008
www.scottsdaleaz.gov/airport/fbopressrelease.asp
Arizona
I'm not real sure why I only took three photographs on 9/22/2021, but they all looked pretty much like this.
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This photograph is an outtake from my 2021 photo-a-day project, 365^4.
Number of project photos taken: 3
Title of folder: Shadow, perched
Other photos taken on 9/22/2021: none
Erik Witsoe | BLOG | Facebook | Medium | 500px | Twitter | Instagram | Flickr
Warsaw, Poland
Summer 2018
From my latest blog post. You can read and see other images at the link above. Enjoy!
"Light and shadows. One and the other. Both together. We all cast them (hopefully) and maybe I am a bit more aware with how mine falls from time to time. I love to chase the light and catch the beauty of the sunrise and sunset, but more than that, I love the shadows that are cast in the hours of low sun and in virtual darkness, out in the city, in the forest, or at home. I always have, and with the camera I have found a way to worship the ground they fall on. Wherever we travel."
Best viewed large.
From my archive.
Very slightly cropped.
Chairs shadows seen in the diner in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, UK.
Most of Rochester Terrace already in evening shadow, but the upper parts of this row of handsome, terraced houses catching a gorgeous hue of sunset light. Quick snap with the phone walking home.
dedpxl03 - shadows
This is not a composite. It was rainy and cloudy today so I thought I would make my own shadows...
Thanks for your visit and comments I appreciate that very much.
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Jupiter’s moon Amalthea casts a shadow on the gas giant planet in this image captured by NASA’s Juno spacecraft. The elongated shape of the shadow is a result of both the
location of the moon with relation to Jupiter in this image as well as the irregular shape of the moon itself.
The image was taken on Sept. 1, 2017 at 2:46 p.m. PDT (5:46 p.m. EDT), as Juno performed its eighth close flyby of Jupiter. At the time the image was taken, the
spacecraft was 2,397 miles (3,858 kilometers) from the tops of the clouds of the planet at a latitude of 17.6 degrees.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt