View allAll Photos Tagged sundown
As the sun settles toward the horizon, Andy noses into his supper of hay behind a screen of California sage.
Camera: Nikon Nikomat FTN (1967-1975, with Vivitar 70-150mm f/3.8 lens).
Film: 35mm 100 ISO Arista.edu Ultra, developed in Arista Liquid Developer (1+9) for 6:20 minutes @ 71 degrees, and scanned with an Epson V600 scanner.
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Pink and romantic sundown in Paris at Place de la Concorde with Eiffel Tower in the background.
This was a strange evening as the sun was setting, the sundogs appeared. The clouds were very different, thin, moving slowly across the night sky. Only two places, across from the sun, these rainbow colours appeared.
Hope everyone has a wonderful weekend. Stay safe and healthy everyone.
Port Quin
Another one from the archives, this time a trip to Cornwall and the lovely unspoiled hamlet of Port Quin, on the north coast near to Port Isaac. I’ve posted a few sunset photos from here previously, but this one seems to have slipped through the net.
Thank you for your visit and your comments, they are greatly appreciated.
Seasalter is a village on the North coast of Kent, near Whistable. The tide was right out , the silhouettes of the time ravaged groynes gave a sense of scale and drama.
using the ND to catch the sun @ the alternative road from Natar to Pesawaran, Raden Gunawan street, district of Pesawaran, Lampung province, Indonesia
"Thank you very much for all your faves and stay healthy" :-)
I do not usually see a sunset from anywhere on my property due to the very tall trees on, and surrounding my land. At this time of year most of the deciduous trees have shed their leaves, but not the oaks as yet. I recently saw this scene and captured it, mainly over the tops of evergreen trees.
The UK Meteorological Office inform me that on 5th December 2020 the sun set in my town at 15:56 hours. As I took this photo at 16:33 hours, some 37 minutes later, I can only conclude that what we see here is the afterglow.
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The sun went down tonight in a sudden blaze of glory over here in Mount Gambier! The western sky was just a dull grey when these amazing rays quickly burst upward for just a few minutes. I was only able to hastily grab a few shots through our laundry window (which was thankfully clean) before the dull greyness returned.