View allAll Photos Tagged sunlight
the sun was low and rising directly behind the object
sunlight striking the front of the lens created flare and diffused across the entire image giving the warm effect
what a beautiful scenery that morning ...
sony nex-6; 20mm; f8; iso 100; 1/50s
It was so nice out today. Went to the park for a little while just me and my camera.. it was a wonderful day. Happy st. patricks day!
Sunlight shining through a glass with red liquid in it. The design created from the different elements caught my eye.
In the blind with our son and grandson. A little while later, our grandson would take his first animal - a lovely impala ram. I am the luckiest of men!
Photo credit: African Sun Productions
Had just stepped out of a Walmart this morning and as I crossed the lot I looked up, and there it was the sun shining threw what looked like snow clouds. Ray's just bursting in every direction. An all I had was this cell phone to take a picture. So a picture,I guess is better then none.
In the previous shot of Roos Tor the entire sky was ablaze with colour but, with time and sunlight very much against me, the conditions were changing very quickly. Originally I had intended to take a shot a little further away from the large boulder stack but the cloud cover in the top right of frame had disappeared leaving it almost devoid of any real colour. A quick change of position closer to the stack not only meant that the rocks now filled the void but also look a little more imposing. It’s almost as if the rock is pointing to the setting sun too. Fortunately the landscape beneath tor is still visible from this angle, which is an added bonus. What do you think? Thanks for looking. Mk
Edward Hopper (1882-1967) - Sunlight in a cafeteria (1958). In the collection of the Yale University Art Gallery.
The curators explain: "From the time he was a young man, Hopper was intrigued by people in urban restaurants, where strangers had little interaction. Sunlight in a cafeteria captures an unsettling tension between the man and woman who are clearly aware of, but do not acknowledge, each other's presence. This edgy stillness suggests the closed lines of communication in much of modern urban life. As in many of Hopper's paintings, the ambiguity in the scene opens up multiple narrative possibilities."