View allAll Photos Tagged transition
The sky looked pitch black when I took this image in Grand Teton National Park however faint morning glow is already evident on this east facing shot taken at 4:30 am. The star cluster Pleiades and the far eastern edge of the Milky Way are seem.
View the entire Low Light Photography Set
View the entire Tetons - East and West Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
That transition time when golden hours streetlights to blue hour. the setting sun still hitting the taller buildings, while the streetlights start to take effect on the promenade.
Officially now Winter and the leaves are still falling. Taken in a local park.
It was our warmest Autumn on record in Palmerston North! www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/305886/warm-weather-puzzl...
A UP SW10 rebuild mingles with an Alco RSD-12 on the joint service rail in Provo, Utah on May 16, 1981. The service life of Utah Railway 600 was winding down, and would be retired from the roster in less than one year.
Happy Spring PolaroidWeek 2017!
Day 3
And now for something different. Going minimalist and monochrome. :)
Polaroid SLR 680
Impossible BW600
My Favourite part of the day, that short period near the end of blue hour & just before the sun rises over the horizon
As night turns to day and land meets the sea, I am reminded of the ever changing nature of our existence. But if I'm being honest, I thought a long exposure would create an ethereal effect with the granite outcroppings along the shores of Pacific Grove.
My California Coast workshop is Jan 31-Feb 4, 2024. It's on sale through July. Details here
Class 45 D123 “Leicestershire and Derbyshire Yeomanry” Built at Crewe in 1961 facing the soon to be redundant steam locomotive. A recreation of a scene that would have happened in 1968. This happily is the GCR railway where both Steam and Diesel have been preserved to working order.
Another winter storm warning is in effect starting tomorrow, this one bringing 8-10" of snow.
I like making these notes so I can look back on them in the years to come. That's one of the reasons I regret deleting my old Flickr account, it would have been so nice to look back at my thoughts, dates and events.
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Panoramic shot at sunrise from the Vogelberg, Passwang, Mountains of the Swiss Jura, Alps in the background.
November 4, 2018: Elgol, Isle of Skye, Scotland. Stefan Blomberg Photography – www.stefanblombergphotography.com
I love the transition of seasons. Misty mornings, sunlight, autumn hanging on, warm & cool tones coexisting. This morning had a touch of magic. A hint of frost, droplets hanging from branches. Sometimes the smallest scenes are the ones that bring the most pleasure.
Ice and snow slowly transition to liquid water in a small, shallow tarn high above the Innvikfjorden and the town of Loen, Norway.
The climb up a different fjord on the previous day was significant enough that some in our party balked at repeating the effort so soon on its heels, so on this day we elected to plonk down our kroners and enjoy an effortless ride to the top of the Innvikfjorden via the Loen Skylift. The Skylift is a large gondola supported by only two towers, one at the beginning and one at the end. On the ride up, the angle of the lines is such that one is essentially hauled straight up a good portion of the cliff, providing quite a sensation of the heights. The top of the Skylift has a restaurant with an extraordinary view, and a ledge frequented by people wearing squirrel wingsuits to launch into the void, for what must be the mother of all adrenaline rushes. We witnessed several people preparing to make the leap, and I cannot say I was inspired to attempt such foolishness myself.
Seeking adventures on a somewhat less exciting scale, I had it in mind to walk up one of the peaks that is several kilometers from the top of the Skylift. Not long after setting off, we encountered more or less continuous snow cover, and it was clear that the route to the peak I wanted to ascend was steep and snowy enough that it would be dangerous without axe and crampons. Lacking such helpful instruments, I noticed a rock band that looked possible to climb up and around the steepest of the snow, but my wife put her foot down firmly and informed me she was not at all interested in such things, but that I was welcome to head up myself if I wanted. My two boys also demurred. Feeling that common sense might be percolating through the rest of my family, I gave up the idea and we set our sights on a somewhat closer, and reasonably safer overlook in a different direction. Along the way I discovered this small tarn, and I was captivated by the abrupt phase transition from solid to liquid that divides the frame.
Many of the birds had transitioned to winter plumage like this one,but a few where why hurry and still in transition.
Sanderling (Calidris alba)
Hunmanby Gap
Many thanks for your views and comments they are very much appreciated.
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