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Looking forward to hearing from you!
Ove
onsdag 19 april 2017
torsdag 13 april 2017
Aurora Borealis at the harbour
[svensk text i kommentarsfältet]
Here are my latest Aurora photos. The wind was so strong I had to lay my body weight on the tripod to prevent it from shaking. But a lot of my photos got stars looking like short lines anyway.
Well, at least the Northern Light was strong too. I thought I came too late but suddenly things started to happen on the sky. I really like having the boats and the lonely harbor light in my pictures. Not just the Aurora Borealis. I think I'll come back to this place again.
But we are heading towards the light period of the year now so shooting the Aurora has to be done after midnight now. And soon it will be impossible because of the light nights. But I'm looking forward to that too!
Here are my latest Aurora photos. The wind was so strong I had to lay my body weight on the tripod to prevent it from shaking. But a lot of my photos got stars looking like short lines anyway.
Well, at least the Northern Light was strong too. I thought I came too late but suddenly things started to happen on the sky. I really like having the boats and the lonely harbor light in my pictures. Not just the Aurora Borealis. I think I'll come back to this place again.
But we are heading towards the light period of the year now so shooting the Aurora has to be done after midnight now. And soon it will be impossible because of the light nights. But I'm looking forward to that too!
The lonely harbour light got company. |
Boats waiting for the summer season. The harbour was still frozen. |
Light Nights and Dark Days
[svensk text i kommentarsfältet]
Finns love summer. It's short but very light. It actually never gets dark. But as a photographer my love for the Finnish winter has really grown stronger over the years. The reason is very simple: it is astonishingly beautiful. At times it is, I should say. But it's very dark too. Daylight lasts for less than six hours in late December and the sun is visible only for about four hours where I live. It's dark when I go to work and it's dark again when I go home.
Let's look at the Nordic light for a moment. Since days are so short in during the winter the sun never rises high over the horizon. It's a constant twilight which can be very beautiful. The sun rises slowly over the treetops and starts setting without giving us any real daylight.
Some might think it's strange that the sun rises and sets so slowly. Of course the sun visually moves just as fast in the sky here as anywhere else in the world. But the angle is so flat. Even at noon the sun is close to the horizon. And when the sun sets it doesn't get dark quckly.
In the summer it the other way around. The sun goes slowly down and never go far below the horizon. (Turn the image upside down in your head to get the picture.) Hence the light nights. You can't see the midnight sun where I live. Around midsummer the sun is out of sight only for four hours it never gets dark.
Visitors may find it hard to sleep because of the light nights. Some Finns too, but for most of us it's not a problem.
In the end of July darkness slowly reclaims it's power over the nights. I think it's a kind of cozy although I know many people hate that the light nights are over.
Let's go back to the winter for a while. Snow makes a huge impact on the light. Obviously, since it reflects light. Maybe that's why I like the winter from a photographic point of view.
Finns love summer. It's short but very light. It actually never gets dark. But as a photographer my love for the Finnish winter has really grown stronger over the years. The reason is very simple: it is astonishingly beautiful. At times it is, I should say. But it's very dark too. Daylight lasts for less than six hours in late December and the sun is visible only for about four hours where I live. It's dark when I go to work and it's dark again when I go home.
Winter daylight reflected in the frozen river. |
Let's look at the Nordic light for a moment. Since days are so short in during the winter the sun never rises high over the horizon. It's a constant twilight which can be very beautiful. The sun rises slowly over the treetops and starts setting without giving us any real daylight.
Some might think it's strange that the sun rises and sets so slowly. Of course the sun visually moves just as fast in the sky here as anywhere else in the world. But the angle is so flat. Even at noon the sun is close to the horizon. And when the sun sets it doesn't get dark quckly.
The sun's path on the sky in mid winter. The photo is taken in mid February. Two months earlier the sun would be even closer to the horizon. |
In the summer it the other way around. The sun goes slowly down and never go far below the horizon. (Turn the image upside down in your head to get the picture.) Hence the light nights. You can't see the midnight sun where I live. Around midsummer the sun is out of sight only for four hours it never gets dark.
A foggy night in the end of June at 01:15 AM. |
Midnight at the beach. |
Visitors may find it hard to sleep because of the light nights. Some Finns too, but for most of us it's not a problem.
In the end of July darkness slowly reclaims it's power over the nights. I think it's a kind of cozy although I know many people hate that the light nights are over.
A Finnish summer cottage at 11 PM on 31 July. |
Faint sunlight on a snowy landscape. |
Snowy trees reflecting the sunlight. |
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