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Tag Graph: Sunsets by time

Tag Graph: Sunsets by time by krazydad / jbum.
About 15000 photos tagged "sunset" taken within the last year. Compare to the previous photo, which graphs sunrises in the same way.

Their horizontal positions represent the day of the year the photo was taken. January is on the left, December is on the right. The vertical bars are the boundaries between months.

The vertical position represents the time of day the photo was taken, according to the EXIF data. The horizontal lines are hours, with the thick line in the middle representing 12 noon.

The deepest "dip" in the wave formed by the images is the Summer Solstice.

Since there was an increase in the amount of photos during the past year, I am dimming the photos proportional to the number of submissions for that day, to minimize the effect of increasing submissions and to keep the overall brightness uniform. This makes the seasonal change in sunset times more apparent.

Also note a slight echo around 5-7 am, which appears to be folks whose camera clocks are 12 hours off. 

Comments

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kastner  Pro User  says:

Wow. This is truly amazing.
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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Genista  Pro User  says:

Very cool stuff.

Now pull out the latitude effect based on location tags, please :)
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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felipe.ledesma says:

I don´t know exactly who you are, and what is your resumé and stuff... But I wouldn´t surprise if the things you have made appear in Wired magazine anytime soon.
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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fo.ol  Pro User  says:

I've been tagging mine "sunrises" and "sunsets," oh well.
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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striatic  Pro User  says:

that -12 hour echo is the most beautiful thing i've seen today.

i'm almost tempted to ask you to crop out the echo section and upload it to flickr.com/groups/failure, but i won't ; )
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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90650 says:

Such elegant displays of information. These things remind me Edward Tufte's work.

Are these graphs generated soley by code or is photo editing involved?

Really beautiful.
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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krazydad / jbum  Pro User  says:

This graph was mentioned on Edward Tufte's website a few days ago, much to my delight.

This one was assembled solely by code. I did the "color of..." graph manually in Photoshop, working off the RGB data.
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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TheLawleys says:

An interesting and impressive visualization, jbum. There's lots of info there. I'm curious to know what's going on with the outliers (other than the 12-hour echo). Mis-set clocks? Extreme latitudes? Non-literal uses of the word "sunset?" Probably some combination of these and more, but the stories behind the outliers always intrigue me. (k)
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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krazydad / jbum  Pro User  says:

A few possibilities:

a) There's a line of photos at 8:00 AM. I assume this were assigned a 'default' time by some software (which software I wonder?) There are other photos that lie on other hour boundaries, which I assume are also either have hand-edited times or using default settings.

b) There are many many photos uploaded to Flickr that don't have
EXIF data. How are 'taken' times assigned to these? I don't know.

c) There are a few photos with sunset tags which are not of sunsets - e.g. "The Sunset Diner".
Posted 59 months ago. ( permalink )

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Neil  Pro User  says:

I did not see this before! I love it. Very Tuftey.
Posted 58 months ago. ( permalink )

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Neil  Pro User  says:

thoughts!

1) why do people start taking sunset photos around March? And why stop in the middle of the summer? (I'm wondering, why not autumn?)

2) what would a graph of all "outdoors" (plus strongly related tags) at *all* times look like? I want to see a swelling of blue around June shrinking to greyish in November, with fringes of sunset/sunrise color.

For maximum effect, perhaps creative techniques are needed to get only sky. Cropping to the top third or half of the image might work.

I'll might try that if you don't.
Posted 58 months ago. ( permalink )

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krazydad / jbum  Pro User  says:

People don't stop taking photos in march. Flickr is only a year old, and the graph was made in February - so the March data was a year old, so fewer submissions to Flickr at that time.
Posted 58 months ago. ( permalink )

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fo.ol  Pro User  says:

But in winter, for me at least, it's already dark by the time I get out of work.
Posted 58 months ago. ( permalink )

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_chance_ says:

There's also not much of a sunset if the cloud cover is thick enough. Nor sunrise for that matter.
Posted 58 months ago. ( permalink )

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quasistoic  Pro User  says:

Keep in mind that there are geographical locations called Sunset (Sunset Avenue, The Sunset District, etc) which might account for a few of the outliers.
Posted 55 months ago. ( permalink )

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Orrin  Pro User  says:

Not to mention Sunset Boulevard, which I frequently use as a tag ...but I always write it sunsetblvd ...so as not to skew your graph!

Thanks for sharing these with us. I find them endlessly fascinating.
Posted 55 months ago. ( permalink )

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bovinity  Pro User  says:

very hott. any chance of turning this visualisation into a poster too?
Posted 53 months ago. ( permalink )

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dmarks says:

very cool!
Posted 50 months ago. ( permalink )

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Shield  Pro User  says:

I'm so glad I found this- really amazing technique. I just blogged it here.
Posted 43 months ago. ( permalink )

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pitix says:

Another likely cause for the outliers is longitudinal travel: when people travel across timezones, they're unlikely to reset their camera's clock, which would still be recording the time back home. Could the echo mean that people are more likely to travel to antipodeal longitudes than anywhere else?
Posted 40 months ago. ( permalink )

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krazydad / jbum  Pro User  says:

Pitix: Good observation!

While this is a good explanation for some of the errors, I'm not sure it explains the 12-hour echo as well as the "am/pm" theory.

My guess is that people would be more likely to travel to closer destinations than the other side of the planet...
Posted 40 months ago. ( permalink )

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moronic_warwicks says:

I'm assuming that this picture has the time scale reversed, so that lower down = later on?

I suppose that in (most of) the Southern hemisphere the seasons are reversed, so this image leads me to the conclusion that the vast predominance of submissions are from the Northern hemisphere.

All things considered that is not surprising ... but it's puzzling to me that we don't see anything other than this main band. This looks consistent with a range of curves going from the equator towards the north ... where are the opposite curves?
Posted 36 months ago. ( permalink )

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krazydad / jbum  Pro User  says:

Here is a Southern Hemisphere sample:

Southern Hemisphere Sunsets
Posted 36 months ago. ( permalink )

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moronic_warwicks says:

sweet
Posted 36 months ago. ( permalink )

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SerialCoder  Pro User  says:

This image has been added to the Flickr Museum for making explore's top 25. Kudos! You can check it out HERE...


Posted 29 months ago. ( permalink )

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