View allAll Photos Tagged aurora"
Aurora Borealis over the Isle of Skye, Scotland.
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I've been keeping track of Aurora Australis activity trying to finally get a decent shot of the 'green glow'. This is about as good as it gets from mainland Australia. Would love to head down to Tazzy, or even Antarctica one day.
5 frames stitched.
With our trip to Iceland nearing its end and no real sign of the Aurora, the impending forecast of clear skies and high CME activity resulted in the most spectacular thing my eyes have ever witnessed. The colours you see here are true to time and i have no way changed them. Even the hotel staff claimed it was the biggest show they had seen for many years!!!!
Aurora borealis (Northern lights) over Longyearbyen, Svalbard.
Lucky enough to capture a shooting start during the exposure :)
This was taken in early 2013 but I'm just getting back into Flickr so thought I'd share some of my older images
another evening spent gazing at the sky, very cold but well worth it.
Taken from the island of Sommaroy near Tromso Norway.
Here is another image from Crater Lake, but this one was a much longer exposure soaking up all that colorful aurora, air glow and some star trails...
1001s ƒ/4 ISO 500 at 16 mm
To put the size of this light show in perspective. The mountains in the foreground are a few 100 meters high.
Iso 800
f/2,8
10 sec.
The Aurora watch was hitting 90% and Brett Abernethy and I were ready. Even with the clouds it was very impressive. The cloud here was moving over the aurora and the view is due East.
Sunspot activity often means an Aurora Borealis display in the north sky. This was a 30-second time exposure.
The northern lights made an appearance in the Sundre area last night. Luckily, the appearance coincided with a bout of insomnia, otherwise I'd have slept through this show.
Gimsøy, Lofoten Islands, Norway. A wonderful experience to see these lights for the first time in my life. Taken on Thursday night at 11.03pm on my Sony RX1, f2.8, ISO 250, 30 seconds.
Aaaaah, my aurora photos looked so spectacular on the small LCD preview screen of the camera, opening them up in full size revealed a horse of a different color. I'm still working on how to make these presentable. More of these to come. Hamnoy island, Lofotens, Norway.
After a cloudy day in Tromsø yesterday, the sky opened up after sunset. The northern lights turned up with a spectacular show. Hope you like it, more to come !!
While I was sitting here shooting this shot a guided tourbus full of excited people stopped behind me and i guess all the tourists got what they paid for.
A memory from last winter, I really begin to miss dark nights. In a week ore to we may see the aurora again, hopefully.
Hamnoy island, yet another aurora photo, this one was one of my favorites, I only saw this phenomenon that evening for the first time, and maybe will never see it again.
This was shot on a random dark road somewhere 30 minutes outside of Reykjavik that probably only our driver Siggi knows where it's located.
You hear stories of people going to Iceland to see the Northern Lights and not seeing them the entire time there and others getting full-blown auroras with crazy dancing lights. Well, we didn't quite get the crazy dancing lights here, but we were still quite lucky to see them on the very first night we arrived and then a second time about a week later, so no complaints.
This was my first time attempting to shoot the Northern Lights and I had little astrophotography experience in general so it was a bit of a struggle at first to get good results, but through lots of trial and error you have the result seen here :)
Still having an amazing time in the Arctic. Just put a new blog together with more photos from this epic aurora night, owls, Arctic macros....
Blog at;
www.oliverwrightphotography.com/blog/view/arctic-blog-num...
hi everyone:)
another shot from fridays aurora show.......
same as the previous, it was cold, the comp sucks, and this is i bit too dar:(( lol
but i post it anyways:))
thanks for stopping by and for leaving comments and faves, it is highly appreciated:))
take care :))
Johnny:))
Our local university issues an 'aurora watch' whenever the elements are right for a northern lights display. Last night was a 'red alert' and what a show! Luckily the weather was not too bad, and as I took this shot from my deck, my nice warm house was easily accessible. Unfortunately, the lights of Edmonton can also be seen.