Africa Wildlife Photography Competition Winners On View In Palm Beach

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Images from the 2022 Benjamin Mkapa Wildlife Photography Awards plainly reveal animals’ extraordinary humanity. A gorilla’s wisdom. The gentleness of an elephant. The community of wildebeest.

That’s easy to see.

Beneath the surface of each picture, no less clear when looking close, man’s inhumanity reveals itself.

Wantonness. Cruelty. Exploitation.

All of these animals are in danger from the most reckless predator the planet has ever known: man.

Be it poaching, habitat destruction or a dozen other extractive and exploitative behaviors which have caused wildlife populations to collapse around the globe, it increasingly feels like a miracle any of these wonderous creatures remain. Enjoy the miraculous while you can in Africa and through the winning entries of the 2nd Annual Benjamin Mkapa African Wildlife Photography Awards which can be seen at The Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach through June 4, 2023.

“When you look into the eyes of this beautiful silverback, you see a lot of yourself looking back,” Africa Wildlife Federation Senior Vice President Craig Sholley told Forbes.com of the grand prize-winning image (pictured below). “It represents an endangered species and a conservation success story. Mountain gorillas are the only great ape in the world whose population is increasing. This success story is a result of a four-decades effort orchestrated by non-governmental organizations like AWF in direct collaboration with the Rwandan government. The product of this work is one that benefits both wildlife and people.”

People and wildlife, connection, our shared fate comes through in another crowd pleaser from the competition, an animal keeper being caressed by an elephant’s trunk in an orphanage.

“This image portrays the importance of the work of Africans who have devoted their lives to the future of threatened wildlife,” Sholley said. “These are individuals who are passionate about conservation and in many cases put their lives on the line–protecting species from poachers and the illegal wildlife trade.”

The picture recalls one of the most famous and heartbreaking wildlife-human photographs ever taken, that of the last male white rhino with his keeper in 2018 moments before the animal died. An image not simply of death, but extinction. Forever death. They both know.

Africa comes to Palm Beach

Credit for bringing the exhibition from Nairobi, Kenya to Palm Beach goes to Wilber James, Trustee Emeritus of AWF and board member of The Society of the Four Arts, along with fellow AWF Trustee Payson Coleman. They approached Director of Programs at Four Arts Sofia Maduro about showing the photographs.

“Payson and I have been involved in African wildlife conservation for over 50 years and knew that a number of our friends in Palm Beach shared our enthusiasm for the preservation of the animals and habitat in Africa as well as the well-being of the people,” James told Forbes.com. “We felt that an exhibition of the Mkapa Awards at the Four Arts would be a powerful way to highlight the majesty of Africa’s animals and also educate the public about the challenges they face. Sofia was in complete agreement about the importance of the exhibition and felt that the Four Arts could also reach out to the schools in Palm Beach and West Palm Beach to invite students to tour the exhibition for a powerful learning experience.”

The competition was co-created by AWF and Nature’s Best Photography to celebrate AWF’s 60-year anniversary as the only African global conservation organization protecting wildlife and its ecosystems as an essential part of a modern and prosperous Africa.

“Craig Sholley and I are equally passionate about African wildlife and the creative skills our Mkapa Awards entrants have shared since its launch in 2021,” Steve Freligh, President and CEO of Nature’s Best Photography Fund, told Forbes.com. “These talented photographers, of all ages and backgrounds, are as interesting and diverse as the photographs they submit, delivering immediate and long-lasting impact that will motivate change.”

Forty-eight award-winning prints from the competition are on view.

“There are those photographs that immediately stop you in your tracks, but also ones where new perspectives are revealed as you examine their details,” Freligh said. “Each image shares an extraordinary moment in Africa, a single experience that may be enjoyed personally as well as collectively.”

The winning images were selected from over 9,500 entries representing 57 countries, chosen by a panel of judges including accomplished wildlife photographers, leading conservation professionals, highly regarded safari guides, and youth conservation activists.

“Through the art of photography and video, the primary goal was to attract, inspire, and involve photographers from Africa and around the world at all levels of camera experience so that they may share stories from the field and encourage new advocates for conservation change,” Sholley said. “Effectively, AWF wanted to ‘Bring Africa to the World, and the World to Africa.’”

Benjamin Mkapa

H.E. Benjamin Mkapa (1938–2020) was president of Tanzania in east Africa, south of Kenya bordering the Indian Ocean, from 1995 to 2005. The astounding “Great Migration” begins in Tanzania.

More than a million wildebeest along with hundreds of thousands of zebra, topi and other gazelle start their annual journey in the Serengeti National Park creating the largest herd movement of animals on the planet. Over the course of the year, the animals move north and clockwise, up into Kenya and the Masai Mara National Reserve, back down through the Serengeti and then to Ngorongoro Conservation Area, famed for the Ngorongoro Crater.

“Mkapa began his career as a journalist, understanding the importance of educating the public on important conservation topics,” Sholly explains. “Today, Mkapa’s name remains widely respected for his legacy of principled leadership and protecting Africa’s wild heritage.”

As one example, during his time on AWF’s Board of Trustees, Mkapa played a critical role in the establishment of Manyara Ranch Conservancy in northern Tanzania, an important 45,000-acre wildlife corridor connecting several of the country’s national parks.

Throughout much of the 20th century, visitors to Africa went primarily to shoot animals, not pictures. Limited legal hunting on the continent persists, in part due to the United States’ continued allowance of trophy hunters to import animals killed in Africa.

Fortunately, photographic safaris have mostly replaced their bloodthirsty predecessors.

“During the launch of the Four Arts exhibition, attendees posed many questions about ‘organizing their first or next safari’ and how to get involved in helping to secure the future of the wildlife and wilderness areas they saw represented in the photos of the competition,” Sholley said. “My greatest thrill has been watching people’s reactions as they view the exhibition images for the first time. When the subject matter revolves around Africa’s iconic wildlife and remote wilderness areas, the impact is clear and visible.”

Africa: Closer than you Think

Americans, by and large, are daunted by the idea of travel to Africa. Many even frequent, life-long, world travelers from the States have never seen southern Africa with their own eyes. Never spent a morning game drive 10-feet from a feeding pride of lions. Never stared eye-to-eye with a cape buffalo.

Too far. Too expensive.

Once in a lifetime.

That needn’t be the case.

While there are undeniably super-expensive and difficult to reach locales and experiences such as the water safaris around the Okavango Delta in Botswana or gorilla trekking in Rwanda or Uganda, visiting Kruger National Park or Greater Kruger in South Africa via flight to Johannesburg and car or bus to the wildlife can accommodate many non-luxe budgets.

Kenya safaris and Tanzania safaris are good middle-ground choices with a non-stop flight from JFK airport in New York direct to Nairobi now an option, shortening travel time to east Africa dramatically.

Africa, particularly when traveling from the eastern half of the U.S., proves no more arduous to reach or expensive to enjoy than Hawai’i, Australia, Asia or India–oftentimes less so. And the rewards are unmatched.

As wonderful as the pictures are, they don’t compare to real thing.

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25 Comically Mistimed Moments Caught On Camera

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While it may be true that some pictures turn out better than others, there is something undeniably captivating about those that capture the exact moment when someone experiences an epic failure. As we scroll through galleries of these perfectly timed shots, we can’t help but point, laugh, and revel in the misfortune of others.

But why is it that we find it so funny when others fail? Perhaps it is because we are wired to find humor in the absurd and ridiculous. Maybe seeing someone else’s misfortune makes us feel better about our own flaws and mistakes. Or maybe it’s simply that we are a bit weird and get a kick out of watching others fall on their faces (metaphorically and literally).

Regardless of the reason, there is no denying that these photos are guaranteed to make us laugh. From someone slipping on a banana peel to face-planting into a pile of mud, the comedic possibilities are endless. So go ahead, laugh, and enjoy the hilariously failed moments captured in these perfectly timed pictures.

Scroll down and enjoy yourself. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.

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Striking A Pose At South Carlsbad State Beach: Photo Of The Day

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CARLSBAD, CA — Patch reader Tiyal Bell captured this photo of Avery Bell at lifeguard tower 25 at South Carlsbad State Beach.

Thanks for sharing!

If you have an awesome picture of nature, breathtaking scenery, kids caught being kids, a pet doing something funny or something unusual you happen to catch with your camera, we’d love to feature it on Patch.

We’re looking for high-resolution, horizontal images that reflect the beauty that is San Diego County, and that show off your unique talents.

Send your photos to [email protected]. Be sure to include photo credit information, when and where the shot was taken, and any other details about what was going on.

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Samsung Galaxy S21 owner? Love to snap the stars? You just got this awesome Galaxy S22 mode

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Samsung Galaxy S21, Galaxy S21+, and Galaxy S21 Ultra users have just got the awesome feature that first came on the Galaxy S22 – the astrophotography mode. This feature enables users to capture stunning long-exposure shots of the stars and sky and it was first introduced in the Samsung Galaxy S22 series and has been carried over to the latest Galaxy S23 series. But now users of some other Samsung phones are set to experience this astrophotography camera mode! As per a report by SamMobile, the Expert RAW app is now available for users of Samsung Galaxy S21, Galaxy S21+, and Galaxy S21 Ultra.

In April 2023, the Galaxy S21 series was updated with a significant 1GB update that included various improvements to the Camera and Gallery apps, among which the astrophotography feature stood out as a noteworthy move. Not just Galaxy S21 series, Samsung plans to bring astrophotography support to other flagship devices, such as the Galaxy S20 series and Galaxy Z Fold, via the Expert RAW app in the near future, the report added. However, no timeline has been revealed so far.

Meanwhile, know how to use this feature on Samsung Galaxy S21 phones.

Not sure which
mobile to buy?

How to use astrophotography mode on Samsung Galaxy S21 series

  • The Samsung Galaxy S21, S21+, and S21 Ultra users can try this feature. All you need to do is download the latest version of Expert RAW from the Galaxy Store.
  • To access the astrophotography mode, it is essential to have the April 2023 security update installed on your phone.
  • Ensure that your device has been updated to the latest firmware by navigating to the Settings > Software update menu.
  • Once you have downloaded the update, you will find a new icon for the astrophotography mode on the in-app toolbar.
  • To use the astrophotography mode, ensure that you have enabled the Special photo options slider. Additionally, turning on RAW photos is recommended as it allows for the capture of the maximum amount of detail.
  • Before getting too excited, make sure the night sky is clear and there is little to no light pollution.
  • Not just photography, the mode also helps you find the location of constellations when you point the camera at the night sky.

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In the Digital Age, Wedding Film Photography Has a Resurgence

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Taylor Dafoe and Alex Schulte’s relationship has always included film photography. It was the catalyst for their relationship: after leaving his rangefinder film camera at Ms. Schulte’s house during a party in 2015, Mr. Dafoe went back a few days later to pick it up. They ended up going on a first date that weekend.

It was also part of how they got engaged. In June 2022, Mr. Dafoe, now 32, who works as a news and features writer at the art marketing website Artnet, decorated the back yard of their home outside Troy, N.Y., with film photos he had taken during their relationship. He proposed by handing Ms. Schulte, now 32, who works in marketing at Donut, a workplace software company, the same film camera he had left at her house when they first met. The engagement ring came months later.

So when it came time for them to choose a photographer for their September 2023 wedding at June Farms in West Sand Lake, N.Y., it was no surprise that they opted for Autumn Jordan, who is based in Athens, N.Y., and often shoots weddings on film. “That was part of the appeal, for sure,” Mr. Dafoe said.

In recent years, more and more couples are seeking out photographers who can shoot film photos for their weddings. The look of the photos, often a bit softer and grainier than digital ones, and the slower, more analog process are appealing to many couples who are craving a nostalgic medium. This means that photographers and couples can’t look at the photos until they’ve been developed days or weeks after the wedding.

Ms. Schulte and Mr. Dafoe welcome the limitations of shooting a wedding on film. They shared that the process has even begun to influence how they think about their wedding day in general.

“We were thinking about trying to do away with some of the preciousness that comes with weddings,” Mr. Dafoe said. Because of the restrictions of film, they would get fewer photographs in the end and have fewer opportunities to reshoot moments. “We want the event to kind of revel in its own ephemerality,” he said. “And choosing to shoot on film, that’s like a big part of that thinking — because of the material and financial limitations of film.”

Anna Urban, a wedding photographer based in Edinburgh, Scotland, has noticed an increase in couples seeking out film photographers over the past year. Though she still primarily uses digital cameras, in September 2022 she started offering film photography to her clients because of the rise in demand. She charges about 100 pounds per film roll, or around $125. About 5 percent of her wedding clients are choosing to add film to their wedding packages, she said.

“People are looking for something different,” Ms. Urban said.“The whole process is different. You don’t see the effect until you have them scanned, developed. It’s like part of the magic, waiting for the photos.”

Kate Hampson, a photographer based in London, began shooting entire weddings on film in May 2022 because it aligned more closely with her personal interests. Although she would typically bring her film camera to weddings, she spent the first few years of her wedding photography career shooting primarily in digital.

However, she was never completely happy with the results.

“I wasn’t getting inspired by digital,” Ms. Hampson said. “So eventually I started saying, Would you mind if I shoot maybe half film, half digital?” Before long, she made the jump to shooting exclusively with film. She typically brings a digital camera to weddings as a backup, but rarely uses it. One of the last times she shot a wedding with a digital camera, in June 2022, it happened to be 118 degrees outside and the camera shut off because of the heat, she said.

“Thank God for film,” Ms. Hampson said with a laugh.

Jen Huang Bogan, a wedding photographer in Montecito, Calif., said that the more weddings she shot, the more she began to realize that film was the medium she wanted to work in.

“It wasn’t until shooting weddings where I was like, OK, there’s a striking difference between digital and film,” Ms. Bogan said.“The look of film just vastly outperformed digital.”

Couples are typically drawn to her work, Ms. Bogan said, because they are looking for classic, timeless photos, which she feels film is best suited for because it tends to not look tied to a specific time period. She compares shooting in film to painting with oil: It’s the medium that she believes produces the best artistic photographs and gives couples the opportunity to slow down.

“It really works for weddings and portraiture because it is so natural and also so flattering,” she said.

Jillian Mitchell, a wedding photographer in San Francisco, Mexico, who works mainly in New York and Los Angeles, shoots a majority of her weddings on film. She started working as a wedding photographer in 2009, shooting entirely on digital cameras. She had used film in her personal work, though, and quickly found herself gravitating back toward the medium as she became more involved in wedding photography.

Although she now shoots primarily film photos, she doesn’t restrict herself. “I do think that digital has a place,” Ms. Mitchell said. She tends to pull out her digital camera when shooting in low-lit areas, like when she’s capturing candid moments on the dance floor. Even so, she said, “it’s very rare for me to see a digital image that moves me in the way that film does.”

There are some photographers who want to recreate the look of film photos in a digital format. One of them is Jose Villa, a wedding photographer in Solvang, Calif., who has shot exclusively on film for most of his 20-year career.

“Weddings are a living, breathing thing,” he said. He aims to capture photographs without interrupting the cadence of a wedding, which often means that he is photographing moments where he has less control than if he were photographing in a studio.

“We adjust to those situations, and also still keep our cool, and use the equipment that makes it so that we can do that,” he said. “Film can be a lot more forgiving.”

Although he still loves shooting in film, over the past few years Mr. Villa has begun taking photos with digital cameras, especially as he works with celebrity clients who post pictures on social media just hours after a wedding.

“Film was really popular, you know, 20 years ago, and then it went away,” Mr. Villa said. “People were talking about it less when digital started becoming better.” Although he believes that some digital photos can be edited to recreate the look of film photos, he also welcomes the resurgence of film photography at weddings.

“I think that it is amazing for these photographers to continue to shoot with film,” he said, “and continue to keep it alive.”

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Africa Wildlife Photography Competition Winners On View In Palm Beach, FL

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Images from the 2022 Benjamin Mkapa Wildlife Photography Awards plainly reveal animals’ extraordinary humanity. A gorilla’s wisdom. The gentleness of an elephant. The community of wildebeest.

That’s easy to see.

Beneath the surface of each picture, no less clear when looking close, man’s inhumanity reveals itself.

Wantonness. Cruelty. Exploitation.

All of these animals are in danger from the most reckless predator the planet has ever known: man.

Be it poaching, habitat destruction or a dozen other extractive and exploitative behaviors which have caused wildlife populations to collapse around the globe, it increasingly feels like a miracle any of these wonderous creatures remain. Enjoy the miraculous while you can in Africa and through the winning entries of the 2nd Annual Benjamin Mkapa African Wildlife Photography Awards which can be seen at The Society of the Four Arts in Palm Beach through June 4, 2023.

“When you look into the eyes of this beautiful silverback, you see a lot of yourself looking back,” Africa Wildlife Federation Senior Vice President Craig Sholley told Forbes.com of the grand prize-winning image (pictured below). “It represents an endangered species and a conservation success story. Mountain gorillas are the only great ape in the world whose population is increasing. This success story is a result of a four-decades effort orchestrated by non-governmental organizations like AWF in direct collaboration with the Rwandan government. The product of this work is one that benefits both wildlife and people.”

People and wildlife, connection, our shared fate comes through in another crowd pleaser from the competition, an animal keeper being caressed by an elephant’s trunk in an orphanage.

“This image portrays the importance of the work of Africans who have devoted their lives to the future of threatened wildlife,” Sholley said. “These are individuals who are passionate about conservation and in many cases put their lives on the line–protecting species from poachers and the illegal wildlife trade.”

The picture recalls one of the most famous and heartbreaking wildlife-human photographs ever taken, that of the last male white rhino with his keeper in 2018 moments before the animal died. An image not simply of death, but extinction. Forever death. They both know.

Africa comes to Palm Beach

Credit for bringing the exhibition from Nairobi, Kenya to Palm Beach goes to Wilber James, Trustee Emeritus of AWF and board member of The Society of the Four Arts, along with fellow AWF Trustee Payson Coleman. They approached Director of Programs at Four Arts Sofia Maduro about showing the photographs.

“Payson and I have been involved in African wildlife conservation for over 50 years and knew that a number of our friends in Palm Beach shared our enthusiasm for the preservation of the animals and habitat in Africa as well as the well-being of the people,” James told Forbes.com. “We felt that an exhibition of the Mkapa Awards at the Four Arts would be a powerful way to highlight the majesty of Africa’s animals and also educate the public about the challenges they face. Sofia was in complete agreement about the importance of the exhibition and felt that the Four Arts could also reach out to the schools in Palm Beach and West Palm Beach to invite students to tour the exhibition for a powerful learning experience.”

The competition was co-created by AWF and Nature’s Best Photography to celebrate AWF’s 60-year anniversary as the only African global conservation organization protecting wildlife and its ecosystems as an essential part of a modern and prosperous Africa.

“Craig Sholley and I are equally passionate about African wildlife and the creative skills our Mkapa Awards entrants have shared since its launch in 2021,” Steve Freligh, President and CEO of Nature’s Best Photography Fund, told Forbes.com. “These talented photographers, of all ages and backgrounds, are as interesting and diverse as the photographs they submit, delivering immediate and long-lasting impact that will motivate change.”

Forty-eight award-winning prints from the competition are on view.

“There are those photographs that immediately stop you in your tracks, but also ones where new perspectives are revealed as you examine their details,” Freligh said. “Each image shares an extraordinary moment in Africa, a single experience that may be enjoyed personally as well as collectively.”

The winning images were selected from over 9,500 entries representing 57 countries, chosen by a panel of judges including accomplished wildlife photographers, leading conservation professionals, highly regarded safari guides, and youth conservation activists.

“Through the art of photography and video, the primary goal was to attract, inspire, and involve photographers from Africa and around the world at all levels of camera experience so that they may share stories from the field and encourage new advocates for conservation change,” Sholley said. “Effectively, AWF wanted to ‘Bring Africa to the World, and the World to Africa.’”

Benjamin Mkapa

H.E. Benjamin Mkapa (1938–2020) was president of Tanzania in east Africa, south of Kenya bordering the Indian Ocean, from 1995 to 2005. The astounding “Great Migration” begins in Tanzania.

More than a million wildebeest along with hundreds of thousands of zebra, topi and other gazelle start their annual journey in the Serengeti National Park creating the largest herd movement of animals on the planet. Over the course of the year, the animals move north and clockwise, up into Kenya and the Masai Mara National Reserve, back down through the Serengeti and then to Ngorongoro Conservation Area, famed for the Ngorongoro Crater.

“Mkapa began his career as a journalist, understanding the importance of educating the public on important conservation topics,” Sholly explains. “Today, Mkapa’s name remains widely respected for his legacy of principled leadership and protecting Africa’s wild heritage.”

As one example, during his time on AWF’s Board of Trustees, Mkapa played a critical role in the establishment of Manyara Ranch Conservancy in northern Tanzania, an important 45,000-acre wildlife corridor connecting several of the country’s national parks.

Throughout much of the 20th century, visitors to Africa went primarily to shoot animals, not pictures. Limited legal hunting on the continent persists, in part due to the United States’ continued allowance of trophy hunters to import animals killed in Africa.

Fortunately, photographic safaris have mostly replaced their bloodthirsty predecessors.

“During the launch of the Four Arts exhibition, attendees posed many questions about ‘organizing their first or next safari’ and how to get involved in helping to secure the future of the wildlife and wilderness areas they saw represented in the photos of the competition,” Sholley said. “My greatest thrill has been watching people’s reactions as they view the exhibition images for the first time. When the subject matter revolves around Africa’s iconic wildlife and remote wilderness areas, the impact is clear and visible.”

Africa: Closer than you Think

Americans, by and large, are daunted by the idea of travel to Africa. Many even frequent, life-long, world travelers from the States have never seen southern Africa with their own eyes. Never spent a morning game drive 10-feet from a feeding pride of lions. Never stared eye-to-eye with a cape buffalo.

Too far. Too expensive.

Once in a lifetime.

That needn’t be the case.

While there are undeniably super-expensive and difficult to reach locales and experiences such as the water safaris around the Okavango Delta in Botswana or gorilla trekking in Rwanda or Uganda, visiting Kruger National Park or Greater Kruger in South Africa via flight to Johannesburg and car or bus to the wildlife can accommodate many non-luxe budgets.

Kenya safaris and Tanzania safaris are good middle-ground choices with a non-stop flight from JFK airport in New York direct to Nairobi now an option, shortening travel time to east Africa dramatically.

Africa, particularly when traveling from the eastern half of the U.S., proves no more arduous to reach or expensive to enjoy than Hawai’i, Australia, Asia or India–oftentimes less so. And the rewards are unmatched.

As wonderful as the pictures are, they don’t compare to real thing.

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¿Qué son las auroras? – Cielos Boreales

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Las auroras son fenómenos luminiscentes que se producen en el cielo nocturno como consecuencia de la interacción de la actividad solar con la magnetosfera y atmósfera de la Tierra. Se producen generalmente alrededor de los círculos polares recibiendo el nombre de auroras boreales en el hemisferio norte y auroras australes en el sur.

¿Cómo se producen las auroras?

El Sol, durante su proceso de fusión nuclear, emite al espacio una corriente de partículas cargadas denominada «viento solar». Este plasma varía en densidad, temperatura, velocidad y polaridad. En ocasiones el viento solar alcanza mayores energías o escapa del Sol a través de grandes agujeros coronales produciendo lo que denominamos «tormentas solares»

Cuando el viento solar alcanza la magnetosfera de la Tierra con gran intensidad esas partículas cargadas son conducidas hacia las zonas polares de nuestro planeta (como los polos magnéticos de un imán). Allí perturban las moléculas de la atmósfera, excitándolas momentáneamente con su energía y produciendo brillantes colores con tonalidades verdosas y violáceas cuando esas moléculas vuelven a su estado energético normal (transforman ese exceso de energía en luz). El resultado es un majestuoso espectáculo de luces y destellos en el cielo que no deja indiferente a nadie.

¿Cómo ver las auroras?

Para ver las auroras tendremos que viajar a zonas próximas al círculo polar. En el hemisferio norte suelen ser visibles en Noruega, Suecia, Finlandia, Islandia, Canadá, Alaska, Siberia y Groenlandia. En el hemisferio sur en parte de Australia (principalmente Tasmania), Nueva Zelanda, sur de Chile y Argentina.

aurora boreal sobre un bosque
Aurora boreal sobre un bosque

Las épocas más favorables para ver las auroras son primavera y otoño. Hay que tener en cuenta que en verano en estas latitudes suele haber luz diurna todo el día y en invierno aunque tenemos oscuridad perpetua o casi perpetua la meteorología suele ser poco favorable. Las fechas próximas a los equinoccios, por la orientación de la Tierra con el Sol, se magnifica la probabilidad de que las erupciones solares interactúen con la magnetosfera de nuestro planeta.

Estar en estas latitudes en esas fechas implica que hay que abrigarse muy bien. Hay que tener en cuenta que tendremos que pasar algunas horas a la intemperie con temperaturas que fácilmente alcanzarán los -15º. Esto incluye calzado especial, guantes, gorros y varias capas de ropa debajo de un buen abrigo.

Tendremos más posibilidades de ver auroras y éstas serán más espectaculares si hay mucha actividad solar por ello tendremos que tener en cuenta el ciclo solar de 11 años en los que tenemos máximos y mínimos. Actualmente estamos en el ciclo 25 y nos encaminamos al máximo solar que se estima llegará en verano de 2025 pero este año estamos teniendo una actividad solar bastante alta.

Es recomendable consultar las aplicaciones de actividad solar que nos indican si hay probabilidades de ver auroras en las próximas horas. También tendremos que estar pendientes de la meteorología ya que no podremos disfrutar del espectáculo si está muy nublado.

Además, al igual que para realizar la observación astronómica, tendremos que alejarnos de las ciudades y huir de la contaminación lumínica ya que el resplandor de la luz artificial nos impedirá disfrutar del espectáculo de las luces naturales.

¿Se ven los colores de las auroras?

Las auroras suelen ser de color verdoso pero en ocasiones puede presentar tonalidades púrpuras y rojizas pero tenemos que tener en cuenta que no siempre los colores son observables a simple vista ya que necesitamos que la tormenta solar sea de gran intensidad para que la aurora sea muy brillante y así pueda excitar los conos de nuestros ojos. Lo habitual es ver las auroras como cortinas de luz grisácea o blanquecina que se mueven en el cielo.

El índice Kp es un indicador de la actividad de auroras ofrecido por la NOAA SWPC y que mide en una escala entre 0 y 9 la actividad de la magnetosfera terrestre. No es un índice que garantice la visibilidad de auroras pero puede usarse como buena referencia. Entre 0 y 2 es tranquilo, 3 inestable, 4 activo, 5 tormenta menor, 6 tormenta moderada y los siguientes niveles corresponden a fuerte, severa y extrema. En latitudes altas se necesita un mínimo de Kp4 para poder ver auroras mientras que un Kp8 o 9 podría hacer visibles auroras en latitudes tan bajas como por ejemplo en España como pudimos ver en abril de 2023.

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GuruShots Winning Images From Their ‘Springtime Splendor’ Photo Challenge

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We teamed up again with the world’s leading photo game GuruShots to showcase the winning images from the Springtime Splendor challenge.

By competing in epic photography challenges against millions of photographers, you can get instant feedback and exposure from over three billion monthly votes and increase your ranking from Newbie to achieve the ultimate status (and bragging rights) of Guru.

Congratulations to those photographers who have made it to the top voted photos. To find out more, and to sign up and take part in the next challenge, visit www.gurushots.com

#1 Top Photographer Winner – Anca, Romania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#2 Top Photo Winner – Salvijs Bilinskis, Latvia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#3 Guru’s Top Pick Winner – Dariusz Budyta, Poland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners


#4 Viktoria Farkas, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#5 Wild Maria Petrovski Folsom, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#6 Serena Vachon, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#7 Ilan Horn, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#8 Sana Filipovic, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#9 Showtime Thomas, Aland Islands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#10 Redhead Shutter Finger, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#11 Lidia Gheorghiu, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#12 Marijan Milic, Croatia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#13 Dahlia Yeh, Taiwan

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#14 Blue Eyed Photography, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#15 Annemiek Smedinga, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#16 Xan White, Switzerland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#17 Tattoodvamp, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#18 Milena R, Bulgaria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#19 Shanky Yvette, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#20 Pavlína Rolincová, Czechia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#21 Nagarajan Subramanian, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#22 Erika Prikrylova, Czechia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#23 David Brinkman, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#24 Adi, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#25 Rainer Kersten, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#26 Dina Bersano, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#27 Fourth Creek, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#28 Brandon Steele, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#29 Jackie Singer, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#30 Cindy Radmacher, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#31 David Feldt, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#32 John Slawik, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#33 Spartak Avetisyan, Armenia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#34 Charlotte Rhodes, Great Britain (UK)

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#35 Sylvie Gabriel, France

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#36 Ashley Aimee, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#37 Luc Bussieres, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#38 Roxana Budulan, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#39 Alain van den Abeele, Belgium

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#40 Jennbible, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#41 Liviu Ivanescu, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#42 Thomlutz, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#43 Michael Gordon, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#44 Rebecca Langham, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#45 Jamesw6176, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#46 Phil Barrs, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#47 Agne Jotautiene, Lithuania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#48 Mick Harris, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#49 Enikő Andor, Romania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#50 Sinisa Nikolic, Yugoslavia (former)

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#51 Daniel Feuerlicht, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#52 Kenneth A Romero, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#53 Sanja Ristivojevic, United Arab Emirates

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#54 Steven Ekenstam, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#55 John Kitzmiller, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#56 Johntubbs, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#57 Gewin Mitch, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#58 Rosita Larsson, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#59 Marius Forgaciu, Romania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#60 Kerenkei, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#61 Ryszard Tutko, Poland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#62 Helkoryo, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#63 Bryony Herrod-Taylor, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#64 Anomis, Romania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#65 David Cassidy, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#66 Luís Laranjeira, Portugal

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#67 Pamela Palmer, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#68 Daggi M, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#69 The Jetsetter, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#70 Spkr51, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#71 Malgorzata Ackermann, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#72 Carla Odiaga, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#73 Katie Derhay, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#74 Joel Struble, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#75 Erika Jägers, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#76 Debbie Squier-Bernst, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#77 Forrest Betts, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#78 Marija Jilek, Croatia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#79 Isiah Hoesli, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#80 Kathryn Keller-Casper, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#81 Ashley Levinson, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#82 Tjeert Mensinga, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#83 Vydmantas Bručas, Lithuania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#84 Barbara Singer, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#85 Heather Dubin-Brians, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#86 Radhika Prasad, India

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#87 Sabine Forstner, Austria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#88 Alana McKibben, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#89 Aogmike, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#90 Peter Merz, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#91 Danielle Hooijmans, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#92 Ari Miller, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#93 Jennifer Schexnaydre, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#94 Karen Abramovich, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#95 Mario Congreve, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#96 Kim Fontenot-Waddle, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#97 Gina Burning Sky, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#98 Shona Thomson, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#99 Nemo Beads, Croatia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#100 Positively Framed, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#101 Mark Greenslade, South Africa

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#102 Shane Lockhart, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#103 Nate Riggins, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#104 Mallory Naylor, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#105 Amanda Youngpeter, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#106 Dan Paolo, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#107 Sierra St Francis, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#108 Lesley Andrew, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#109 Louise Botha, South Africa

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#110 Agnes Elek, Hungary

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#111 Click Emotions, Switzerland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#112 Cooky Overman, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#113 Reginald West , United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#114 JR Penny, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#115 Maguicarvalho, Portugal

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#116 Ivossmann, Estonia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#117 Chester Kleinhans, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#118 Thuweirdsailor, Japan

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#119 Dora Be, Poland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#120 M.Winter, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#121 Janouk Elzinga, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#122 Megan Giordano Raymond, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#123 Jerome Rabillé, France

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#124 David Morávek, Czechia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#125 Julie Barnett, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#126 Christina Shirley, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#127 Sharon Mulford, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#128 Mark Hilton, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#129 Nikita Hardesty, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#130 Alexander Dusatko, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#131 Joshua Owen, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#132 Glzez, Turkey

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#133 Chris Yeaples, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#134 Margaret McLennan, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#135 Thomas Gutschi, Austria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#136 Sergina, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#137 Catherine Fuller, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#138 Manfred Blaha, Austria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#139 Zachary Petersen, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#140 Christina Pokracki, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#141 Jess Guidry, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#142 Karlee Daniels, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#143 Sheri Fresonke Harper, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#144 Igor Tsukerman, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#145 Zennifer, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#146 Vadim Peskov, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#147 Arantxa Martinez, Spain

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#148 Lukasz Szubartowicz, Poland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#149 Terry Nunn, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#150 Kourtney Frisone, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#151 Sublime Capture, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#152 Jtinjersey, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#153 Ck Popp, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#154 Linsy Nozica, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#155 Alysia Conway, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#156 Brian Spears, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#157 DeJour Stricklen, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#158 Matza Dimoff, Bulgaria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#159 Nikolai Suvorov, Czechia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#160 Hannah Tsukroff, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#161 Judy Reyes, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#162 Rodrigo Carriço De Oliveira, Switzerland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#163 Michelle Brooks, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#164 Bruno Venturi, Italy

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#165 Franc Glavas, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#166 Sarah Dawn Baines, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#167 Gabi Pipó, Hungary

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#168 Nidhi Rathi Saraogi, India

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#169 Teneil Ridgeway, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#170 Bill Heaton, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#171 Adonis Angelodimou, Cyprus

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#172 Lorddampersnooty, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#173 Mirnak Photography, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#174 Jeanna Qvarnström, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#175 Nancy Chow, Hong Kong

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#176 RJ Six, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#177 Peter Czanik, Hungary

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#178 Boris Vesel, Croatia (Hrvatska)

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#179 Viktor Balázs, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#180 Eugene Turkestanov, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#181 Susie Bennett, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#182 Sara Dawn, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#183 Teresa Finik, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#184 Meyers86, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#185 Anna Ozaki, Japan

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#186 Santosh Gorla, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#187 Kimber Lights, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#188 Mike Wagner, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#189 Hampus Hultman, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#190 Paula Fisher, United kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#191 MNXPIXNJ, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#192 Katy Lewis, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#193 Bahar Uysal Hamaloğlu, Turkey

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#194 Billura Maharramova, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#195 Timo Kahl, Germany

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#196 Þorsteinn Friðriksson, Iceland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#197 VTPhotog26, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#198 Natechia Schellingerhout, South Africa

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#199 Wendy M Backyarda, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#200 Godwin Cheung, Hong Kong

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#201 Dai Xi, United kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#202 Danny Garcia, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#203 Olga Zeltser, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#204 Tom F Park, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#205 Rtemisanren, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#206 Raivo Erik Veevel, Estonia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#207 Cody Abel, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#208 Felix Hebeisen, Switzerland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#209 Pascale Ducasse, France

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#210 Sylvester Fourroux, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#211 David Prosser, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#212 Sara Curtis, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#213 Ron Licari, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#214 Guy Lambrechts, Belgium

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#215 Sachem-Nashebo Holmes, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#216 Debra Coratti-Velie, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#217 Javier Colon, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#218 Alvaro Hernández, Ireland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#219 Mel Harvey, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#220 Simon Curwen, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#221 Srinivasthi, India

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#222 Paul Woodall, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#223 Alex Zlidin, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#224 Arnold Beettjer, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#225 Ori Livneh, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#226 Ken TOMMY, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#227 Stephan Hauman, South Africa

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#228 Marin Alina, Romania

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#229 Thierry Marty, France

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#230 Jerry Nieters, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#231 Magister Gault , United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#232 Anntie Landm, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#233 Christopher Styer, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#234 Robyn Michelle Robertson, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#235 Justin Hamilton, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#236 Nirada Somjit, Thailand

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#237 Chris Romano, United states

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#238 Sally El Gohary, Egypt

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#239 Devon Williams, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#240 Heather Bannister, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#241 Jeannette Banrey, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#242 Tiffany Dunn, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#243 Doc Leora Leeder, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#244 Gabriele Pittau, Italy

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#245 Finta Agnes, Hungary

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#246 Uri Freundlich, Israel

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#247 Jesper Wikstrom, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#248 Ellie Thurlow, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#249 Shawn Digity19, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#250 Amber Daddy, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#251 Marie Bolin, Sweden

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#252 Amanda Dietrick, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#253 Pavel Pavel, Chile

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#254 Caitlin Sheedy, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#255 Michal Havlik, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#256 ElShaddaiEM, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#257 Jpower1985, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#258 T Charles Rogers, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#259 Ian Lloyd, United Kingdom

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#260 Stacy Hartman, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#261 Silvia Marcos, Mexico

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#262 Hayden Wood, Australia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#263 Ilona Kila, Latvia

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#264 David Lee, Canada

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#265 Heath9111, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#266 Jacob Basnett, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#267 Amanda Westerman, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#268 Beau Levens, Netherlands

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#269 Wes McFee, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#270 Vicki Burke, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#271 Emily Trenter, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#272 Vauhkonen Jani, Finland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#273 Jenn Pyles, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#274 Silvia Rothleitner, Austria

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#275 Carynne Carter, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#276 Jessica Reninger, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#277 Tanner Carson , United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#278 Jyrki Nygren, Finland

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#279 Ameen Malik, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#280 Anna Mmm, Great Britain (UK)

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#281 Ermin Sarkari, India

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners

#282 Betsy DeWitt, United States

Gurushots Springtime Splendor Photo Challenge Winners


Find more info about GuruShots:

Please check our previous articles from GuruShots:

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Easy Color and Texture for Food Photography

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Dyeing cheese cloth with natural foods, to use as texture and color in food photography, is similar to dyeing Easter eggs. Here’s how!



Easy Color and Texture for Food Photography


© Provided by Whisk and Dine
Easy Color and Texture for Food Photography

Food Photography

Aren’t we all food photographers these days! Dining out, or cooking in we have become a world, fully aware of the beauty nature contributes to our world of color, through its food. 



Silk Fabric In Vibrant or Soothing Colors


© Provided by Whisk and Dine
Silk Fabric In Vibrant or Soothing Colors

Texture and color are important elements in any photo. While the food itself may or many not be the most beautiful thing we’ve photographed, we have come a long way in understanding how to embellish on its beauty in a still shot.

Color and Texture

Elements play a huge role in setting the mood or vibe for a particular food photograph; metal, wood, color and textiles. 

While I have been a textile person most of my life, having sewn since I was twelve, I have my favorite textiles to work with. 



Textiles and Sewing


© Provided by Whisk and Dine
Textiles and Sewing

Silk, cotton and raw fibers make for beautiful texture in a garment, upholstery, or table setting. 

I was in want of a light and airy cloth I could toss into my photos without it being dominant in the shot. Something sort of ethereal looking. 

Cotton gauze, also the same fabric used in cheese cloth, caught my eye. Its really cheap, comes in long bundles to cut however needed and since its a raw cotton, I knew it would absorb dye easily. 



Food Dyed Cheese Cloth


© Provided by Whisk and Dine
Food Dyed Cheese Cloth

I wanted to use various foods as the dye. So many of the foods I cook with have such intense pigment; after all, isn’t that where original dye first came from?

Food As Dye

How often have we gone to peel beets, gold or red, or turmeric, cabbage or other plants, only to realize we should have put gloves on first?

Those, are the foods you will be able to obtain the most intense dye from on the cotton gauze. Oh, and do use gloves!

When I was a kid and we would dye Easter eggs, the colors were always so pretty and very intense. 



Chemical Dye


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Chemical Dye

But then you go to peel the egg to eat it, only to find the dye stained the white of the egg too. I didn’t want to eat that artificial dye, and I certainly didn’t want my kids eating either. 

It was then (1980’s), that I began experimenting with food as dye. Some foods require longer soak time than others. 



Natural Dye


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Natural Dye

Not sure why but a drop of vinegar in the water helps to make the color of the dye more intense, and absorb better on the fabric. 

How To Dye Fabric or Eggs Naturally

Once you have chosen the colors you will use, rough chop those food items, put them into pots of water with 2 tablespoons of white vinegar and boil the food. 



Food Dyed Cheese Cloth


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Food Dyed Cheese Cloth

Take the dry pieces of white cotton cheese cloth and immerse them totally into each pot. Allow to sit for about an hour. 

With gloves, squeeze excess liquid out, hang to dry (preferable outside, since the drips will stain), and once dry, the cloth is ready to use. 

I have only recently become aware of a beautiful dried flower petal, Butterfly Pea Flower Tea, that has intense blue or purple color. 



One Hour Soak Time


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One Hour Soak Time

I made a loaf of bread using the tea in the water of the dough. The trick to this tea, should you want blue as the color, there can be no acid, so don’t use vinegar in the dye water. 

With a drizzle of acid, the tea turns purple quickly and would dye the cloth a lovely lilac color. 

Ingredients Needed

  • Water
  • Red Cabbage
  • Red Beets
  • Gold Beets
  • Turmeric
  • Black tea
  • Butterfly Pea Flower Tea
  • White Vinegar



Natural Dye Ingredients and Equipment


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Natural Dye Ingredients and Equipment

Equipment Needed

  • Several 4 quart pots
  • Cheese cloth
  • Thongs
  • Drying rack


color and texture for food photography


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color and texture for food photography

Print

Easy Color and Texture for Food Photography

Dyeing cheese cloth with natural foods, to use as texture and color in food photography.

Course Kitchen Hacks, Lifestyle

Prep Time 30 minutes

Cook Time 40 minutes

Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes

Servings 4 servings

Calories 300kcal

  • Water – 4 quarts per pot
  • Red Cabbage – 1/4 a head, for pale purple
  • Red Beets – 1 whole beet, for intense magenta
  • Gold Beets – 1 whole, for pale yellow
  • Turmeric – 1 root, for intense yellow
  • Black tea – 2 tbsp, for woodsy beiges to brown
  • Pea tea – 4 petals, for blue or lilac
  • White vinegar – 2 tbsp per pot, except for blue Pea tea
  • Rough chop each item being used. Place in separate pots of boiling water with vinegar. Lower and simmer with a lid on for 30 minutes.

  • Remove food items from each pot and gently press each cotton gauge strip into the appropriate pot. Allow to soak for an hour.

  • Carefully, with gloves, squeeze out excess liquid and hang dry, taking care to protect the floor beneath from drips staining.

  • Once they are dry, they are ready to use.

Calories: 300kcal



Food As Natural Fabric Dye


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Food As Natural Fabric Dye

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Kelsea Ballerini Shuts Down Chase Stokes Breakup Rumors With a Kissing Photo

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It’s only been two months since Chase Stokes confirmed his relationship with country singer Kelsea Ballerini, and already the new couple is the subject of breakup rumors – rumors that Ballerini is quick to shut down. In an Instagram Q&A with fans the weekend of April 30 (via People), Ballerini was asked by a fan if she and Stokes had split, to which she responded “nah,” along with a photo of the pair kissing.

Questions surrounding whether or not Ballerini and Stokes were dating ended when “Today” asked Stokes that very question during his March 3 appearance on the morning show, at which point he finally confirmed with an affirmative “Mm-hmm” and a smile. The pair made their red carpet debut a month later at the CMT Music Awards on April 2.

Speculation about the duo potentially dating began on Jan. 13 when the 30-year-old “Outer Banks” star shared an Instagram carousel that included a photo of him and the 29-year-old singer getting cozy at the College Football Playoff National Championship. While Ballerini’s face isn’t shown, Stokes tagged her in the snap. “Go vols 🙈,” she commented on the post.

The “Roses” singer touched on the dating rumors days later on Jan. 16, when she posted a TikTok featuring a screenshot of a post from gossip Instagram account DeuxMoi. In her video, Ballerini laughs and shakes her head at the post, which says she can’t be dating Stokes because she’s “too busy consistently asking out the manager of soho house nash when she comes in all the time after last call.”

“I know, I know, I know, I know, stop reading, stop looking,” Ballerini says. “But what is happening, guys? What is this? Let’s not do this.” Ballerini captioned the video, “I’m about to break up with the internet 5 sure 😂.”

The next day, Stokes addressed the rumors when a TMZ photographer ran into him and quizzed the actor about what exactly is going on between him and Ballerini. When the photographer said Stokes and Ballerini make the cutest couple, he responded, “Thank you.” When asked what drew him to the singer, Stokes said, “She’s a sweet girl. We’re having a good time, and that’s all I’ll say.” He stopped short of confirming the pair’s relationship status at the time, however.

Read ahead for every update from Stokes and Ballerini’s romance rumors leading up to their confirmation.

When Did Chase Stokes and Kelsea Ballerini Start Dating?

Stokes and Ballerini kept fans on their toes for weeks with their many outings together and flirty interactions on social media as dating speculation swirled. On Jan. 26, TMZ shared a video of the pair holding hands at a restaurant in Nashville, further adding to dating speculation that’s been swirling around them. According to the outlet, the pair were spotted out on Jan. 24 at Nashville country music venue Robert’s Western World.

Several days later, the pair were spotted embracing at LAX. Still, in an interview with People, which was published on Feb. 8, Stokes declined to elaborate on the nature of his relationship with Ballerini at the time, insisting to the outlet that they’ve “just been spending some time together.” “Kelsea is a lovely, lovely girl,” he added. “She’s great. We’re having a good time.”

But on Feb. 13, Stokes added fuel to their dating rumors when he posted a photo of himself and Ballerini cozying up to each other in an elevator. “So proud of you, your heart, and your beautiful soul,” he wrote in the caption, going on to congratulate her for the release of her EP and short film, “Rolling Up the Welcome Mat.”



Chase Stokes hinted at a romance with Kelsea Ballerini. 👀


© Getty / Stefania D’Alessandro
Chase Stokes hinted at a romance with Kelsea Ballerini. 👀

On the Feb. 22 episode of the “Call Her Daddy” podcast, Ballerini confirmed she’s not single anymore, but she wouldn’t reveal that Stokes was her new beau. “I’m just vibing,” Ballerini said, adding that her relationship with Stokes – which she said began after they started talking in December 2022 – has “been like a really beautiful reawakening.”

A few weeks before Stokes confirmed the new couple’s romance, he posted a photo on his Instagram Story on Feb. 23 of Ballerini kissing his cheek while the pair hugged sweetly. He captioned the snap, “imy❤️.” Then, on March 2, the two stars enjoyed their first big outing as a couple at a New York Rangers vs. the Ottawa Senators game at Madison Square Garden in NYC, where they were photographed sharing a kiss in the stands, per People.



Chase Stokes hinted at a romance with Kelsea Ballerini. 👀


© Getty / Stefania D’Alessandro
Chase Stokes hinted at a romance with Kelsea Ballerini. 👀

Who Have Chase Stokes and Kelsea Ballerini Previously Dated?

Stokes was most recently linked to his “Outer Banks” costar Madelyn Cline. The two first met in 2019 while making the show’s first season, but they reportedly split in November 2021 after more than a year of dating. They sparked reconciliation rumors in March 2022 when they posed hand in hand on set while filming the third season of their Netflix series. However, according to Stokes, the two have just remained good friends.

“A long time ago, we agreed to always put the work first. So I think going into this next chapter, we just wanted to equally honor that promise,” Stokes told People. “Truth be told, she’s an incredible actress. She’s a lovely human being. And I’m over the moon and just super proud of the work that we’ve done over the past three seasons. I’m always going to root for her.”

Ballerini, on the other hand, split from fellow country musician Morgan Evans in August 2022. She filed for divorce after nearly five years of marriage and later confirmed the news on her Instagram page. The former couple first met while hosting Australia’s Country Music Channel Awards in March 2016 and later got married in December 2017.

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