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Travel snapshots from Toonsarah

Water reflecting the sky with clouds and low sun
The sun will come out tomorrow (and I will photograph it)

The sun will come out tomorrow (and I will photograph it)

November 9, 2020

Breaking the rules of photography

When I was about ten I was given my first camera, a Kodak Brownie. And my father, himself quite a keen photographer, taught me a few of the basic rules of photography. One of the most important of these was, you must always have the sun behind you when you shoot. Sorry, Dad, but that’s just not true!

I’ve learned since that the rules of photography are there to be broken; you can often get a more interesting image by shooting into the light. Obviously pointing your lens directly at a bright sun is never a good idea. But when it is partly shaded by cloud or mist, and when it is very low in the sky, that’s the time to forget that ‘rule’ and turn your face to the sun.

For this week’s Lens-Artists Photo Challenge, entitled ‘The sun will come out tomorrow’, I want to share some images shot directly into the sun, to celebrate our nearest star and the constant light it shines on us – every day, even during a pandemic.

I’ll start with a couple from the Okavango Delta in Botswana. The photo at the top of this page was also taken there. The skies are immense and every sunrise and sunset was stunning, and unique!

Expanse of water with low sun and clouds
Sun rising, Okavango Delta
Dramatic sunset reflected in water
Sunset in the Okavango Delta

Then let’s follow the sun from rising to sunset, around the world:

Hot steam rising in front of sun
Dawn breaks at the El Tatio Geysers, Chile
Lake with a jetty and mountains beyond
Morning at Lake Crescent, WA
River with several bridges and low sun
Bridges over the Tyne, late afternoon
Sunset over the sea, waves breaking on rocks
Sunset at Hanga Roa, Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
Sunset with river in foreground
Sunset over the Nam Ou, Nong Khiaw, Laos

Just look what you get when you break the rules! So turn your camera, and your eyes, to the sun, because the one certainty in this uncertain world is that it will come out tomorrow.

[OK I know it’s November right now in the Northern Hemisphere so we may not actually see it, but it will be there!]

Thank you to Ana for proposing this interesting Lens-Artist challenge!

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17 thoughts on “The sun will come out tomorrow (and I will photograph it)”

  1. rosalieann37 says:
    November 11, 2020 at 14:44

    My dad gave me a Brownie camera when I was about 10. I don’t remember his instructions. But he was mad about sunsets. He took thousands of photos of sunsets, which of course nearly always to be taken into the sun.

    I do love your photos – when the sun low in the sky in the winter is a really good time to take that kind of photo.

    It was not just your dad – the prohibition against taking pictures into the sun was pretty much universal from way back.

    We were in Germany in 1950, in the funicular (?) somewhere like Heidelberg and Dad had loaded his movie camera. When you loaded the film into a camera in those days (I know you know this Sarah, but younger folks may not), you have a leader which has been exposed to light. You have to run the leader through to get to the good unexposed film. Dad was taking movies on the leader, when the one of the other people in the car said to the other (in German) “Look at the stupid American, taking pictures into the sun”.

    Europeans assumed that Americans could not speak or understand anything but English – Dad understood perfectly since he grew up in a German immigrant family and spoke German before he spoke English. [He politely answered in German.]

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 11, 2020 at 14:51

      That’s a funny story about your Dad Rosalie! I’ve come across similar things happening to others too (it might make a good discussion topic for our FB VT page one day?) I didn’t mean to imply that my father was inventing that rule – he was passing on the accepted principles of photography of which that was one. But I’m sure he broke it himself occasionally, just for the odd sunset!

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  2. Teresa says:
    November 10, 2020 at 10:52

    Your sun photos are great, Sarah!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 10, 2020 at 10:57

      Thanks Teresa 🙂

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  3. restlessjo says:
    November 10, 2020 at 08:07

    The Tyne Bridge did make me smile, and start humming ‘the fog on the Tyne is all mine, all mine!’ 🙂 🙂 When were you there?

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 10, 2020 at 08:53

      Thanks Jo 🙂 My husband’s a Geordie so we’re up there usually three times a year or more. Even this year we’ve been able to get up once, in August, so that’s our most recent visit. But this photo was taken a few years ago I think, on a winter visit

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      1. restlessjo says:
        November 10, 2020 at 08:55

        My home was in Hartlepool on the north east coast. I still have many friends there and love that part of the world. 🙂 🙂

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        1. Sarah Wilkie says:
          November 10, 2020 at 08:56

          Me too – I consider it my second home 🙂

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  4. Anna says:
    November 10, 2020 at 05:20

    I just love a good sun photo! You’ve got some beautiful shots here Sarah!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 10, 2020 at 08:54

      Thank you Anna 🙂

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  5. Easymalc says:
    November 9, 2020 at 21:08

    That’s what friends are for – and it’s looking great too 🙂

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  6. Ana says:
    November 9, 2020 at 18:55

    Love your post, Sarah. I agree with you, sometimes it’s convenient to break the rules. Thanks for joining!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 10, 2020 at 17:05

      Thank you – for the comment and great theme 🙂

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  7. Amy says:
    November 9, 2020 at 17:52

    Wow, what a series, Sarah! Thank you so much for the sun images around the world. Love it!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 10, 2020 at 17:05

      Thanks Amy – glad you enjoyed them!

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  8. Easymalc says:
    November 9, 2020 at 17:22

    I totally agree with you Sarah, and I’m so glad that you’ve managed to find somewhere to really express your individual photographic ability 🙂

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 9, 2020 at 18:16

      Thanks so much Malcolm – for the comment and for your assistance when I was setting up this blog 🙂

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Some topics I’ve touched on

africa architecture around_the_world_in_ten_photos art beliefs birds boats buildings bulgaria cffc chile churches cities customs deserts dprk ealing england friendly_friday gambia history india italy japan just_one_person_from_around_the_world landscape laos lens_artists_challenge london monuments museum new_mexico north_korea people photography photo_effects rivers ruins street_art street_photography sunday_stills usa village war wildlife

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In Santiago, Chile
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