Capture: Upside Down, Inside Out
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The mosque is large and has several gates. This was the only one open. That courtyard looks inviting, but that sign over the gate saying “ancient mosque/清真古寺/qīngzhēn gǔ sì” looks oddly threatening. I’ve been in there before, years ago, it is really beautiful. But I don’t like photographing inside active places of worship, it seems kinda rude and invasive.
Even so, through a gap in the wall…
Another old mosque in a similar style nearby, this one over the line on the far eastern edge of Chaoyang District. But I find it works best in sillhouette. I like these old properly Chinese-style mosques, they look much better than the faux-Middle Eastern style mosques and other buildings like schools and cultural centres built for the Hui in more recent years.
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Jos,
What is that last building with the claws on top?
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
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ChrisW, in reply to
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Or perhaps this?
Brightens up a grey day!! Nice tour thanks Chris : )
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
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ChrisW, in reply to
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And how are the reflective qualities of the river you ask? Not bad I'd say - this of my first homecoming dawn with 7-sec reflection of almost the last of the waning moon, the earth-shine on the rest of its face too. Bellatrix and Betelgeuse (beautiful names!) the shoulders of Orion out to the right.
And part of a 15-sec exposure from the same fencepost a few minutes earlier, showing Aldebaran and the inverted V of Taurus above the moon, and to the left nestled within the now-bare branches of the walnut tree, Matariki/the Pleiades/Seven Sisters, the last of the moon phase signifying the end of the Matariki month.
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
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Hebe, in reply to
That lazy New Moon last night was remarkable because though it was a silver sliver, I could see the whole sphere. It was as though there was a tiny glow of back-lighting.
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ChrisW, in reply to
Half sphere !-)
That "tiny glow of back-lighting" is the earth-shine I referred to - here on a more zoomed image from the previous lunar cycle, full image and cropped enlargement.If you imagine yourself standing in the middle of that mostly dark hemisphere of the moon facing Earth, at that time just before sunrise in NZ (or just after sunset in the case of the New Moon), then it would be night time but you would be seeing the brightness of a Full Earth, much bigger and brighter than a Full Moon here. So here we see the night-time part of the moon in the light of that Earth-shine bounced back to us.
In my photo of the old moon reflected in the river, I like it that that the light I'm seeing as the pale part of the moon's hemisphere is a tiny proportion of the sunlight that fell on the mid-eastern Pacific, Americas and Atlantic Ocean, bounced back towards the sun but was intercepted by the dark night-time face of the moon, bounced back to this edge of the Earth hemisphere facing the moon, to hit the calm surface of the Taruheru River to reflect coherently (upside down, if not inside out) to my eye and camera lens, finally captured!?
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
finally captured!?
Beautifully captured, beautifully explained.
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Hebe, in reply to
I like it that that the light I’m seeing as the pale part of the moon’s hemisphere is a tiny proportion of the sunlight that fell on the mid-eastern Pacific, Americas and Atlantic Ocean, bounced back towards the sun but was intercepted by the dark night-time face of the moon, bounced back to this edge of the Earth hemisphere facing the moon,
What a very amazing thought Chris. Imagine what that light has seen before it has seen us.
Thank you for your earth shine explanation.
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Jos,
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Hebe, in reply to
Life is all around...great things you do.
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Mountains, village, bird
Great water-colours : )
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
the flax dying pool near the river as a small planet
Nice and tricky Jos! Found your marbles : )
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Thanks Hebe, and Chris.
And Jos - that Ohiwa Harbour one looks ready-made for a souvenir plate and bowl set. Also seemed familiar in a roundabout way - and found it back in mid-Summertime, when I sussed out the public walkway Ohiwa Track to that marvellous-looking spot and put it on my to-do-some-day list. -
BenWilson, in reply to
What a very amazing thought Chris. Imagine what that light has seen before it has seen us.
Was just watching a video that suggests most of that light spent millions of years inside the core of the Sun trying to get out. It would have been going "freeee at last" for 490 seconds before doing the double ping-pong and ending it's life absorbed into the CMOS in Chris's camera. Rather more mindboggling is that there will probably be some photons coming in from deep space in that shot from the other side of the universe, that escaped some star only a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, and have been on their way here since before the Milky Way even formed.
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