Taken on September 11th at 6:39 pm directly after a short hail storm in Lafayette, Colorado. This Cumulonimbus cloud structure is unstable.
Clouds First // Jennifer Kracha
Flow Vis Guidebook
- Introduction to the Guidebook
- Overview 1: Phenomena. Why Does It Look Like That?
- Overview 2: Visualization Techniques
- Overview 3: Lighting
- Overview 4 - Photography A: Composition and Studio Workflow
- Overview 4 - Photography B: Cameras
- Overview 4 - Photography C: Lenses - Focal Length
- Overview 4 - Photography C: Lenses - Aperture and DOF
- Overview 4: Photography D: Exposure
- Overview 4 - Photography E - Resolution
- Overview 5 - Post-Processing
- Clouds 1: Names
- Clouds 2: Why Are There Clouds? Lift Mechanism 1: Instability
- Clouds 3: Skew - T and Instability
- Boundary Techniques - Introduction
- Dye Techniques 1 - Do Not Disturb
- Dye Techniques 2 - High Visibility
- Dye Techniques 3 - Light Emitting Fluids
- Photons, Wavelength and Color
- Refractive Index Techniques
- Art and Science
- TOC and Zotpress test
9 Comments. Leave new
I like that along with the previous cloud it tells a good story of a cumulonimbus.
The cloud is super fluffy which made it so beautiful
Those are some nice clouds. I like the framing of the clouds and the texture that you can see in them.
I love how much more apparent your texture is and how well its balanced with the colors (yellows and blues)
Good picture. The CB cloud definitely is unstable. Good editing though! It makes the clouds pop more
Your skew-T looks unstable, could be the hail storm.
Really cool fluffy image. The clouds look like they’re some sort of flowers!
The cloud is so crisp and fluffy. It definitely makes it feel very mysterious.
The texture in this image is beautiful. The color editing in this photo is very effective.