Friday, January 30, 2026

Brighton Beach, Melbourne for Skywatch Friday

 


At the same stretch of Brighton Beach, where the horizon usually softens into pale blues and orderly pastels, the sunset arrived transformed. The sky did not fade so much as ignite. Persistent bushfires burning through the rural hinterlands had filled the air with smoke fine enough to filter the light, and the sun, lowered to the edge of the world, surrendered its usual brilliance to something deeper and more elemental.

The evening unfolded in layers of orange and molten gold. Smoke scattered the shorter wavelengths of light, leaving behind a spectrum that felt both sumptuous and unsettling. The sea mirrored this altered sky, its surface burnished, as if the day itself were being smelted into colour before it disappeared. What might have been a routine coastal dusk became a spectacle born of distance and destruction—fire shaping beauty far from its source.

There was a quiet tension in that moment. The sky’s richness carried the knowledge of burning forests, of heat and wind moving through rural valleys, of lives and landscapes under strain. And yet, standing on the sand, the light was undeniably arresting: a reminder of how intimately connected city and countryside are, how the atmosphere carries stories across hundreds of kilometres. Brighton’s sunset that evening was not just a closing of the day, but a visible trace of fire, climate, and land—an amber testament to a season that refuses to stay in the background.


Sony A7RV

FE 70-200mm f4 G


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30 comments:

  1. One has to view this one large. I did that to get a closer look at the boat but was also pleased to see the people.

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  2. Replies
    1. The colour is always rich in the sky during sunset when bushfire happens

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  3. Ese cielo es una belleza y se me asemeja a una bandera contribuyendo a dar una gran espectacularidad.

    Saludos.

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  4. Wow, gorgeous photo! Take care, enjoy your day!

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  5. How gorgeous!! The sea does mirror the sky; the sky being intense and the sea more pastel. And the lone sailboat!! Who knew that destruction could be so beautiful.

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  6. The lone sailboat becomes the focus of your stunning sunset photo. This photo makes me wish I were sailing.

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  7. Que maravilla de fotografía. Tiene de todo un atardecer brillante, un mar colorido y luminoso, un buen contraluz y unas texturas excelentes.

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  8. Fires and smoke can make amazing sunrises and sunsets.

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  9. Rich and compelling colors, Roentare. We've had them here in Waikiki for a couple of days, but it's caused by vog or volcanic smog, a hazardous haze formed when sulfur dioxide, gas and other volcanic emissions from active volcanoes, mix with sunlight, oxygen, and moisture. Fortunately it cleared today.

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  10. Wow sky and with that sailboat postcard worthy. Great composition in color and subject.

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  11. That sailboat in the background -- wow. It really helps tell the story and bring it to life.

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  12. This is so beautiful. The sailboat is perfectly placed.

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  13. I love your layer cake sky!! Such rich colors in a peaceful scene.

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