KRIS BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY
After a lacklustre sunrise up on Loughrigg, the sun started to finally breakthrough small gaps in the clouds and tracked across the hillside picking up interesting details.  In one of those moments, the light hit a lone tree with softer light accentuating the surrounding woodland.
After an early walk up to the summit with no chance of a sunrise, I decided to head back for breakfast.  I suddenly felt the warmth of the sun on my neck as the sun broke through a gap in the clouds and spun around and fumbled with my phone to capture the view before me.  Golden side light illuminated Cat Bells, accentuating the contours of her flanks in full autumnal plumage.  By the time I got the big cam out the light was gone.
Autumnal dawn light explodes in the sky in a blanket of fire over the Helvellyn range at Castlerigg Stone Circle in the Lake District.  Its easy to wonder what Neolithic man must have thought at the sight of such wonders.
Through a gap in the canopy of the surrounding trees, the light was accentuating the hoar frost on this little sapling on a very cold winter morning
I passed through a stretch of denser wood and was looking for a splash of colour that was down at eye level. I noticed this sapling quite delicately growing in a small clearing allowing a little bit of light down through the canopy to warm it up and make it stand out against the foggy cool tones in the background.⁠
Borrowdale Water Mill in very early autumn with the diffused light coming over the nearby ridge providing a soft back light
Filey Brigg at sunrise on a hazy summer day, captured with a long exposure to capure the milky motion of the rising tide as it ebbs and flows.
Moody sunset at Saltwick Bay near Whitby, with the wreck of Admiral Van Tromp in the foreground, Black Nab in the middle ground on the right and in the distant, in the glow of the setting sun, Saltwick Nab.
Solitary oak basking in the evening sun
Snow dusted Langdales as the sun lit up the valley leaving the mountains looking dark and foreboding

All content and photographs © 2023 Kris Brown Photography

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