Shimmering Australian ponds
pictured in stunning aerial photographs hardly to believe that these
spectacular portraits are not watercolor paintings depicting otherworldly
patterns. These stunning photographs are actually of crystallizers: shallow
ponds in which concentrated brine evaporates leaving a 'crop' of salt crystals.
These exclusives crystals were photographed by Simon Butterworth from a light
aircraft flying 4,000 to 5,000 feet above the Useless Loop solar salt operation
situated in Shark Bay, the westernmost point of mainland Australia.
The height was mainly vital in
getting this flattened perspective, which was attained using a long focal
length camera. Moreover, time and cloud cover also played a key role with the
abstractness of the photographs heightened by a lack of shadow. Because the
main reason that these crystals appear blue can in fact be attributed to the
reflection of the sky. The tracks left by the salt harvesting machine account
for the brushstroke patterns. The series, called “Project Blue Fields”, is part
of a bigger project, Aesthetics of the Astonishing, which see the relationships
between perception, expectation and reality, and was nominated for a Sony World
Photographic Award in the Professional Landscape category.Source: Dailymail
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