![]() If you would like to use my photos for any other purpose please email me for permission. If you post my images in electronic form (such as a blog, email, or electronic document) please include an active lnk to this website. You may post links to this blog or to my photos. You may print any pictures from this site for educational purposes only, in accordance with fair use law. Please treat them as you would any copyright protected material. See more ideas about landscape, pretty landscapes, cool landscapes. Most of the photographs on this site are my own. Explore Sevilya Shhukinas board 'Pretty Landscape', followed by 8,540 people on Pinterest. When I am not teaching I love photography, ceramics, watercolor painting, visiting museums, creating animations, kayaking, hiking and spending time with my husband and daughter. As a result, you will find both middle school and high school art lessons in this blog as well as summer camp projects appropriate for younger students. McGinnis Middle Schools, also in Perth Amboy. Prior to that, I was an art teacher at Samuel E. Rachel Wintemberg started teaching digital, media and fine arts at Perth Amboy High School in Perth Amboy NJ in the fall of 2018. (I have a degree in physics and studied atmospheric physics and as an artist I am particularly interested in air) Reply Delete We talk about 'the sky' and and 'the wind' but rarely air itself. I think it's a shame that something so beautiful and so important goes so unnoticed - a bit like fish not noticing water. ![]() If there is a lot of moisture in the air then all wavelengths of light will be scattered (like a cloud) so the hills will look lighter but not bluer, but if most of the scattering is from the air itself, blue light will be scattered a lot more and the hills will look lighter and bluer. Create texture by applying scribbles with short, broad strokes with the pencil tip flat against the paper, going back and forth. Begin shading the leaves of the tree with a 4H pencil. That means that when you look at something 8km away you are looking through the same amount of air as there is between you and space (looking straight up). Use the 4H pencil to refine the sheep by adding ears and filling out the basic shapes of their legs. If it were the same density as it is at sea-level all the way up then it would be only 8 km deep. The atmosphere is thinner than you might think. If you look at a bit of air that sunlight is shining through you won't see much red light - it goes straight through, but some of the blue light will be scattered in the direction of your eye. The reason the sky is blue is because blue light is far more likely to be scattered than red light. ![]() Most of the colour comes not from particles suspended in the air but from the air itself. When there is no blue sky visible you won't see as much blue in the distance." "The particles in the atmosphere reflect the blue of the sky, causing the distant mountains to appear grayish blue. Most artists paint only light and objects and treat air like it is invisible. Air itself is visible, though few artists paint it (Turner was one of the exceptions). Nice article, but I think you are wrong about the cause of the blue colour and are missing one of the most startling things about atmospheric perspective. ![]()
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