Baily's Beads and Corona Mashup 12x12
A 12x12 inch square image professionally printed on archival paper. It arrives ready for you to mat or frame and hang on your wall. This photo would look great framed in a simple black 12x12 inch square frame as is, or mounted in a 16x16 inch white mat and then framed.
For this image, I place the Baily’s Beads effect image directly over the top of the Corona during Totality image. It’s purpose is to show the effects together on one sun so to speak. Two of the coolest parts of the total eclipse mashed together. In most of my images I clearly showed that the effects didn’t happen at the same time, because I put the images close together, but not directly on top of each other. I didn’t want it to seem like I saw these two different stages at the same time, as that would be impossible, but I do think it’s fun to see them layered together in this way.
A 12x12 inch square image professionally printed on archival paper. It arrives ready for you to mat or frame and hang on your wall. This photo would look great framed in a simple black 12x12 inch square frame as is, or mounted in a 16x16 inch white mat and then framed.
For this image, I place the Baily’s Beads effect image directly over the top of the Corona during Totality image. It’s purpose is to show the effects together on one sun so to speak. Two of the coolest parts of the total eclipse mashed together. In most of my images I clearly showed that the effects didn’t happen at the same time, because I put the images close together, but not directly on top of each other. I didn’t want it to seem like I saw these two different stages at the same time, as that would be impossible, but I do think it’s fun to see them layered together in this way.
A 12x12 inch square image professionally printed on archival paper. It arrives ready for you to mat or frame and hang on your wall. This photo would look great framed in a simple black 12x12 inch square frame as is, or mounted in a 16x16 inch white mat and then framed.
For this image, I place the Baily’s Beads effect image directly over the top of the Corona during Totality image. It’s purpose is to show the effects together on one sun so to speak. Two of the coolest parts of the total eclipse mashed together. In most of my images I clearly showed that the effects didn’t happen at the same time, because I put the images close together, but not directly on top of each other. I didn’t want it to seem like I saw these two different stages at the same time, as that would be impossible, but I do think it’s fun to see them layered together in this way.