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Wednesday 31 December 2014

Snowflake macro photo: Winter technologies, small and simple stellar plate snow crystal with glossy and relief surface, glittering in cold LED light on smooth pale background
Snowflake photo: Winter technologies (1024 x 768)

This is small snowflake, 1 mm in diameter or slightly bigger. Glass background with backlight, additional lens Helios 44M-5, December 2014, Moscow. 19 RAWs averaged.

Prints available at Artist website (mirrors at Pixels and FineArtAmerica).
Licenses for commercial use - at Shutterstock.com.

Inverted variant:

Closeup snowflake image: Crystal of darkness, small stellar plate snow crystal with simple shape, glowing on dark gradient background
Snowflake photo: Crystal of darkness (1024 x 768)

Licenses for commercial use - at Shutterstock.com.

December 26, 2014 was really wonderful day, which adds to my snowflake archive lots of fresh crystals (more than 8 gigabytes in total). I've processed two more snowflakes: High voltage and Gardener's dream, and lots of other pretty crystals waits for processing!

Picture of snowflake: High voltage, large snow crystal with simple broad arms and glossy, relief surface, sparkling on bright gradient background in cold LED lightSnowflake image: Gardener's dream, big stellar dendrite snow crystal with ornate arms and massive central hexagon, divided by six sectors

If you want to see more snowflakes, you can browse through all snowflake pictures.
Here you'll find snowflake photo wallpapers in numerous resolutions and screen proportions, up to Ultra HD 4K.
And here is article about snowflake macro photography.

Saturday 27 December 2014

Snowflake macro photo: Crystal of chaos and order, big splitted plate stellar dendrite snow crystal with complex and chaotic structure, glittering on blue-gray gradient background
Snowflake photo: Crystal of chaos and order (2400 x 1800)

Prints available at Artist website (mirrors at Pixels and FineArtAmerica), RedBubble.com.
Licenses for commercial use - at Shutterstock.com, 500px.com.



Finally, i had 3 days of good snowflake shooting, and nice new crystals to process. This image, however, from January 2014, but next snowflakes will be fresh!

This is relatively large crystal, around 5 or 6 millimeters in diameter. if you look closely at it's center, you'll easily classify it: this is snowflake of split plate type. I encounter these crystals not too often, and usually they look quite like "normal" snowflakes at first glance, and we'll see difference only when inspect them closely. Here is another crystal of same type: Vega, and it also won't show it's true nature, if you don't magnify it:

Snowflake image: Vega, big splitted plate snow crystal with unusually simple shape and inner structure, glowing on dark cyan woolen background

This "chaotic" snowflake was captured on large plate of glass with LED back lighting, using Canon Powershot A650is with additional lens Helios 44M-5, reversely mounted in front of built-in camera optics. 11 identical RAWs was averaged to boost signal-noise ratio of this picture.

Here is next snowflake, that i've processed from wonderful evening snowfall of 16th january 2014 - Iron crown / Spark:

Snowflake images: Iron crown and Spark, two color versions of real snow crystal with short detaild arms and large, empty central hexagon, glittering on smooth gradient background

If you want to see more snowflakes, you can browse through all snowflake pictures.
Here you'll find snowflake photo wallpapers in numerous resolutions and screen proportions, up to Ultra HD 4K.
And here is article about snowflake macro photography.

Monday 15 December 2014

This winter in Moscow starts not too good for snowflake photography: when it's cold, there is almost no snow; when we got snowfalls, it's too warm and snowflakes quickly melts. But one day was cold and snowy, and i was lucky to capture some big fernlike dendrite crystals like this one:

Snowflake macro photo: Cloud number nine, large fernlike dendrite snow crystal with complex structure, standing on edge against clean blue background
Snowflake photo: Cloud number nine (3586 x 2691)

Prints available at: Artist website (mirrors at Pixels and FineArtAmerica), RedBubble.com, Society6.com.
Licenses for commercial use - at Shutterstock.com, Marketplace.500px.com.

Fernlike dendrites are really interesting snow crystals. If you ever seen the snow, then you probably seen them, too: this is common and very big snowflakes. Usually they are so big, that we can see all their details with naked eye, especially if we catch them on dark backdrop for better contrast. Many "traditional" snowflakes, which are painted by artists and modelled by 3D designers, remind fernlike dendrites or similar type, stellar dendrites.

We can describe fernlike dendrites as stellar dendrites, only with more complex and "chaotic" structure: usually they have more side branches and "icy leaves", and these details are not strictly symmetrical on different arms, and even on opposite sides of same arm. Maybe this asymmetry caused by really big size of fernlike dendrite: often they can be whole centimeter from tip to tip and even bigger! Because crystal is big, changes in air temperature and humidity on it's oppposite sides is not so perfectly synchronous, as on sides of smaller and simple snowflakes, and this causes asymmetrical growth of arms.

Usually these crystals have very small center, but long, large and massive arms, and these crystals are very fragile. Often we can see these snowflakes with broken arms, or even single arms, fallen from the sky: it seems that this is results of collisions in the air.



This time, i've tried slightly different shooting, and was satisfied by achieved results: i collected snowflakes on plastic bag, then transferred best looking specimens on surface of DVD-R disk, using small paintbrush. Moving snowflakes with brush is quite easy task; but then, i've used sharp wooden toothpick to raise crystal by it's edge and make it stand vertically, relying on other crystal. This trick was not easy, but, surprisingly, not impossible mission: within half of hour i've managed to get four crystals standing vertically, and they not fall, when i captured short photo series for averaging. This picture processed from the best of all four source sequences. It was made from averaged stack of 10 identical photos. Background behind snowflake is not sky: this is blue paper.

I've also processed other fernlike dendrite crystals - Winter is coming!, Asymmetriad, Silverware / Neon, and my favourites: Majestic crystal and Leaves of ice:

Snowflake photo: Majestic crystal, large and complex fernlike dendrite with many side branches, icy leaves and petals, glittering on pale gray-blue backgroundCloseup snowflake picture: Leaves of ice, very big fernlike dendrite snow crystal with tree-like arms, containing lots of side branches and icy petals, glowing on dark grey background

This snowflake also available as ultra HD wallpaper:

Snowflake photo wallpaper: Cloud number nine, resolution up to Ultra HD 5K, standard and widescreen, 4:3, 5:4, 16:10 and 16:9, free download

If you want to see more snowflakes, you can browse through all snowflake pictures.

Saturday 6 December 2014


This is another compilation of tiny ice crystals (around 0.2 - 0.4 mm in diameter), captured January 22, 2014. Used 3 sources (each containing 8 identical RAW shots for averaging). I picked best crystals (and some unfocused ones for background) and drag them in one compact group.

Source images (opened on Flickr in full resolution):

Ice dust 2 - source 1/3Ice dust 2 - source 2/3Ice dust 2 - source 3/3

Previous ice dust picture:

Ice dust, snowflake macro photo by Alexey Kljatov

If you want to see more snowflakes, you can browse through all snowflake pictures.
Here you'll find snowflake photo wallpapers in numerous resolutions and screen proportions, up to Ultra HD 4K.
And here is article about snowflake macro photography.