A preview with a few sample pages of Skies/Himmel is now available on the electronic publishing platform ISSUU. You can access it right here or directly on ISSUU, or—through their app—on your mobile device. Take a look and enjoy!
A preview with a few sample pages of Skies/Himmel is now available on the electronic publishing platform ISSUU. You can access it right here or directly on ISSUU, or—through their app—on your mobile device. Take a look and enjoy!
”A book is a bottle thrown into the open sea,
on which this label should be attached: Catch who can!”
Alfred de Vigny (1913), Journal d’un poète, De la publicité
(my translation of the French original)
With Skies/Himmel I will take you on a journey through my skies. Enjoy wonderful photographs of skies in almost every color, learn where the colors of the skies come from, and look at interior design ideas and how a Skies by Gabriele Golissa™ photograph could look in your home. An ideal book for art lovers, fans of photography, and nature enthusiasts alike. The book is fully bilingual (English/German).
Publication date is June 27, 2017. However, Skies/Himmel is already available for pre-order where books are sold. Ask your local bookseller (find one here) or look it up online. There is also an e-book-version available for iPad and Mac on iTunes.
– Hardback: ISBN 978-0-9989432-0-6)
– E-book: ISBN 978-0-9989432-1-3 (for iPad and Mac)
”The air up there in the clouds is very pure and fine, bracing and delicious.
And why shouldn’t it be?—it is the same the angels breathe.”
Mark Twain, Roughing It, 1872, Chapter 22
Clouds consist of very small water droplets and ice crystals. They are formed through condensation, a process where water molecules in the air cannot remain vapor any longer but cluster into droplets. This happens when the air either cools down or has to absorb more water vapor. As long as the droplets are light and small enough, they will stay in the atmosphere as clouds. When they get bigger and heavier, they will eventually fall from the sky as precipitation.
”Light rays will tell you the story.
There is another alphabet
Whispering from every leaf,
Singing from every river,
Shimmering from every sky.”
Dejan Stojanović, Forgotten Home
During twilight, meaning the periods between dawn and sunrise as well as between sunset and dusk, the sun is not at its zenith but near the horizon. Therefore, the sun’s light has to travel much further through the atmosphere because of the curvature of the earth. The longer light travels, the more light with longer wavelengths gets scattered, causing yellow and reddish hues to dominate over the blue. This is why the sky is sometimes colorful and spectacular during these times of the day.
“… and I’d look up into the sky – up – up – up – into that lovely blue sky
that looks as if there was no end to its blueness.”
Anne in L. M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables, 1908, Chapter 7
We owe seeing anything at all to the sun. Even though we usually do not consciously see this, sunlight has a visible spectrum between—and not including—ultraviolet and infrared. Rainbows show us this visible spectrum with colors ranging from short-wavelength violet and blue over green, yellow, and orange to red with longer wavelengths.
When sunlight enters the earth’s atmosphere, it is scattered by very small molecules present in the air. This scattering is stronger for light with a shorter wavelength, causing a greater proportion of short-wavelength colors like blue to be scattered than other colors with a longer wavelength. Additionally, the human eye responds most to the colors blue, green, and red. Combining this with the scattering effect explains why the sky appears blue to us during the day. And remember, blue skies are ideal for sky gazing.