Scenes from nature's destruction yesterday.
Brandon Montgomery posted these mind-numbing photos he took of the tornado near Belzoni on social media.
Very thankful that Saturdays tornado outbreak wasn't as bad as it could have been!It's still been bad, but it could have been much much worse.I reprocessed the photos this morning, focusing on better color correction and clarity.I had limited battery life on the laptop in the car when I worked on these photos that I'd previously posted, so I couldn't really work on them very much right after they were taken.I mainly wanted to correct the strong purple hues "even though there was quite a bit of purple".I had set the cameras white balance to 4,000k to avoid the unnaturally orange color that can often occur at night doing long exposure photography using auto or daylight white balance.This is a storm chasers dream to capture images like this!!!!I believe many chasers could go a lifetime without capturing nocturnal tornado/lightning photos like this and it's that much more special to accomplish in the Mississippi River Delta of the south!* OM System OM-1 * camera* m.zuiko 12-100mm f/4 IS PRO * lens
10 comments:
Mr. Montgomery, your photos are awesome.
Can you post the coordinates of the camera’s location?
Mind numbing? Really?
This weather made the news in Europe. I just received an email from a friend in Scotland asking if I am ok.
Brutal!
The damage in Walthall County is horrendous.
For the most part, Tylertown was spared. But a few miles "down the road" ... the landscape is unrecognizable.
Tornadoes, torrential rain, flash flooding, and earthquake, and a building on fire in Hattiesburg.. The end times?
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/zb6ip7z5zmcsgamhr5ia1/Hardy-St-Fire.MP4?rlkey=ggoesukv1jfx5ldym3285u07j&dl=0
I wish FEMA would give us grants to build safe rooms in our home.
Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!
Hope those folks are ok.
Hope the feds give the state money for assistance
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