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Magazine
It's a Light Show With the Sun and the Moon as the Stars


By Editor Kimberly
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 9th of May 2025

 

'End of the Day' by Shunsuke Sadakata

 

We all recognize that true photography is more than just capturing what we see—it's about the ability to capture images that can each tell a story. And few subjects bring more natural drama, emotion, and symbolism into an image than the Sun and the Moon.

These celestial bodies aren’t just light sources—they're characters in your frame. They rise and fall, reveal and conceal, and they bring with them moods that can turn an ordinary photo into something impactful and unforgettable. An image with a narrative.

 

The Bold Storyteller

 

'Evening by the sea' by Erik Engström

 

The boldest storyteller is the sun and when it enters your frame, it's rarely subtle. It shapes the entire emotional tone of an image—whether it’s casting a long, golden shadow at dawn, lighting up the sky and washing the scene in brilliant shades of red, yellow and orange at sunset or washing everything in a brilliant light during midday.

 

'Morning at Mt. Begunjscica' by Mirko Potocnic

 

A sunbeam slicing through trees can evoke hope. A backlit silhouette at sunset can speak of mystery, change, or farewell. The sun doesn’t just light your scene; it writes a story for you to capture.

 

'Dreamy light' by NingYun Ye

 

Golden hour, with its rich warmth and forgiving shadows, is especially powerful for storytelling. It can add softness to a portrait, nostalgia to a landscape, or romance to a city street. The colour and angle of sunlight give you control over tone—whether you're telling a story of adventure, serenity, or transformation.

And sometimes, the absence of the Sun—just after it sinks below the horizon—tells its own kind of story. Blue hour brings cool, quiet hues that slow everything down. There's a sense of reflection, of things winding down, of waiting.

 

A Quiet Narrator

 

'Another new day' by Andreas Agazzi

 

Where the Sun is expressive and direct, the Moon is subtle and symbolic. It speaks in whispers, and invites you to shoot more than just a scene—it asks you to capture a feeling.

 

'Lonely Silence' by MingLun Tsai


The Moon can be mysterious, lonely, romantic, even eerie depending on how you frame it. A lone figure beneath a full moon might suggest isolation or wonder. A sliver of moon above the ocean can be the start—or end—of a journey. Its presence doesn’t dominate the image, but it adds depth, a sense of time passing, of something bigger happening. The presence of a large full moon rising highlights the relative insignificance of our world within the vastness of the universe.

 

'Night hedgehog' by Hamad

 

Its phases even offer visual metaphors—growth, fullness, letting go. And photographing the Moon well requires slowing down, planning ahead, and embracing the quieter moments of the night. In storytelling, that’s where a lot of its meaning lies.

 

A Shared Language

 

'Orbit' by Koto

 

The beauty of using the Sun and the Moon in your photography isn’t just visual—it’s symbolic. They can represent beginnings and endings, cycles and change, warmth and distance. They add narrative layers to your image without saying a word.

 

'Planet Rising' by Kimberly

 

Photographing a sun-drenched landscape tells one kind of story—maybe about vitality, hope, or clarity. A moonlit forest tells another—perhaps about solitude, dreams, or the unknown. The light they offer is more than just exposure; it’s emotional context.

 

When They Share the Stage

And then there are the rare, breathtaking brief moments when both Sun and Moon are in the sky together—during twilight hours, or on those magical days when a full moon rises just as the sun sets. These moments are like poems in motion, full of contrast and balance. In storytelling terms, they offer complexity: light and shadow coexisting, past and future overlapping.

 

'at night' by fotomarion

 

Eclipses, too, are cosmic drama at its peak. They’re fleeting, intense, and unforgettable—like the climax of a great story you’ve been waiting to capture. Some of the most breathtaking moments happen when the two meet. Think of a pale moon hanging in the pastel light of dawn, or a solar eclipse where day briefly becomes night.

 

'Solar & Moon' by Jianshu

 

Capturing these rare phenomenon gives us a sense of experiencing something much greater than ourselves and the little blue planet we share.

 

 

Let the Sky Speak

Photographing the Sun and the Moon isn’t just about getting the shot—it’s about listening to the story unfolding above you. Every sunrise hints at a beginning. Every moonrise suggests a chapter turning. If you let them, they’ll give your images more than beauty—they’ll give them meaning.

 

Here are just a few more wonderful images from our 1x members.

 

'Morning light' by Yuan Su

 

 

'Peace at night' by Tracy Lee

 

'In the moon that is always rising …' by Steven T

 

 

'Bell Tower' by Fan Lin

 

'Sunlight Through Ice' by Þorsteinn H. Ingibergsson

 

 

'Solitude at Sea' by Kenneth-Wei Zeng

 

'Dancing in the Moonlight' by Steven Fudge

 

'Moonlit desolation' by Jie Jin

 

'dead sea by night' by Ilan Amihai 

 

Write
Result contest: 'New life, new beauty ... That's spring'

by Yvette Depaepe
Published the 7th of May 2025

 

'New life, new beauty ... That's spring'
In spring, nature is in full bloom, making it the perfect time to go outside and take pictures. A forest, a green meadow, a field under a blue sky: numerous subjects that allow photographers to express their artistic sense.
All the submissions are celebrating the most loviest season of the year. See by your self ;-)

The winners with the most votes are: 

1st place : Hilda van der Lee

2nd place : Craig McGowan
3rd place : Hiro Tanaka

Congratulations to the winners and honourable mentions and thanks to all the participants in the contest 'Humour in Photography' 

 


The currently running theme is 'Staircase photography'
Using a staircase as a photographic background or as its main topic will lead to an unexpected result. It will shine bright like sunlight or fade like sunset, add a tremendous contrast between the surrounding elements, or emphasize a detail of the favorite part of the location.

This contest will end on Sunday the 18th of May at midnight.
The sooner you upload your submission the more chance you have to gather the most votes.
If you haven't uploaded your photo yet, click here

Good luck to all the participants.

 

1st place:  by Hilda van der Lee
 
 
 
2nd place: by Craig McGowan
 
 
 
3rd place: by Hiro Tanaka
 
 
 
HONOURABLE MENTIONS
 
by Piet Haaksma
 
 
 
by Clas Gustafson PRO
 
 
 
by Antonyus Bunjamin (ABE)
 
 
 
by KOGAHI
 
 
 
by HuongHoang
 
 
 
by Martin Kucera AFIAP
 
 
 
by Claudio Moretti
 

You can see the names of the TOP 50
here.
 
The contests are open to everybody except to crew members.
Submitting images already published / awarded on 1x is allowed.

AI. GENERATED IMAGES ARE NOT ALLOWED. 
Write
Congratulations to all winners. Beautiful flowery scene.
Very beautiful images you presents. Fantastic light and colors. Congratulations!
beautiful images! Congrats to all!
Congrats, great results.
Beautiful images! congrats to all.
Congratulations to the authors, nice work!!
Beautiful work. Congratulations to all the authors!
Beautiful work . Thank you for sharing.
Wonderful images !
Beautiful images! Congrats to the winners!
Susan PRO
Gorgeous images !
Beautiful collections, congrats to all the winners and participants!
How beautiful and refreshing! Congratulations to all the winners!
Featured exhibition: PUPA

by Yvette Depaepe
Published the 5th of May 2025

 

This months' featured exhibition is titled  'PUPA - It is the Soul that Dances, the Body Follows It'  by PacodlaCorte


To introduce his exhibition, PacodlaCorte quotes: 
"Turned into a grotesque, deformed caricature, it must suffer the pain of metamorphosis, tearing off the stigmata from itself until it finds, sailing in the sea of ​​its own emotions, of its battered feelings, of the disturbance that terrifies its senses, the simple purity of nature until it becomes air, earth, water, fire. Dance is the body and the body contains all dance, there is no need for colours, nor more costumes than the skin, and the spirit must move 10 cm and 7 cm from the body. In those minutes of dance, the dancer can be a flower, a stone, a chair, or a word. She jumps, rolls on the floor, gets into a fetal position, stands up and opens her arms as if she were on the edge of a cliff, about to fall."

 

I invite you to explore this extraordinary exhibition and admire the methamorphosis of the dancer ... No colours, nor costumes, just the skin and the spirit of the body.
This exhibition which will be exposed on our opening page  / 
Gallery during the whole month of May 2025. 
Click here to see the entire exhibition: [323] PUPA by PacodlaCorte

 

To trigger your curiousity, here is a small compilation of images out of this splendid exhibition.

 

the beginning

 

 
metamorphosis
 
 
 
shout
 
 
 
light
 
 
 
feel
 
 
 
touch
 
Write
Excellent pictures congratulations!!
Fantastic work!!
Very artistic, love it...congrats PacodlaCorte for this beautiful featured exhibition!
Great work! Amazing pictures!
It is very amazing ... Thanks for sharing this session with us.
Lusman PRO
excellent album
Cool. Extremely amazing.... Thanks for showing the pictures and sharing the collection.
Thank you
Amazing collection! Congratulations PacodlaCorte! Many thanks, dear Yvette, for featuring it!
Thank you
Excellent!!!
Thank you
Poetry and simplicity


by Editor Lourens Durand
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 2nd of May 2025


'calmness' by Damijan Sedevic

 


The idea of simplicity in the composition of a photograph.

It can be compared to showing your home with the intention of selling it. In the case of the show house, it takes a lot of preparation to not only present a clean house, but to strip it of everything that personifies you. The idea is for potential buyers to see the bare bones and use their own imagination to fill the space with their own personality and history before deciding whether they can see themselves fitting into the space.


The same idea applies to Poetry.

Photographer Oriana Ivy wrote “I think it’s safe to say that the greatest poetry uses the simplest words, the simplest syntax, a child-like parallel construction. To be or not to be? And if not that, then: Can I make it more simple? It is one of the most important questions a poet needs to ask during revision. Paradoxically, depth resides in simplicity.” Atticus Review, a literary online journal.

Her thoughts are reflected in this poem by Una Hynum:

ORIGAM

Yesterday I laundered a mouse —
wash, rinse, spin cycled.
She came out a little damp,

lying on her side as if asleep,
tiny whiskers, claws folded,
thin tail, exquisite ears, so complete

 as if sculpted from Japanese Kami paper.
If there were children in the house
there would have been a funeral —

match box coffin, bouquet of weeds,
Boy Scout version of taps.
But they are gone and I am old —

I scooped her into the trash. 

~ Una Hynum

 


But how can this be achieved in photography, you may ask?
The short answer is by simplifying the composition down to its bare bones, allowing viewers to use their own imagination and life experience to fill in the story.

* Use a simple background to isolate - homogenous, neutral, black, white, out of focus, sky, lightly textured, anything that focusses the viewer    onto the subject and removes distractions.
* Fill the frame with the subject, isolating it
.
* G
o really close up, even to extent of cutting off edges of the subject, forcing the viewers’ eyes to look where you want them to.
* Take out any clutter that has nothing to do with the story.
* Use lighting to isolate the subject or to force the viewers’ eye to a focal point.
* Remember the rule of thirds and leading lines, as well as perspective tricks to lead the eye to where you want it to look.

 


The story itself

This is the difficult part. You need to decide what the story is that you want to tell with your photo; is it the beauty of a landscape, a tale of poverty, a beautiful person, a still life depicting loneliness, ……..



Only you can decide

Take the picture, then cut out the clutter, write the poem in your head, reshoot and let your masterpiece tell your story.

 

Lourens Durand

 

 

'Kung Fu Master' by Lina Gunawan

 

 

'Bonding with god' by Carmit Rozenzvig

 

 

untitled by Mikhail Potapov

 

'Le contrebassiste' by Strugala Didier

 

 

untitled by Antonio Grambone

 

 

'The Floating Island' by Albena Markova

 

'Kseniya' by Sergey Khalemsky  

 

 

'wishful' by Hari Sulistiawan

 

 

'something to grab onto' by Antonio Bonnin Sebastià


 

'Water conversation' by Phillip Chang

 

 

'Red Tailed Shrike!' by Sina Pezeshki

 

'Prunis Avium N°3' by Christophe Verot

 

'Simplicity' by Stephen Clough

 

 

light and darkness' by Gilbert Claes

 

 

… by Shihya Kowatari

 

 

'Out of the fog' by Bor

 

'Lily Grace' by Annie Whitehead

 

 

'The Name of The Rose (Umberto Ecco)' by Heike Willers

 

 

'Symphony unfinished...' by Thierry Dufour

 

 

'Little secret' by Wil Mijer

 

 

'Lost' by Jimmy Hoffman

 

 

'Asian elephants' by Pedro Jarque Krebs

 

 

'My New Baby' by Kim Lennert Simonsen

 

 

'Like a Family' by Louie Luo

 

 

'Focussed' by G. KIRAN KUMAR REDDY

 

 

'Bokehlicious Parakeet' by Abhisek Bagaria

  

Write
Great article and selection of pictures !! Congratulations
Wonderful! article and selection of images. Congratulations!
Excellent subject with interesting learning session and beautiful photos, thank you Lourens and Yvette
Thank you Mira.
Great article and beautiful pictures!Thanks for publishing.
Thank you.
sublime !!!
Thank you.
Great collection of outstanding photos, thank you
Thank you.
Perfect article and beautiful collection to help explain the concept! Thanks a lot! Learning.
Thank you.
The ideas and approach, in my opinion, are absolutely correct. And an excellent embodiment of these ideas.
Thank you.
Perfect presentation, a beautiful selection of images, thank you!!
Thank you.
Excellent images! Thanks so much for sharing!
Thank you.
Thank you so much for including my photo in such a wonderful selection.Thank you,Best regards..
Thank you.
Thanks a lot dear Yvette and Lourens !
Thank you Phillip.
very amazing and a great selection of images, thank you Yvette
Thank you.
Wonderful magazine!
Indeed.
Thank you so much for the inspiring article with very beautiful and great photos!
Thank you.
Great choice of images. Thank you Lourens.
Thank you Michel.
A very interesting article and a beautiful selection of images. Congratulations!
Thank you so much.
Minimal in so many photographic genres is art, deciding what to leave out can be part of the journey to successful minimal work
Indeed.
Nice selection... Thank you very much for pubishing... Cheers
Thank you
Beautiful series
Thank you
superbe collection ... congrats
Thank you.
Thank very much Yvette and Lourens for choosing my image. Best regards !!!
Thank you Thierry.
Nocturnal wanderings by Alexander London

 

by Editor Michel Romaggi in collaboration with the author Alexander London
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 30st of April 2025

 

 

 

Dear Alexander, could you briefly introduce yourself and tell us how you came to photography?
Hi, my name is Alexander London and I've been sober for about nine years now. It started innocently enough: I just wanted to remember things. A few photos here, a few melancholy sunsets there. Then came the rabbit hole, wide open, bokeh and full of shadows I didn't know were mine.
I'd always wanted to create, but I wasn't good at it... so I started capturing instead. Photography became my way of making something without having to invent it.
I didn't become a photographer. I became someone who couldn't explain what was happening without a shutter. Words felt like a betrayal. Photons, however, were honest. Sometimes too honest. You see the reflection of a stranger in a café window and think, "Wow, they look lost". Then you realize it's you.
Photography became the only way to keep my inner apocalypse from spilling over into polite conversation. I couldn't draw. I couldn't write consistently. I couldn't sit still.
But I could click: Frame, crop. Chase the light, as if it owed me money.

 

'Shinjuku Blues'

 

So now I shoot. Not because it makes sense. But because it prevents things from making too much sense. And that, ironically, is how I found my voice.
Through a medium where nobody talks and nothing has to be explained, so in complete contrast to that, let me explain to you:
Instagram was. A golden age, when it was just one photo, in order, no dancing, no reels, no algorithm trying to sell you trousers you googled once in 2014. Photographers vibrated quietly, posting single images like monks with DSLRs.
@spatialflow was there, doing something strange and inexplicably amazing. Painting cities with colours that belong in dreams. Before (or during?) @liamwong's reign of cyberpunk elegance, @spatialflow made Tokyo look like it had been designed by a synthwave deity.
Naturally, I did what any aspiring night goblin would do: I approached him with the most passive-aggressively flattering question you can ask a photographer.
"Nice camera. It's probably just the camera, isn't it? So, er, what is it?" He was polite: Panasonic Leica 25 mm 1,' an Olympus OMD em 5.

 

 

A camera so affordable that even my overdrawn bank account sighed with relief.
I bought it. Waited a few days. Held it in my hands like Excalibur, expecting instant greatness. Instead I got confusion, a menu system designed by eldritch beings, and the creeping feeling that I might not have a clue what aperture was.
There were meetings. Neon nights. People dressed like characters from films I pretended to have seen. Someone asked me to photograph them. I said yes and panicked for 48 hours.
 In trying to imitate others, something strange happened, a style began to whisper through the noise.
Nights are kinder when viewed through an f/1.4 lens. Cities open up, colours bleed. Everything looks like it's apologising for the shitty day. I began to steal hues from other night crawlers. Reflections. Halos. Purple shadows. Orange sorrows. Slowly it all made sense in a way that can't be explained without alcohol or poetry.

Somewhere along the way I was featured in Streets of London, a book by Mendo, which was surreal and beautiful and made me feel like I had fooled everyone for a moment. Apart from that, a few shoots, some modelling work, but no, I'm not a professional.
And I don't want to be. I'm an amateur.  From the Latin amator, lover.  I love it. The way people love stray dogs or songs that remind them of cities they have never visited.
That was nearly nine years ago. Since then I've been chasing light like a madman. Lugged far too many lenses across Asia. Shot in typhoons, missed trains, ruined shoes.
Only to learn the truth: less is more. Your equipment is enough.
Photography isn't a dig for buried treasure. It's lightning in a beer bottle. It's not something you plan like an expedition, it's something that happens when you're paying attention or not.

 

 

What equipment do you use for your night shots?
Mostly the usual suspects. 99% of the time it's a Sony A7IV glued to a 16-35mm, although to be honest I live with the 35mm like some kind of focal length monogamist.
Occasionally I'll flirt with a 50mm or 85mm, especially the 85, which compresses reality in a way that makes the world feel like a film I've already cried over.
Night doesn't wait for you to think. It punishes hesitation. So I shoot fast, crop shamelessly, and sometimes switch to APS-C on the fly, like a thief trying on different disguises.
I'm not precious. The shot is more important than the math.
I recently flirted with the Fuji XT5 and a 56mm, some of the images floating around might be from that little affair. The Fuji colours really do have that cult glow, as if someone had turned the melancholy up to eleven and sprinkled it with nostalgia dust. But honestly? Anything works if it's fast enough to keep up with my attention span and the chaos of the city.
Lately I've been experimenting with a 28mm. Wide. Unforgiving. Wonderfully stubborn. Someone once said, "If a piano had an unlimited number of keys, there would be no music in it".
Photography is the same. The fewer notes you're allowed to play, the more you learn to sing.

 

 

How do you choose the locations?
The call of the night. The hunt. The deeply irrational urge to leave my apartment at 1:37 a.m. because a streetlamp might cast shadows in the form of a philosophical crisis.
Whatever you want to call it, it's not a method. It's a symptom.
I live in London. It was once a dream. Fog, rain, and the promise that somewhere between the Victorian architecture and the corner shops I'd find magic. But dreams have a way of unpacking themselves and becoming flat-pack furniture. Now I walk the same streets and think, "Ah yes, the 50 shades of London sky".
It's strange. I'm not from London, but I can't see it clearly anymore. It's like when you say a word too many times and it stops sounding like anything real. London has become that word.
So I looked east.
Japan became the next dream, one wrapped in neon, vending machines and the kind of visual poetry that makes your soul cry out for subtitles.
Through a camera lens, it didn't just glow. It hummed. Even the mundane had this strange cinematic weight.
Salarymen. Alleyways. Cigarette smoke curling up as if it had a backstory.
I don't go to certain places. I go to certain feelings.
I chase motifs + light like it's a rare Pokémon.
People walking through harsh fluorescent rain. Red traffic lights in empty streets. Silhouettes in ramen bars.
I don't map places, I map moods.

Tokyo has no rival. No city bathes itself in so many shades of emotion. It doesn't just light up, it acts. Every lamp, every sign, every screen is a character in a silent play that only the cameras can hear.

 

 

 

You often have a special and interesting perspective for your pictures, could you explain what drives you to make these choices?
Quick answer: longing.
You know that feeling when you're on a train at night and it's raining and the glass reflects your face back at you, half real, half ghost? That's the perspective I'm always chasing.
I don't think it's about angles or clever compositions. It's about longing. It's about searching for a version of the world that feels like a memory you haven't made yet.
Cities are full. Packed. Lights. Advertisements. People rushing past each other like waves that never touch. But somehow, in that chaos, I still manage to feel alone, like I'm the only person watching a film everyone else is acting in.
So I frame my shots the way you look at someone you'll never speak to again, through glass, across the distance, slightly out of focus. I look for reflections, silhouettes, backs of heads, doorways. Fragments. Because that's what love feels like in a city.
Fragmented. Romantic, but unattainable.Sometimes I crouch. Sometimes I shoot from too far away. Sometimes I stand in the wrong place for too long, hoping for the right
person to walk through the light.
What drives me on is that tiny thread of invisible connection, me on this side of the lens, and someone else somewhere who might feel the same.
In a Wong Kar Wai film, people pass each other endlessly, never quite touching, always almost.
That's what I'm trying to photograph: the almost.

 

'Taxi Driver'

 

What kind of post-processing do you usually use to get these often old-fashioned colours?
Lightroom is like a cigarette lighter in a rainstorm. Useful, yes, but it's not the flame that matters. It's what you light with it.
I think colour grading is like memory, it doesn't have to be exact, it just has to feel true.
The tones I'm chasing are not what the scene looked like. They're what it felt like to be there, alone, probably listening to a sad jazz track that nobody asked for, wondering if someone else, somewhere, might be walking through the same kind of light.
I am drawn to the old way of looking, because the past always feels warmer. Like a film that's aged under someone's bed. The colours are softer, almost apologetic. Blues that hurt. Reds that breathe. Shadows that don't just hide things, but hold them.
People ask me for presets, and I get it. We all want a shortcut to emotion. But my edits are constantly changing - depending on the weather, the level of sadness, and how much sleep I've lost thinking about light bouncing off wet concrete at 2am.
I push the tones until they hum like a broken heart in the background.
Standing in the same place doesn't produce the same photograph. Because the colour isn't in the lens - it's in what you wanted to see.
Two people can look at the same neon alley and walk away with different ghosts.
So yes, Lightroom helps. But it's not what gives the colours. It's just the place I go to remember what it felt like when no one was looking.

 

 

 

Thank you, dear Alexander, for exposing your soul to us and for taking us with you on your nocturnal wanderings, which provide us with such exceptional good images. ~Yvette Depaepe~

Write
"I don't map places, I map moods." This very intersting interview touched my heart! Personal, deep, and honest, with great street images! Thank you Alexander, for sharing your soul with us! Thank you, Yvette and Michel, for bring it to us!
thank you Yun
I really enjoyed this interview which was so honest and personal. Your thoughts and words were gripping, and your images are Wonderful! Congratulations! Alexander and Thank you! Yvette and Michel.
Thank you for this deeply personal and open interview. It truly is something special – in fact, it reads like a journey through a neon-drenched night in Tokyo, where every side street offers a new glimpse into something unseen.
Thoughtful reaction, Andy ... You expressed so well the essence of Alexander's personal journey through a neon-drenched night in Tokyo.
This interview is really special, I am glad to discover your wonderful work, dear Alexander, and to read about your emotional journey.Congratulations and thank you for sharing.Thank you dear Michel and dear Yvette for bring it to us.
A real pleasure to us to present Alexander to our readers, Gabriela!
Thank you so much for a very interesting interview with great street perspective photos!
A most interesting and thought provoking article and images. Thanks for sharing Alexander, much appreciated!