Wait for the Sunset Afterglow
A lot of times when I’m shooting sunsets at the beach, I’ll see people hop out of their cars, snap a few frames as the sun hits the horizon, and then leave. Those are probably nice shots, but the real show often begins about five or ten minutes after the sun has hit the horizon; it’s a time I like to call the afterglow. It’s during this brief period when color flares up into the sky and the clouds really catch fire.

The reason that the afterglow is so intense is because the angle of the sun is causing direct light rays to bounce around in the cloud cover and scatter on the layers of dust, moisture, and pollution. Believe it or not, the more pollution there is, the better the sunsets. After a forest fire or a volcano eruption, the sunsets are often spectacular for weeks as the dust lingers in the atmosphere. Even more amazing, these clouds of volcanic dust travel around the globe in jet streams and, in fact, when Krakatoa exploded in August of 1883 the sunsets were so intense as far away as New Haven, Connecticut (nearly half the circumference of the Earth away) that people thought the sky was on fire. There are reports of the fire companies responding to fires in the sky!
Next time you’re photographing a sunset, especially if there are interesting clouds, hang out and wait for the real show to begin. And incidentally, not only did I not saturate the colors in this shot, but I actually had to tone them down because the yellows, pinks, and reds were bleeding together too much. The only area that I saturated a tiny bit is the reflection in the smooth water at the bottom of the frame to the left of center—I just wanted that spot of color to brighten the foreground a bit.
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