Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - This work is a strange sight.

This work is a strange sight.

I walked gently by the stream and looked up at the stars. The starry sky in summer night is always beautiful and desirable.

Oh, my God, it's dark blue. It looks so close that you can touch it with your hands. But it is far away, revealing a mysterious atmosphere. Stars are like diamonds, embedded in the sky and shining. The stars in summer are like naughty children, densely covered with boundless night sky, blinking and full of feelings. They stare at the world naively and curiously, guessing what they don't understand. The bright moon is their mother. She projected silver light on the earth. Little stars surround the moon. In front of her, they are so petite and their light is so weak. Moonlight is flowing, sprinkling her beautiful glow on the grass, on the small flowers and on the stream running day and night.

I am addicted to the stars all over the sky. At this time, I had a whim to start looking for constellations. First, I'm looking for Ursa major, the Big Dipper. Where is it? Huh? Isn't that what it is? It is made up of seven stars, which are in a bucket shape, and bucket handle faces south. When I found Ursa major, I naturally thought of Polaris. Finally, the brightest Polaris was found at a distance of 5 times in the direction of Doukou. Then, I found the summer triangle: Lyra-Vega, Eagle-Altair and Cygnus-Tianjin IV. Altair and Vega are on both sides of the Milky Way, far away from each other.

"All over the sky, sparkling ..." Unconsciously, I sang a nursery rhyme when I was a child. At that time, I was naive and didn't believe there were countless stars, so I loved to reach out and index the stars when I had nothing to do.

I like the beautiful starry sky on summer nights!