Each wallpaper on InterfaceLIFT has been tagged with keywords, allowing you to browse for similar content, whether it be by Color, Scene, Location, Medium, Event, Equipment, or Subject.
You are currently browsing the 15 desktop wallpapers that were tagged with 'Scene: Night Sky', beginning with the most popular images. You are on page 1 of 2.
Taken on a night with a full moon at Lake Wakatipu, near Queenstown, New Zealand. The view was crystal clear and very bright. So I went for a 30-second long exposure, ISO 400 at f/2.8. Made it almost look like daylight...
A motorway heading in the direction of Limassol city, Cyprus. The appearance of the Milky Way in the sky was totally unexpected as it couldn't be seen with the naked eye.
It is said that Tolkien travelled through the landscape of Switzerland to the Lauterbrunnen Valley, a deep valley that many people now believe was the direct inspiration for the valley of Rivendell, a place instrumental to events both in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.
The name Rivendell itself means "Deeply Cloven Valley" and the Lauterbrunnen, with its steep sides and many waterfalls (72 to be exact), certainly fits this description, with the mountains of the Eiger, Monch, and Jungfrau lying beyond.
Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Lightroom, Color Efex, Turkey Bacon Avocado Sandwich.
It is a composition of three pictures stitched together in Photoshop, but the street and the mountains were taken from the same place as the first Velocity image here on InterfaceLIFT.
Taken in late May 2015, this is a shot of the Milky Way over a partially thawed Bow Lake in Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada. Taken just after the Moon had set with some light cloud cover.
This composite image combines a near-infrared view from the Hubble Space Telescope, an infrared view from the Spitzer Space Telescope, and an X-ray view from the Chandra X-ray Observatory into one multi-wavelength picture.
It features the spectacle of stellar evolution: from vibrant regions of star birth, to young hot stars, to old cool stars, to seething remnants of stellar death called black holes. This activity occurs against a fiery backdrop in the crowded, hostile environment of the galaxy's core, the center of which is dominated by a supermassive black hole nearly four million times more massive than our Sun. Permeating the region is a diffuse blue haze of X-ray light from gas that has been heated to millions of degrees by outflows from the supermassive black hole as well as by winds from massive stars and by stellar explosions. Infrared light reveals more than a hundred thousand stars along with glowing dust clouds that create complex structures including compact globules, long filaments, and finger-like "pillars of creation," where newborn stars are just beginning to break out of their dark, dusty cocoons.