Small City Big Personality

The first Supermoon of 2019!

A nice freezing cauld walk to Bertha Loch!

By Marysia Macfarlane

WOW!

By Marysia Macfarlane

Look at the stars, look how they shine for you....it was all yellow.....

By Mark Westwater

A sky full of honey...

By Mark Angus

Otherworldly and strange...

By Tim Haynes

"Do not swear by the moon, for she changes constantly. Then your love would also change.” - William Shakespeare, Romeo & Juliet

By Marysia Macfarlane

Somewhere above Perth....we're loving this surrealist style picture from Mark!

By Mark Westwater

There are a septillion stars in the universe. How many is that, you ask? 200,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. Yep.

By Mark Westwater

Skies of blue and earthy green peaks through which stone rises. Photos like this remind us how Perthshire is home to some of the world's most beautiful landscapes.

By Mark Miller

Kirkcaldy in shades of gold.

By Mark Angus

Night owl (or early riser?!) Rab captured this beautiful portrait of the moon at 5 in the morning.

By Rab Dobbie

We are loving this peaceful picture as taken by Marysia at the South Inch.

By Marysia Macfarlane

I'm your Venus, I'm your fire! Your desire...

By Mark Angus

What a breathtaking shot! Two silhouettes stand, looking outward at star dense skies as dusk descends.

By Connor McLaren

Hues of purple, azure, amber, and gold fleck and merge above a star studded sky at Mailer Hill.

By Mark Westwater

"As the lukewarm hands of the Gods/ Came down and gently picked my adrenaline pearls/They placed them in their mouths/And rinsed all of the fear out" - Moon by Bjork

By Rab Dobbie

When the Sun is close to the horizon on a sunny day, its light appears warmer and softer. This makes the golden hour - casting a magical, soft glow.

By Jamie McEachen

Supermoons exceed the brightness of an average-size full moon by on average, 15%. Shine on!

By Corina Richards

Full moons are when you're most likely to see the Moon in the daytime. When the Moon reaches the final phase of it's cycle (Full Moon), it is at its closest to the Sun, which beams off it and causes it to be visible, even in the day.

By Debbie Wallace

When blue scattered light is set against an environment heavy in red light (for example, during sunset) and a dark grey cloud, the may sky appear faintly green.

By Fiona Leslie

Schiehallion and Loch Tummel, from Queen's View, on the Night of the Super Blood Moon.

By Wallace Gilbraith