Mixed light, mixed feelings

Happy New Year.
I’ll start with a confession: I really dislike fireworks. Not the light itself, but everything around it. The pollution, the stress for animals, the damage to nature, and the yearly ritual of people discovering—once again—that playing with controlled explosions has consequences. Every year the harm increases, and every year we collectively act surprised.

So no, you won’t see me buying fireworks or lighting them myself.

But… I do photograph them.

Because once they are already in the sky, they become something else entirely. Brief, chaotic chemical experiments unfolding against a dark background. This image was taken handheld with my Canon 5D Mark IV and the Sigma 100–400, using a 1.6-second exposure at ISO 100. Long enough to let the explosion draw itself, short enough to keep structure and definition.

What fascinates me most is the physics and chemistry behind the colors. Yellow from sodium, red from strontium, and that elusive blue—one of the hardest colors to produce reliably in fireworks—created by copper compounds under very specific temperatures. Add bright white sparks, often magnesium or aluminum, and suddenly the sky looks less like a celebration and more like a fleeting nebula.

If you look closely, it almost resembles deep-space imagery: expanding clouds, glowing particles, tiny star-like points suspended in darkness. A reminder that the same physical laws govern both fireworks above our cities and stellar explosions light-years away.

I don’t celebrate the noise or the damage. But I do observe the light—brief, beautiful, and already fading.

#fireworksphotography #longexposure #nightphotography #scienceandart
#physicsinmotion #chemicalcolors #handheldphotography
#nightSkyVibes #urbanastronomy #photographicexperiment
#Canon5DMarkIV #Sigma100400
#NewYearsLight #mixedfeelings
#climateawareness #naturefirst
#PixelfedPhotography #Pixelfed
#WonderingLens
#ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography
here’s a special kind of chaos that comes alive in a city after dark. When Kevin and I went out for some street photography in Tilburg, I wasn’t planning on experimenting… but the road beside me was practically begging for it. Headlights glowing, engines humming, the rhythm of cars passing like pulses of light through the night — it felt like the perfect moment to attempt something notoriously tricky: handheld long-exposure car photography.

Armed with my Canon 5D Mark IV and the Sigma 24–70 Art, I opened the lens to f/2.8, dropped the shutter all the way to 1/2 second, and kept ISO at 500. In conditions like this, physics isn’t on your side. Every heartbeat, every breath, every tiny muscle tremor becomes part of the photo. And honestly? Most shots were complete misses — streaks, smears, abstract failures.

But that’s the beauty of experimentation: sometimes the chaos aligns.

In this frame, the passing car locked into motion just long enough to stay recognizable, while the world around it dissolved into soft trails. Technically improbable, creatively satisfying. Handheld long exposure is a conversation between control and surrender — you guide the moment, but the moment also guides you.

And in those rare situations where the two meet halfway, the result becomes something unexpectedly artistic.

#longexposure #longexposurephotography #streetphotography #nightphotography #urbanshots #tilburg #motionblur #creativeexposure #canon5dmarkiv #sigma2470art #slowshutter #carphotography #cityatnight #experimentalphotography #lighttrails #nightstreets #moodygram #capturingmotion #handheldphotography #streetmood #urbanexplorer #playwithlight #photonarrative #storytellingthroughlight #scienceoflight #wonderinglens #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #lowlightphotography #cinematicstreets #eveningvibes #urbanmoments #photoexperiment #movementandstillness #physicsinmotion #artisticeffect #slowshutterart #lensculture #creativecity #citylightflow