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Open Sky

Scattered, layered, or simply uncategorisable skies — the catch-all that guarantees every cloudscape a home.

A single contrail cuts a clean diagonal across layered cloud strata over the Netherlands, the aircraft already gone and only the white line remaining. The sky holds two states at once — the soft cumulus gathered at the lower frame and the open, cooler blue above, bisected by that one precise mark. Austere and still, the atmosphere itself becomes the subject.
A wave-form cloud layer curves across the lower third of the frame, its sculptural edge catching the last of the soft afternoon light. Above it, altocumulus dissolves into open blue — two distinct registers of sky held in the same image. This is a pure sky study from the Netherlands, where the flat horizon and wide atmosphere make cloud formations the entire subject. The lenticular shape carries its own geometry: smooth, unhurried, almost architectural against the open expanse above.
Heavy cloud strata press low over the Netherlands, layered from steel-blue at the edges to near-charcoal at the centre. The sky here is the entire composition — no horizon, no architecture, just the full weight of a Limburg storm building overhead. Weather this dense reads both as stillness and pressure at once: the air has stopped moving and everything is about to.
Cumulus clouds stack in dense horizontal bands over Sint Pietersberg, each layer pressing against the next with its own weight of grey and white. The frame holds nothing but sky — no horizon, no anchor — and the cloud structure earns that decision. It builds upward through strata: low flat rolls at the base, billowing towers in the middle, a heavy shelf riding the upper edge with a strip of deep blue caught behind it. Architecture without walls, stillness with the texture of incoming weather.