The northern lights flare in the sky over a farmhouse, late Friday, May 10, 2024, in Brunswick, Maine. Brilliant purple, green, yellow and pink hues of the Northern Lights were reported worldwide, with sightings in Germany, Switzerland, London, and the United States and Canada. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
The northern lights flare in the sky over a farmhouse, late Friday, May 10, 2024, in Brunswick, Maine. Brilliant purple, green, yellow and pink hues of the Northern Lights were reported worldwide, with sightings in Germany, Switzerland, London, and the United States and Canada. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
BRUNSWICK, Maine (AP) — Robert Bukaty has covered nearly every type of story and event for The Associated Press in his 30-year career, from the somber to the exhilarating: a mass shooting, COVID-19, presidents, political campaigns, ski racing — a lot of ski racing — Olympics, and everyday life in Maine as staff photographer in Portland. With a little nudge from his daughter and a solar storm, he has now even shot the northern lights. Here’s what he said about capturing this extraordinary image.
Why this photo
My photo of the northern lights in the sky over a farmhouse in Brunswick, Maine, came about less because of my role as a photojournalist and more because of my role as a father.
When I joined her on the front yard, we saw what looked like pink see-through clouds drifting in front of the stars. She showed me a picture she took on her iPhone. The colors were much more impressive than what we saw with our eyes. I joked that if I was a photographer I’d be working this like crazy, trying to make pictures. Then it dawned on me that maybe I should grab my professional DSLR and a tripod.
It was a good decision. There were patches of color in the north and a nebula-like display directly overhead. The best light, however, was in the east where the flares of the aurora borealis reminded me of stage lighting at a rock concert. That’s when the photographer in me finally kicked in. The sky alone was dramatic, but the picture needed was something to anchor the scene to earth.
If you’ve read this far hoping I’d share some technical advice on lenses or shutter speeds, I’m sorry. I shot the photo with my iPhone. About all I did was steady my hands on the roof of my car. Before taking the picture, I tapped on the screen and dragged the exposure slider bar down a tiny bit so that the brightest part of the sky was not washed-out.
Why this photo works
I think the photo works because the image is the combination of striking light and a simple, uncluttered composition. The aurora’s angled light draws the viewer’s eye to the quiet, rural home, while the dark landscape and sky frames the colorful display.
While I’m pleased with the photo, I’m even happier to witness my daughter’s excitement over the natural phenomenon.
“I’ve been wanting to see the northern lights since I was 3 years old,†she said.