Aurora in Texas: Double Light Show

In October, 2024, an unusually strong geomagnetic storm made aurora borealis, the Northern Lights, visible from Texas. The night had a full moon, clouds, and thunderstorms – any one of which can make it a bad night for catching the Lights with a camera. Instead, it made for very nice shots like this one, where Texas put on its own light show beneath the clouds, and the clouds wore bright rims lit by the moon.

Northern Lights, Texas #2: Double Light Show, near Wichita Falls
The image shows red northern lights in the top half, under which are a full band of clouds, two lightning strikes, and a dark horizon line© Randy Heffner inspect image detail »
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Full Title and Copyright

  • Northern Lights, Texas #2: Double Light Show near Wichita Falls
  • © 2025 by Randy Heffner, all rights reserved

Medium & Format

  • Digital photograph
  • This image works well printed on metal or on fine art paper.
  • Aspect ratio is 3:2, so uncropped print sizes include 4x6 inches, 8x12 inches, and 18x12 inches (larger images may be possible, but I would need to test image quality first)

Editions and Options Available

  • In a limited edition of 30 signed prints
  • As an unsigned open edition print
  • Framed
  • Unframed

Pricing

  • To be determined


16 May 2025; updated 30 May 2025
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Randy Heffner

Randy lives at the intersection of philosophy, theology, and culture — reading, watching, walking, and sometimes creating in search of our better selves. Film and photography have a lot to do with it, but anyway, art. The tie is an anomaly.

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