Skip to main content

Snowflake photography brings you up close with ice crystals

WASHINGTON – You’ve never seen snowflakes like this before.

Alexey Kljatov set up a snowflake studio on his balcony in Moscow last winter and snapped images of frozen crystals of water, better known as snow. The results are magical.

He used a stool and a piece of glass to capture some of the images and a piece of dark wool fabric to capture others. Kljatov has been perfecting his snowflake photography the past five winters and uses a Soviet-era lens attached to a modern digital camera to magnify the crystals. You can learn more about his technique and the camera equipment he used in this blog post.

The images capture standard snowflakes like the kind you created in second grade with construction paper and a pair of scissors. But others look like columns, are hollow or are hexagonal. One shot shows what looks like a hexagon about to become a multi-pointed snowflake.

In an email, Kljatov tells WTOP that the hexagon crystals are his favorite. Although the outer edges of the flakes are simple, they form intricate designs in the center of the crystal. The tiny flakes tend to be just 1 to 2 mm and are difficult to capture.

No scientist, Kljatov is a school assistant for computer and chemistry classes. But the amateur photographer has discovered that medium and small crystals have a lot more shapes, details and inner patterns than larger crystals.

Take a wander through his winter wonderland.

WTOP’s Amanda Iacone contributed to this report. Follow @WTOP on Twitter.

Emergency guide: What you should do to prepare for emergencies

WASHINGTON — Do you know what you'd do if an emergency hits? What if you're at work, your spouse is stuck in traffic and your children are in school? There's no way to plan for every emergency, but you can make sure you're prepared for different scenarios, including making a plan for your family and building a kit of emergency supplies.
Read Next Story