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Species Western Dragon
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starless western dragon deity god goddess light pollution symbol magic orange yellow night city sky wolfgun and shadow use low density sodium lights for public nighttime lighting femaleReport this content
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Starless, Bane of the Night. The sickly, poisonous dragonness hatched from Humanity's vain attempt to immortalize the day. She prowls along their artificial stars, consuming the night that dare purify her skies. Just as they had wished.
So while listening to Wolfgun's Starless & Shadow I got inspired to draw a symbol for light pollution, which is my interpretation of the song. The symbol then inspired me to draw a magical dragon deity. Of light pollution. How's that for a minor goddess!
SIDE NOTICE: Orange light may be associated with light pollution, but orange light is actually the least polluting form of light! Under very low light our eyes rely completely on our rod cells, which receive light best at approximately cyan. White lights produce plenty of cyan, which is deflected to us through scattering and oversaturates the view of the night sky. Orange lights - especially low-density sodium lights - produce little to no cyan, so they are the least visible to our nighttime eyes! So if you see orange sodium lights in a city, know that that's not actually highly-polluting archaic technology, it's actually a pretty ingenious mitigation strategy!
So while listening to Wolfgun's Starless & Shadow I got inspired to draw a symbol for light pollution, which is my interpretation of the song. The symbol then inspired me to draw a magical dragon deity. Of light pollution. How's that for a minor goddess!
SIDE NOTICE: Orange light may be associated with light pollution, but orange light is actually the least polluting form of light! Under very low light our eyes rely completely on our rod cells, which receive light best at approximately cyan. White lights produce plenty of cyan, which is deflected to us through scattering and oversaturates the view of the night sky. Orange lights - especially low-density sodium lights - produce little to no cyan, so they are the least visible to our nighttime eyes! So if you see orange sodium lights in a city, know that that's not actually highly-polluting archaic technology, it's actually a pretty ingenious mitigation strategy!
335
Views
Views
2
Favorites
Favorites
1
Comments
Comments
General
Rating
Rating
Category Artwork (Digital) / Portraits
Species Western Dragon
Size 800 x 900px
File Size 896.3 kB
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