Treasa Giblin Frazer

Treasa Giblin Frazer Photographing the beauty of Ireland, captured in low light and atmosphere + Photography tips.

no Ai elements added but edits used to enhance light already captured

08/04/2026

What you see now is what I see later...Same Location..Closer view during a hazy morning.. Cheers for watching x

07/04/2026

What you see now is what I see later...Same Location but Night time view Aurora 😁 cheers for watching x

01/04/2026

What you see now is what I see later. Same Location...Closer zoomed in view...Cheers for watching ā™„ļø ###
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30/03/2026

What you see now is what I see later. Same Location... Different light... Closer zoomed in view...Cheers for watching ā™„ļø ###

27/03/2026

What you see now is what I see later. Same Location... Different light... Closer zoomed in view...Cheers for watching ā™„ļø ###

Day 7 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I decided to post one of my Aurora photos shot from Lough Salt Co.Do...
26/03/2026

Day 7 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I decided to post one of my Aurora photos shot from Lough Salt Co.Donegal during one of the many high displays we've had the last few years..Hundreds of people came out to view in awe as it was visible to the naked eye ā¤ļø

Day 6 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I've decided to post a photo I shot of our Moon. We see it every nig...
25/03/2026

Day 6 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I've decided to post a photo I shot of our Moon. We see it every night, yet rarely stop to look.
The Moon is full of detail, depth, and stillness.
Who else loves to look up at our moon?

Day 5 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I decided to show my photo of Barnard's loop. Under the quiet skies ...
24/03/2026

Day 5 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I decided to show my photo of Barnard's loop. Under the quiet skies of Glenveagh, Co. Donegal, a lone photographer stands by the still lake shore as the mountains fade into shadow.
Above, Barnard’s Loop softly reveals itself, an ancient arc of light drifting through Orion, carrying the echoes of long-dead stars.
In that still moment between land and sky, light that has travelled for thousands of years finally meets Donegal.

Day 4 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky. Here is a the Milkyway I photographed over Glenveigh Co.Donegal. Th...
23/03/2026

Day 4 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky. Here is a the Milkyway I photographed over Glenveigh Co.Donegal. The Milky Way, our home galaxy containing over 100 billion stars, has been described for millennia as a glowing river of light, leading to diverse cultural stories of its origin.Ā Greek mythology attributes it to spilled milk from Hera, while Eastern Asian cultures often call it a "Silver River" and Kalahari tales call it the "Backbone of Night" What names have you heard it being called?

Day 3 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I am posting a photo I shot of Andromeda.To the sailors of old, it w...
22/03/2026

Day 3 of Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky I am posting a photo I shot of Andromeda.
To the sailors of old, it was simply a faint, steady glow, a quiet companion in the dark. On long journeys across restless seas, when the wind softened and the world fell to shadow, they turned their eyes upward.
The North Star held them steady, but Andromeda… Andromeda told them where they were in the story of the sky.
They would trace the constellations like familiar coastlines. Cassiopeia shaped like a tilted crown, Pegasus stretching wide like a great square sail, and there between them lay that soft blur. A marker. A reassurance.
ā€œHold her course,ā€ the old captains would say, glancing upward. ā€œShe’s still there.ā€
And as long as that faint light remained in its place, they knew they had not drifted too far, not lost themselves to the endless black.
They didn’t know they were looking at another galaxy, only that it was constant, dependable… like the stories they carried, and the shores they hoped to find again.

Day 2 astro post for Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky.Long ago, on clear winter nights in Ireland, our ancesto...
21/03/2026

Day 2 astro post for Irish Astronomy Week with Donegal Dark Sky.
Long ago, on clear winter nights in Ireland, our ancestors looked up and saw stories written in the stars, hunters, warriors, and great journeys stretching across the sky.
Standing beneath that same sky, I captured this moment, the Orion Nebula glowing like a cosmic hearth fire, the Flame Nebula flickering nearby, and the dark silhouette of the Horsehead emerging like something carved from myth. Just above orion, the Running Man drifts quietly, as if crossing the heavens with purpose.
It’s hard not to feel a connection, as if these distant clouds of light and dust are part of the same storytelling tradition, only written on a far grander canvas.
From the fields and hills of Ireland to the deep sky beyond, the stories are still there… we just have new ways of seeing them.

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