Jean Nagy enjoyed the post-storm sunset this evening.
She wasn't alone: Read more.
Jean Nagy enjoyed the post-storm sunset this evening.
She wasn't alone: Read more.
Stephen Bronstein couldn't help but watch the sunset over Porter Square last night.
Michele Connors looks at the Back Bay from the other side of the Charles this morning.
Nancy O'Connor watched the cloud move in over Millennium Park in West Roxbury: Read more.
Erica Mattison looked up this afternoon (about 45 minutes before somebody in the South End was nearly blinded by the setting sun reflecting off the other side of the tower).
But perhaps nowhere more so than over Dorchester, as Annabelle Blake noticed when she looked down Morrissey Boulevard.
Eileen Murphy looked towards the west late this afternoon and spotted a sun halo.
Jessica Burko shows us the view towards downtown from Roslindale around 1 p.m. She called them "a giant sky quilt wanting to snuggle" (so maybe she's tired, while I'm hungry).
Erica Mattison watched some clouds that obviously mean business roll over what used to be the Casey Overpass in Forest Hills around 3:40 p.m.
Leah Klein was not much liking what she saw in the sky over Chelsea early this evening.
Around 5:40 p.m. The clouds were moving from the northwest to the southeast.
Ryan Meador watched the clouds moving over the Charles without doing much more than looking menacing, around 6:20 p.m.
Around 6 p.m., lots of people looked up and spotted the gigantic, majestic cloud just sitting up there, reaching way up into the sky.
Eric spotted the cloud over the Zakim - and much of the rest of the area.
Other views of the cloud:
Jared Villemaire photographed the interesting clouds over Beacon Hill late this afternoon after a morning of some pretty wild weather.
Rosalia, meanwhile, went for a walk on the Longfellow Bridge and couldn't help but notice the sunset underneath the cloud deck: