@Shinya0 ,
Hi Shinya, thank you so much for your beautiful light show images. For Ade and myself we were amazed at the colours in Nagasaki on our visit there in 2012, nobody does colourful effect quite like the Japanese.....mind you everything the Japanese do, they do well!
Australia is a bit different in that we try to let nature talk for itself! Of course there are the iconic lightshows like the Sydney Opera house roof sails during the 'Colours of Vivid festival'.......
But Shinya, on a more personal level one of our neighbouring towns in the Adelaide hills is called Lobethal and every December every house in Lobethal has a Christmas lights display in their front yard. Each year it attracts many thousands of visitors, the residents all try to outdo each other year after year and this is typical of what we get to see, house after house........
But some of our outback light-shows are absolutely breathtaking.
This is an illustration of one of them. This is in the desert in the middle of Australia at a place called Uluru (Ayers rock) .......
This photo was taken from a luxury glamping resort called Longitude 131, and it is estimated there are 1.7 million individual lights in this photo field of view between the resort and the rock of Uluru .....
But as I said we like to let nature show us at our best....
This photo was taken at 1145 pm with a mobile phone on a stand using 'nightime' setting in a small South Australian town in the Flinders Ranges called Blinman.......
The sky is almost frightening, it is so full of stars, it almost feels like they are falling in on you.
In 2016 we had an Italian school student (Aurora Lacu from Modena in northern Italy) staying with us for 3 months as part of the International Student Exchange program, and I said to her..."In outback Australia you can read a book by starlight alone".....she laughed at me and said that was not possible!
We took her into the Flinders ranges and one night I drove her out to a deserted patch of road away from the interference of any artificial street lighting, I asked her to get out the Italian book she had brought with her, she gave it to me and I opened it up to a random page, and she read the entire page by starlight alone. She will never forget that experience!
She was a lovely girl and there were some tears all around when we had to put her on that plane back to Italy. She has been back here again since and we have named our Airbnb cottage after her.....
I am sure @Laurelle3 will be able to contribute some of her beautiful Aussie scenes as well.
All the best to you Shinya.
Cheers.........Rob