Photographer Proposed To His Girlfriend Under The Northern Lights And The Photos Are Breathtaking
Dale Sharpe’s proposal idea to Karlie Russell was straight from a romance movie, and luckily he documented it in beautiful photos.
Dale, 34, has been carrying the idea of proposing to Karlie, 29, under the Aurora Borealis for five years. “I hadn’t heard or seen anyone do it before, and I wanted to do something different from everybody else,” he said. That place was also special for both of them because the couple visited it about 30 times. “We both love chasing the Northern Lights and photographing them together, so it seemed pretty fitting.”
His first plan didn’t work out because Dale hid the ring inside a moisturizer bottle, but when their luggage was overweight on a flight from the Faroe Islands to Iceland, Karlie threw the moisturizer – with a $4,000 ring hidden inside – into a trash can. “I didn’t know until a week after when we were in Iceland and I was looking everywhere for the ring,” Dale said.
The man saved up money for a new ring and the couple later booked a two-month work trip through Iceland, Norway, and Finland. He wanted to ask the big question seven years to the day they first started dating, but the Northern Lights seemed to him too beautiful to wait. “It was the most amazing display of color in this natural phenomenon that we’ve ever seen.”
He staged the scene in a way that made Karlie believe they were taking a selfie. When everything was ready, Dale got down on one knee in front of the breathtaking Aurora’s greens and blues and removed the ring out of the couple’s medical pack. Karlie said yes, and the stunning picture turned out to be both beautiful and romantic as hell.
More info: dk-photography.com.au (h/t: dailymail)
When Karlie and her photographer boyfriend Dale travelled to Scandinavia to see the Northern Lights she did not suspect it would end in a huge surprise
The couple loves to travel all over the world, but the Arctic Circle is their favorite place – they visited it about 30 times
“We both love chasing the Northern Lights and photographing them together, so it seemed pretty fitting,” 34-year-old Dale said
His first attempt was unsuccessful because Karlie (unknowingly) threw away the $4,000 engagement ring he was hiding inside a bottle
“I didn’t know until a week after when we were in Iceland”
Dale saved money for another ring and booked another trip to the Northern Lights through Iceland, Norway, and Finland
He staged the scene in a way that made Karlie believe they were taking a selfie. Then, Dale got down on one knee and took out the ring
Karlie said yes and the moment was captured perfectly in the decoy selfie that turned out to be breathtaking
Congrats to the happy couple on their magical engagement!
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Share on FacebookAbsolutely stunning, I will never be over how gorgeous nature is and this is a prime example
Most awesome !The kind of story told around campfires and passed on to generations. Here's wishing you both a life of love and adventure !
Ahh, a very inexpensive lesson learned early on here. Never hide anything from your Significant Other. It may wind up biting you in the "you know what".
As a young lad, I grew up in Anchorage, Alaska, and it was a wonderful experience. Before my family was stationed there I had heard all sorts of things about the aurora borealis, and how beautiful it was. But no matter where I went, even north of Fairbanks, they never looked like the ones in the pictures. I was so disappointed, until I took up serious photography later on. Now I know why those pictures Always look so wonderful, and they looked so washed out for me. Timed Exposure. The longer one leaves the shutter open, the more light enters the lense, and the more intense the Northern Lights.
Load More Replies...Absolutely stunning, I will never be over how gorgeous nature is and this is a prime example
Most awesome !The kind of story told around campfires and passed on to generations. Here's wishing you both a life of love and adventure !
Ahh, a very inexpensive lesson learned early on here. Never hide anything from your Significant Other. It may wind up biting you in the "you know what".
As a young lad, I grew up in Anchorage, Alaska, and it was a wonderful experience. Before my family was stationed there I had heard all sorts of things about the aurora borealis, and how beautiful it was. But no matter where I went, even north of Fairbanks, they never looked like the ones in the pictures. I was so disappointed, until I took up serious photography later on. Now I know why those pictures Always look so wonderful, and they looked so washed out for me. Timed Exposure. The longer one leaves the shutter open, the more light enters the lense, and the more intense the Northern Lights.
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