This photograph from the #ThomasFire has been named one of TIME's Top 10 Photos of 2017. Here, photographer Marcus Yam (@yamphoto) explains coming across the scene: "When the brush kicked off on Dec. 4 in Santa Paula, Calif., I skipped ahead—following the direction of the wind—and positioned myself in the path of the flames in Ventura. Chaos ensued; fire was spreading everywhere and burning indiscriminately. Some people evacuated early while others stayed behind until the very last moment before packing up their cars. The electricity was out and visibility was poor due to the smoke.⠀ I parked my car on a street in the darkness and, with the engine still on, I walked up to a cluster of fire moving in behind a Victorian-styled home. The homeowners were calmly packing up and I recall thinking to myself, 'Gosh they are in their pajamas. They were probably asleep.' I made a few frames of what I thought was the most surreal reality of living in beautiful California—under threat of hellfire. I continued to stand there, shivering, and watched as the homeowners drove off into the darkness before I could leave the scene. Within an hour or two after I made that picture and shared it on social media, a man named Kirby Ditto emailed me and said he had not been able to reach his mother in Ventura but saw the picture I had made of her packing up her car. He said he was 'extremely happy and relieved to see that she was able to evacuate.' In times like that, I was happy to reply: 'I saw them drive off, so I’m hopeful they made it to a shelter. Good luck.' Photograph by @yamphoto—@latimes/@gettyimages

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 12月29日 06時32分


This photograph from the #ThomasFire has been named one of TIME's Top 10 Photos of 2017. Here, photographer Marcus Yam (@yamphoto) explains coming across the scene: "When the brush kicked off on Dec. 4 in Santa Paula, Calif., I skipped ahead—following the direction of the wind—and positioned myself in the path of the flames in Ventura. Chaos ensued; fire was spreading everywhere and burning indiscriminately. Some people evacuated early while others stayed behind until the very last moment before packing up their cars. The electricity was out and visibility was poor due to the smoke.⠀
I parked my car on a street in the darkness and, with the engine still on, I walked up to a cluster of fire moving in behind a Victorian-styled home. The homeowners were calmly packing up and I recall thinking to myself, 'Gosh they are in their pajamas. They were probably asleep.' I made a few frames of what I thought was the most surreal reality of living in beautiful California—under threat of hellfire. I continued to stand there, shivering, and watched as the homeowners drove off into the darkness before I could leave the scene. Within an hour or two after I made that picture and shared it on social media, a man named Kirby Ditto emailed me and said he had not been able to reach his mother in Ventura but saw the picture I had made of her packing up her car. He said he was 'extremely happy and relieved to see that she was able to evacuate.' In times like that, I was happy to reply: 'I saw them drive off, so I’m hopeful they made it to a shelter. Good luck.' Photograph by @yamphoto@latimes/@gettyimages


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