The society for people who love the sky

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Today's Cloud-a-Day

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Cloud of the Month

Arcus cloud spotted over Carmel, Indiana, US by Christina Erickson

September 2025

When you see an arcus cloud feature stretching across the sky ahead, you can be sure that heavy showers will soon follow – as we explain in Cloud of the Month for September...

Friday September 12th

is Cloud Appreciation Day!

Once a year, on Cloud Appreciation Day, people from around the world pause to look up. They capture their sky and describe how it makes them feel — creating a shared, emotional snapshot of our planet’s atmosphere.

These individual moments are brought together in the Memory Cloud Atlas, a global archive of sky photos and feelings — a lasting record of people around the world pausing to reflect on the atmosphere we all share.

In 2025, Cloud Appreciation Day takes place on Friday, September 12th. The Memory Cloud Atlas opens for contributions on this day only — for 24 hours, anyone anywhere can contribute their sky and say how it made them feel.

Download Our Free CloudSpotter App

Discover the wonders of clouds with our CloudSpotter app.

Discover the amazing world of clouds with your pocket guide to the wonders of the sky and have your spottings verified as you build a collection of clouds.

Our CloudSpotter app will teach you how to spot 58 different cloud formations and optical effects, from the common ones like Cumulus clouds and rainbows to rare ones like the fleeting fluctus cloud or the hard to spot circumzenithal arc. Learn what makes each formation special with expert text from the Cloud Appreciation Society and stunning reference photographs by our app users around the world.

Build up your own Collection of spottings and use our innovative tools to find out what type of clouds or optical effects you’ve spotted. See New Spottings by other users around the world and say (with our help) if you think they got the clouds right. CloudSpotter can even analyse your image and say what cloud types it thinks you’ve spotted. Becoming an expert cloudspotter has never been easier or more fun!

Cloudspotting for Beginners

A collaboration with award-winning illustrator William Grill, Cloudspotting for Beginners is a stunning introduction to clouds and the sky. We are very proud of this beautiful hardback book, which has been shortlisted for the prestigious  Wainwright Prize (Children’s Non-fiction) for nature writing. Charming, uplifting, and easy to understand for all ages, Cloudspotting for Beginners will inspire anyone curious about clouds to look up at the sky with a new understanding and appreciation.

Recent Clouds Spotted

New from our Members

Cloud Poetry
Sheryl Oder sent us this poem based on ...
Cloud Art
Lynn Wirtz, Member 38,668, was inspired to paint ...
Cloud Videos
Eileen Hennemann, Member 27,616 was extraordinarily  lucky to ...
Cloud Music
Dan Barstow, Member 41,557 introduced us to the ...

A Survival Kit for the Imagination

Our downloadable lesson plans and resources for schools and homeschools teaching about the sky.

News

Clouds & Climate: A Fireside Chat with Gavin Pretor-Pinney & Dr Ed Gryspeerdt

Asterisk Labs and the Cloud Appreciation Society are delighted to invite you to an online ‘fireside chat’ between Gavin Pretor-Pinney (Member 001) and Dr Ed Gryspeerdt.  The event will take place on Friday, 19th September from 16.00 to 17.00 BST and you can register to join the event here. Gavin is Founder of the Cloud […]

We Take Clouds For Granted

In a Guest Essay for The New York Times, Cloud Appreciation Society founder Gavin Pretor-Pinney (Member 001) shares why clouds matter more than ever, not only for their beauty but for their critical role in regulating Earth’s climate. From cooling parasols to warming blankets, clouds are central to the story of our changing atmosphere. And […]
Above the clouds over Pudong New Area, Shanghai, China

How microbes living in the clouds affect our lives

High above us, in the chilly, windswept world of clouds, scientists have discovered a thriving community of airborne microbes—bacteria and fungi that not only survive but may play a vital role in shaping our weather. These resilient organisms hitch rides on water droplets and ice crystals, influencing cloud formation and even precipitation. Researchers are now […]