Liminal: The Beautiful Strangeness of In-Between Moments

PHOTO BY PIXABAY ON PEXELS

Liminal is today’s word of the day—a term that captures the eerie beauty of in-between moments. It describes spaces or states that sit between one thing and the next, like empty hallways or early dawn light.

These quiet transitions often go unnoticed, but they hold a strange kind of magic worth pausing to explore.

Empty Hallways and Quiet Stations

Liminal spaces like empty hallways and quiet stations exist between one moment and the next. They aren’t destinations, but transitions—places that feel suspended in time.

The soft echoes, dim lighting, and stillness give these areas an eerie, dreamlike quality. They feel both familiar and strange, inviting quiet observation rather than action.

These liminal moments open space for reflection. Free from distraction, they let thoughts wander and creativity surface. In their stillness, we glimpse the quiet power of the in-between.

Check out the post below and get a feel for the liminal:

Transitions in Travel and Time

Transitions in travel are full of liminal energy. These moments—waiting at a gate, riding between cities, or pausing at rest stops—feel suspended between here and there.

The following video captures this feeling through original photos and thoughtful editing. The creator explains the concept of liminality while documenting how these spaces evoke nostalgia, curiosity, and reflection:

It’s a personal and creative look at how in-between moments shape how we move through time and place. These quiet pauses often leave the deepest impression.

Capturing the Mood: Liminal Aesthetics in Photography

Liminal photography captures the quiet beauty of transitions. It focuses on spaces and moments that feel between states—like dusk, empty hallways, or deserted buildings, such as the ones on the post below:

These images often stir feelings of nostalgia, uncertainty, or anticipation.

Soft lighting and muted colors give scenes a dreamlike quality. Leading lines and unusual angles draw viewers into spaces that feel both ordinary and surreal.

Photographers use fog, shadows, and symmetry to deepen the mood. The result is an image that feels still, yet quietly alive with meaning.

Alan Reiner

Alan Reiner

Hi, my name is Alan Reiner and I have been in the writing industry for almost seven years. I write articles that can span from 200 words all the way to 20,000 words every single day. How do I do it? With a lot of determination. All my way through school and college, I hated long-form assignments. I could never get into the groove of working on one piece for an extended period of time. My pieces were always late because I didn’t have the motivation to type them, let alone edit them.