There is no solid boundary called the 'sky'. The blue thing overhead is just the sunlight being scattered by the atmosphere and blue is the colour that is scattered the most and therefore the 'sky' appears blue to us. Now, there is no gap between the Earth and the atmosphere (which I guess you could call the sky) so the answer to your question would be immediately above land. Even where you're standing is 'sky.'
The horizon is the line where the sky meets the earth when viewed from a particular point. It is the apparent junction of Earth and sky or of land and water.
space
The line where the earth meets the sky is called the horizon. It is the apparent line that separates the Earth from the sky when viewed from a specific point.
the rubber meets the sky
Where the Sky Meets the Land was created in 2000.
The duration of Where the Sky Meets the Land is 1.42 hours.
The line that separates the land from the sky is called the horizon. It appears straight but is actually curved due to the Earth's round shape. This line is where the sky meets the Earth's surface, providing a visual boundary between the two.
If you're talking about sky as in sky on this planet, then your answer would be the horizon (the point were the ground meets the sky from any vantage point on the surface). Or you could be talking about the atmosphere, which is the boundary between the earth and space and keeps life alive, and air on earth.
The cast of Where the Ocean Meets the Sky - 2008 includes: Finola Hughes as Narrator
There is no solid boundary called the 'sky'. The blue thing overhead is just the sunlight being scattered by the atmosphere and blue is the colour that is scattered the most and therefore the 'sky' appears blue to us. Now, there is no gap between the Earth and the atmosphere (which I guess you could call the sky) so the answer to your question would be immediately above land. Even where you're standing is 'sky.'
It simply means where the horizon (where earth meets sky) sits in the frame. It is generally boring to keep it in the center. It stops the eyes. Try framing so there is a lot of sky, a little sky with the camera level.
Horizon