The scene from overhead at 9:06 a.m., taken by the GOES-16 satellite.
Clouds
Mary Ellen couldn't help but look up this morning at Millennium Park in West Roxbury.
Joe Blankenship caught one last sunbeam for the day on the Pru this evening.
Parrish Freeman watched the clouds move out this evening from Jones Hill in Dorchester.
Clouds seen through the old Blockbuster sign that still stands by the side of American Legion Highway, in the mall where the Popeyes is in Roslindale.
Michael Spicher couldn't help but notice the ominous clouds from the ferry from Hingham back to Boston this afternoon. Read more.
Joe Kidston watched the sun go down over the Back Bay, downtown Boston and Boston Harbor from Hull this evening.
Evan Stark captured the storm moving in over Jamaica Plain, just before the skies opened up this afternoon:
Emily Murphy, meanwhile, looked out over downtown Boston around 4:45 p.m.: Read more.
Matt Frank watched the late-afternoon storm band move over Malden and Everett. Read more.
A halo cloud giving its all over Hyde Park and Roslindale shortly before 5 p.m.
Jonathan Berk captured some of the cloud tops over South Boston after the afternoon storm.
Muerl got an ominous view on North Beacon Street in Brighton during the second of this afternoon's storms. Read more.
Jonathan Berk enjoyed the drop in humidity that the storm brought to downtown Boston.
Up at Revere Beach, Marianna McCormick was among those forced to seek shelter from the storm: Read more.
Lena takes in the view north from VFW Parkway in West Roxbury:
Being in Boston but feeling like in Stranger Things 3.
Emily Murphy watched today's storm roll in over the South End, declares it "exhilaratingly beautiful." Read more.