Brave souls have taken to the sea as part of the Loony Dook New Year's Day dip in Fife.
Participants in fancy dress braved the chilly waters of the Firth of Forth on Monday morning (January 1) to wash away the Hogmanay hangover and say hello to 2024 in style.
Crowds gathered at around 11am at Kinghorn Beach for the event, which is organised by and raises money for the local RNLI.
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It is one of many Loony Dooks which will take place in Scotland on New Year's Day, with events also being held in South Queensferry, Portobello, Kirkcaldy, St Andrews, Kinghorn, Helensburgh, Broughty Ferry and Dunbar.
It's a New Year tradition which started in South Queensferry in the 1980s, when a group of friends suggested taking a dip for a Hogmanay hangover cure.
The name derives from the abbreviation for 'lunatic' and the Scots word for dip or bath - dook.
Gradually the event has grown in popularity over the years, spreading to coastal communities throughout Scotland.
In recent years, the South Queensferry Loony Dook was criticised for becoming too commercialised after organisers started charging a fee of up to £20 for a dook.
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Now the event is no longer part of the official Edinburgh Hogmanay programme and has returned to local organisers, who charge no fee but encourage donations to the local RNLI.
The South Queensferry and Helensburgh events take place from 2pm on Monday, January 1. Meanwhile, Dunbar is at midday. the Portobello event is at around 1pm and Broughty Ferry at around 2.45pm.
It comes after a night of lively Hogmanay celebrations throughout Scotland.
In Edinburgh, thousands flooded the streets for the Street Party and Concert in Princes Street Gardens which featured performances from Pulp and Hot Chip.
At midnight, an enormous fireworks display lit up the skies above Edinburgh Castle followed by a rendition of Auld Lang Syne.
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