Hundreds of people placed flowers and candles at a vigil to remember those who were killed by a gunman in Plymouth on Thursday.
Many began congregating at North Down Crescent Park in Keyham while it was still light yesterday to place tributes on the ground close to where the incident began.
As it grew darker, mourners stood with candles in their hands, while others shone the torches on their phones.
They paused briefly and stood silent, lifting their lights high in the air in a moment of unity following the atrocity.
As the evening went on, a sea of tributes were left on the grass - including notes paying tribute to the victims.
People could be seen with tears in their eyes and clasping their hands together, while others comforted each other.
Jake Davison, 22, shot and killed his 51-year-old mother Maxine Davison, also known as Maxine Chapman, at a house in Biddick Drive in the Keyham area of the city on Thursday evening.
He then went outside and shot dead three-year-old Sophie Martyn and her father Lee, 43, in an attack witnessed by horrified onlookers.
He killed Stephen Washington, 59, in a nearby park, before shooting Kate Shepherd, 66, on Henderson Place.
Ms Shepherd later died at Derriford Hospital.
Davison also aimed and shot at two local residents - a 33-year-old man and a 53-year-old woman, who are known to each other - in Biddick Drive.
They suffered significant injuries but are not believed to be life-threatening.
Plymouth Sutton and Devonport MP Luke Pollard tweeted images of the vigil and the victims' names, writing:
"Tonight our community came together to remember the victims of the shooting in #keyham.
"The past day has been one of the hardest for me personally and hardest for our city that I can remember.
"We will get through this, and we will do it together #plymouth."
An investigation has been launched into Davison's possession of a shotgun and firearms licence, which were returned to him in July after being removed at the end of last year.
Detectives are also examining Davison's social media output and phone use, police confirmed.
Social media posts and interactions suggest he was interested in guns and the US, while his social media use suggests an obsession with the "incel" culture, meaning "involuntary celibate", a culture which has amassed a following online among some men who feel they are being oppressed by women due to a perceived lack of sexual interest.