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Composite Photograph of the Super Blood Moon Eclipse of Jan 2019 and the Solar Eclipse of August 2017.

Sporting new long hair extensions, Kristen Stewart holds onto a fake diploma as she films the graduation scene in The Twilight Saga: Eclipse in Vancouver on Friday afternoon (August 28).

 

The 19-year-old actress was joined by her on-screen dad Billy Burke, who tweeted late last night: “Just got to hotel in Vancouver. Start tmorow early. Someone gets a cap and gown. G’nite for now.”

 

Also pictured on set was ‘Carlise Cullen’ Peter Facinelli.

 

The second film in the series, The Twilight Saga: New Moon, is set to hit theaters in November.

 

justjaredjr.buzznet.com/2009/08/29/kristen-stewart-forks-...

 

do not copy anything from me.

no posers allowed!!!

pls. don't take any of my photos w/out my permission.

  

every views counts so, just keep on viewing.

you can leave notes too! btw. comments are highly appreciated.

 

vampirekisses* <333

   

As viewed from Tarbert, Co. Kerry.

Showing prominence at about 3:00.

No hemos podido verla bien por haber algo de niebla

Eclipse was awesome! The moon rose straight up the middle of the sun creating a perfect smile.

2005/10/03 - Eclipse anular em Miranda do Douro, Portugal

 

Annular eclipse (Astronomy) - an eclipse of the sun in which the moon does not cover the entire disc of the sun, so that a ring of sunlight surrounds the shadow of the moon.

 

montagem1a

The inevitable eclipse group shot

Después de varios días muy movidos por últimos pendiente, un largo viaje y regresar al trabajo, finalmente me uno a la reciente tendencia de compartir la fotografía que conseguí del evento astronómico más increíble y esperado de los últimos años, un eclipse total de Sol.

 

Durante varios meses estuve pensando en esto, en como capturarlo de una forma diferente, ya que sabía que muchísimas personas en toda Norteamérica iban a hacer lo mismo, consiguiendo imágenes extraordinarias pero muy similares unas de otras.

Pensé en capturarlo con el bellísimo paisaje de la ciudad de Halifax, y aunque el sol aquí solo se cubriría 94% y que yo saldría de viaje, estaría de regreso justo a tiempo para llevar a cabo esa idea que valia mucho la pena. Luego durante mis noches de insomnio, analice la situación y pensé que ya estando tan cerca y siendo una oportunidad única, podría ser todavía una mucho mejor idea rentar un auto, manejar unas cuantas horas al norte y hospedarmede en un lugar donde podría vivir y captar el asombroso 100%, pero no contaba con que el clima tendría la última palabra y cambiaría todos mis planes.

 

Debido a una tormenta de nieve, cambie mi vuelo de regreso por recomendación de la aerolínea y de esta forma me terminé quedando unos días más en casa, días que disfruté mucho pero que me hicieron buscar una nueva idea para capturar este fenómeno haciéndolo más complicado debido al alto ángulo en el que se encontraría el sol en ese momento.

 

Después de buscar muchas opciones en mapas y aplicaciones, termine eligiendo la Torre Latinoamericana, emblemático edificio de la Ciudad de México, perfecto para está idea a pesar de solo oscurecerse all 75%. Es una imagen compuesta por 4 fotos para crear una panorámica del edificio en primer plano y 23 fotos del cielo usando un filtro especial para captar el sol. Es la primera vez que lo uso y quedé absolutamente impresionado con el verdadero tamaño del Sol, es increíble que lo grande que lo vemos es solo de su resplandor.

 

Al final conseguí una fotografía única entre el mar de fotos que han compartido las personas, la lección de que a veces por más que uno planee las cosas siempre puede pasar algo que lo cambia todo y solo es cuestión de aceptarlo y dejarse llevar, y por último, pero más importante, disfruté de un fenómeno extraordinario en mi amado México, rodeado de la genial vibra de la gente en frente de construcciones tan simbólicas para mí.

 

¡Y ahora a esperar con ansias el siguiente eclipse y está vez haré todo lo necesario para presenciar el 100%! España o Islandia, ¡nos vemos en 2026!

 

Nikon Z50

Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 at 18mm

Foreground 1/500 f/11 ISO 100 x 4

Sky 1/1000 f/11 ISO 100 ND filter 16.5 stops x 23

Interval 5min

Shot of the 2017 partial eclipse in Venezuela, at the peak moon coverage from my location (around 50%)

A partially eclipsed setting sun approaches the Washington Monument.

Eclipse glasses are sold at a variety of stores, both in person and online, but it's important to check for one key feature: your glasses should be marked with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 12312-2 code. That code specifies the properties that a solar viewer should have to protect your eyes.

anular solar eclipse, October 3, 2005. Titulcia (close to Madrid)

The sunrise the day of the solar eclipse in March 2015

As seen from my office window at Bradford University.

All Right Reserved

Copyright © Giulio Frangini

My attempt at photographing the solar eclipse. I had only just decided to photograph it the week prior and couldn’t get my hands on a solar filter and therefore the plan was to only photograph at totality (including the diamond ring and Bailey’s beads). I did some research online in the days leading up to the event and thought I pretty much had it all figured out. Had my settings all prepped beforehand. My plan was to take bracketed images (9 frames) on a tripod with 1/30 being my starting exposure and combine them in post processing. However, in the minutes before the magical moment, I became aware that my tripod isn’t a very good one and I was not able to tilt my camera enough to be able to capture the sun/moon so high up in the sky. I ended up having to shoot freehand and should have either disabled auto bracketing or at least dropped down to 3 frames as I would never be sturdy enough by hand to handle all those exposures. Needless to say, I did manage to enjoy the spectacular event and got one or two images even if they weren’t everything I had hoped to achieve.

The entire internet, science and the media world has and had been buzzing about the eclipse. The drumbeats for the event could have been heard more than a few weeks before it.

 

At first, I had been in two minds about taking time off to seek out the perfect location for the eclipse. But the media storm reminded me of my childhood days, more than 17 years ago. It was bright morning in October. My school, in anticipation of the eclipse, had given a day off. As I was having my morning breakfast, I peeked out of the window and saw the sun, missing a chunk of it, and shaped like a crescent. I had wished it developed into a total eclipse, but my location was bereft of such celestial surprises.

 

Ever since then, I had enamored for totality. To be able to see the coronal streams getting expelled out of the sun, to be able to marvel at the diamonds that characterize the start and end of totality and to be able to experience night during day had always been my dreams.

 

And last Sunday, I got an opportunity at it. It never achieved totality, but atleast I got to see the full projection. Perhaps, even more interesting than just shooting the sun itself was the camaraderie of the other astronomers and photographers around, one of whom was kind enough to donate a small piece of solar film without which this shot wouldn't have been possible!

 

Oh. I forgot the gear: the dizzying array of telescopes, starting from tiny ones fitted with H-alpha projectors to giant reflecting telescopes that produced a view of the sun so big that every little detail could be seen.

 

What an experience it was

 

This image is a stack of 3 individual shots, roughly about 3 minutes apart. Shot at 300mm, F11, ISO 800 and 1/500s and brightened up in Lightroom.

 

Hat Creek Rim Vista Point

CA USA

Barque "Eclipse"

 

This photograph is part of the Paddy Ballard collection. Picture was found in a scrapbook of an unknown date and unknown source bought in a jumble sale. Apologies for the poor quality, but of historic interest.

Photo of the 2017 Solar Eclipse. Taken in Lincoln City, OR.

Ilford XP2 Super 400 - Canon T70 - i did not put a lot of time into shooting the eclipse. i just wanted to enjoy it....i only took 2 shoots and this was the best. You can see the black dot in the middle...this is the full eclipse. It was one of the best experiences of my life but a photo can not represent how i felt.....it needs to be experienced.

Eclipse de lune. Sigma 150/600 + Canon EOS 760d sur StarAdventurer. Temps pourri :-(

 

Eclipse of the moon. Bad weather...

Tonight it is Full-Moon and Penumbral Lunar Eclipse, the first eclipse of the year. A penumbral eclipse occurs when the Moon passes through the Earth's penumbra. The penumbra does not cause any significant darkening of the Moon's surface and there is only a light shadow. The Moon may turn a little yellow.

Full Lunar Eclipse in the skies over Calgary early in the morning of Nov 8, 2022.

Eclipse partielle

Eight hour exposure of April 15th lunar eclipse. Mars' trail is faintly visible above the eclipse track. Taken with a pinhole camera, .15mm pinhole 24mm from 24x36 frame. ( idea.uwosh.edu/nick/populist.pdf )

this is a view of the inside of an observatory. The shape is a fancy of the architecte.

It was supposed to be part of a giant telescope.

 

From the eclipse 2015-03-20

Eclipse. I wasn't too optimistic when I set up in readiness to photograph this partial eclipse. Cloud cover was 8 oktas and there were only 45 minutes to go to maximum eclipse time. 25 minutes after that key time had passed, there was a fleeting break in the clouds at just the right spot. This is the shot I got before the gap closed.

 

Shevington, Wigan.

This video starts at about the time the eclipse begins, and runs a little past the end. The frames were taken at four second intervals. Totality shows up really well.

 

I used my old Canon Rebel T1i, and a Sigma 8-16mm f/4.5-5.6 lens. Each image used the same settings: 8mm, f/7.1, 1/640 second, ISO 100. I processed the images in a very similar way (noise reduction is greater on the darker images) such that the change in brightness from the eclipse is retained in the video.

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