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I was at my brother's home in Salem, Oregon, to see the total eclipse. In that location, the period of totality was almost 2 minutes long. All of the partial eclipse shots were taken with a Canon T7i with a Tamron 18-300 lens, a 2x telextender, and a solar filter from Thousand Oaks Optical. The total eclipse shot was taken with a Panasonic Lumix 30x travel zoom point-and-shoot camera that also captures raw images.
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.
Phase de totalité entre 5h12 et 5h20 UT
Crop
Utilisation de plusieurs images à différents temps de pose pour augmenter la dynamique, puis reprojection sur une des photos (celle au temps de pose le plus long pour avoir le plus d'étoiles).
DSC06966_DxO-TIFF-31-EclMul+SAT+ET-2048+1600v2
BD12TBX 36229. First of England (Bath) Volvo B9TL/Wright Eclipse Gemini 2 in North Street, Downend, South Gloucestershire on 19. Lucky to get photo out on walk. Ex-First West Yorkshire (Leeds) & has been retrofitted to Euro 6 standard.
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
Volvo B7RLE
Wright Eclipse Urban Body
Ex. First Group 69312. It is rare to see a bus that is not Enviro400 on the service X8, especially a single-deck bus.
Dia 15 de junho de 2011
Guarapuava PR
Copyright © 2011. Jean Henrique Wichinoski. All rights reserved.
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...
I'm a bit late to the game, but here's my lunar eclipse experience. This was taken about 10 miles south of Las Vegas.
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.
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.
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.
Start of Lunar Eclipse Over Paso Robles…
Like many photographers, I pulled an all-nighter to shoot the April 4, 2015, total lunar eclipse, which began at 4:58 am Pacific Time here in Paso Robles, CA. Totality was very brief, lasting for a mere 5 minutes. This image was shot at 4:59 am. I was amazed at the visibility and reddish orange color of the moon during the eclipse.
There appears to be some debate amongst astronomers as to whether this was indeed a true total eclipse. Even with the naked eye, you could still see the entire moon during totality. See the Sky and Telescope article at www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-news/observing-news/apr... for more information.
I began shooting around 3:30 am during the early parts of the partial eclipse, and will post more images as I work them up. I also hope to put together a sequence covering the partial and total eclipse phases.
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Copyright notice: © 2015 Renee M. Besta/Ren Mar Photography, All Rights Reserved. All my photographs are digitally watermarked and copyrighted. No photograph shall be copied, saved, reproduced, republished, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold or distributed or used in any way by any means, without prior written permission from me. No exceptions.
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