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A wide-angle timelapse of the total lunar eclipse starting late September 27 and ending early on the 28th as seen from my front yard. The beginning is foggy because I didn't think to put the lens outside in advance to warm up. The ending is foggy, too, because of the changing conditions. I altered the exposure during the sequence to better see the totally eclipsed moon, and again to not terribly over-expose the moon after the eclipse.
I used Magic Lantern on my Canon Rebel T1i to get the pictures. I set its intervalometer (better than any Canon has made) to take pictures at 40 second intervals, and further configured it to take 3 exposure bracketed images. I wrote a Python script to use the interval between images to discern the groups of bracketed exposures, use enblend to combine them, and give the output a name that made it easy to find the images and sort them into the correct order. I used ffmpeg to create the video from the resulting 369 blended images.
I wanted to get a shot of Sharka under the eclipse more than anything. The sun? Yeah, that's cool. Icebat? He was #2 on my list. But my car with some solar eclipse action is what I was after.
Shot with my F3 and Fuji Reala 200. Scanned at Costco. Touched up only slightly in photoshop to bring out the car and give it a bit of a crop.
F3 > D300. The dynamic range film gives just blows away the D300 sensor.
M/Y Eclipse is a luxury motor yacht. She is currently berthed at the Detached Mole, Gibraltar.
Eclipse is the world's second largest private yacht.
©2016 Tony Evans. All Rights Reserved.
Just a quick low res montage of my shots from today's eclipse. Photos taken with Panasonic G85 and 100–300 II lens, with an inexpensive filter purchased from B&H.
I just used Powerpoint to make the montage, and would welcome suggestions on how to get a higher quality combined image.
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Hopkinsville, KY. August 21, 2017. Shot on a Hasselblad Xpan II and Fuji Provia 100F. Developed and scanned by The Darkroom.
This eclipse was visible as a partial phase from the east coast of the US. This was shot from the beach in Florida just after sunrise. The disk of the moon is partially obscuring the sun. I did not artificially increase the sunrise colors here -- in fact, I moved the tint control more to the blue end. The RAW photos were very red.
Right after that first photo was taken, heavy clouds rolled in and didn't let up for an hour. At that point, the eclipse was pretty far along.
Eye protection is critical for the upcoming Solar Eclipse!
Photographed by Volunteer Photographer Connar L'Ecuyer.
Celebrity Eclipse is a Solstice-class cruise ship, operated by Celebrity Cruises. She is the sister ship of Celebrity Solstice, Celebrity Equinox and Celebrity Silhouette. Celebrity Eclipse measures 122,000 GT and carries 2,852 passengers (double occupancy) plus crew.
Tonnage:121,878 GT
Length:317.14 m (1,040 ft 6 in)
Beam:36.80 m (120 ft 9 in)
Draft:8.30 m (27 ft 3 in)
Decks:17 decks
Installed power:
4 × Wärtsilä 16V46
67,200 kW (combined)
Propulsion:
Two ABB Azipods
Three Wärtsilä CT300 bow thrusters (3,000 kW each)
Speed:24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph)
Capacity:2,850 passengers
Crew:approx. 1,271
Tug boats; Island Scout and Point Valiant
Barge ITB Supplier
Helijet on helipad in Vancouver.
Sikorsky S76A
Canada Place, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Trixie Little and the Evil Hate Monkey at the Palace of Wonders anniversay blow out. This performance is done to Bonnie Tyler's Total Eclipse of the Heart, a suitably melodramatic tune.....
Fase del Eclipse de Luna del día 16/07/19, entre las localidades de Baena y Castro del Río.
Distancia : 8 Km. aprox.
We spent 3 days at a fishing cabin in the Deschutes Club, located in a remote canyon on the Deschutes River 15 miles south of Maupin with this crew.
Using a jerry-rigged lens hood with one-half-a-pair of eclipse glasses taped over it, I found (back in 2017) that it was possible to get pretty decent eclipse photos with my Nikon.
This year, I decided to take a more thought-out series of photos from beginning to end, in the hopes of creating something along the lines of the image shown here.
I took photos roughly every ten minutes, and ended up with a decent number of "phases" to work with. Fredericksburg, Virginia, got about 88% totality, which left the sun as a very thin crescent at the peak.
I think it's a much more fun record of this eclipse than my handful of images from 2017.
The Solar Eclipse in Cheltenham - 20 March 2015
Taken when the moon had covered 87% of the face of the sun and was retreating! I only managed these shots because the clouds rolled in. Prior to that the sun had been shining brightly! So the solar glasses did a brilliant job of making visible the slow and steady progress of the moon in front of the sun. Wonderful!
Eclipse 2 3876 (KX11PUK) travels along Lytton Way on route 101 towards Luton.
Another example of an ex 310 branded Eclipse, come to Stevenage and received Journey Mark livery. Fleetnumbered 3876 it fits nicely towards the start of the numbering and is in regular use on the interuban routes out of Stevenage interchange.
Eclipse was pretty much a dud in the area around Rochester, NY. At home we had heavy overcast and light rain when totality was reached. The darkness lasted just a few minutes and the shed light came on and the chickens gathered out front thinking it was time to go in. It's a poor-quality cell phone pic.
Did anyone else shoot the eclipse with a pinhole camera!? I brought my solar puck camera and a stake. I did a test shot the day before the eclipse to get it right. The white line is the path of the sun that day, with it dimming out during the eclipse. I composited-in a separate shot of totality, and a foreground shot taken with my Canon 6DM2.
Here it is, the "ring of fire" annular eclipse. To get this, I had to DRIVE 7 hours ONE WAY!
I have SO much more to say about this, but I want to get home home before 3am. SO, I am leaving right now and I will post more tomorrow!
Geek talk: SV80ED, Canon 7D, Astrozap, the BAADER AstroSolar Filter and a lot of driving! Thankfully there was a Cracker Barrel in Utah! (I live in San Diego where there are NO Cracker Barrels!) Post processed in Lightroom3
There is a sun spot on the bottom!