View allAll Photos Tagged LunarEclipse
Only an eclipse (or some pretty sloppy Photoshopping) could make a setting moon look like this! Although we missed out on the total lunar eclipse here in Wisconsin, it was pretty cool to have it partially eclipsed as it disappeared behind the bluffs about 20 minutes before the sun came up!
Eclipse of Uranus was watched during the total solar eclipse tonight. On this photo, Uranus is very close to the moon on the bottom side.
天王星食が皆既月食の最中に見られました。写真の月の下側,非常に近くに天王星が見えています。この後すぐ食されました。
神奈川県川崎市で撮影。
Lunar Eclipse Nov 11, 2021 outside of Houston Texas. 97% covered. The outer circle of moons represents every 15 minutes for 4 hours of the event. Clockwise from lower left. The max image was at 3:03 CST. Processed in Photoshop
EffiART
-
Exif data
Measured EV - -2.25
Camera
Canon PowerShot SX60 HS
Aperture
f/6.5
Focal Length
247 mm - 1365 mm
Exposure
0.003 sec (1/320)
Flash
Off, Did not fire
ISO Speed
800
Exposure Bias
-4/3 EV
Partially eclipsed moon rising to the east of the tiny hamlet of Azure in southern Alberta. Clouds ruined the majority of the eclipse, but this was the location I had scouted a few days before for some shots of the moonrise. I'm glad I at least got this chance.
A massive development work is going on in Malta right now. And, that's a bad news for photography as, so many cranes are, destroying the beauty of the shots! The same thing, happened here. Hopefully, those cranes will be removed by two years. The abnormal cropping is also due to presence of cranes.
My step-daughter and I sat out and marveled at this awesome natural event. Considering that we can predict these things down to the exact second, I wonder how ancient people perceived these events?
For observers in Europe, only the beginning of the total lunar eclipse on December 21, 2010 was visible, before the Moon set. This picture was taken at 06:32 UT, just as the umbral eclipse started (so most of the eclipse you see in the image is due to the penumbra). Because of the low altitude of the Moon (only 2,4° above the horizon), blurring and distortion by the Earth's atmosphere is severe.
Also caught in this shot is the "green flash", an elusive atmospheric phenomenon that is sometimes visible at sunrise or sunset. Rarely (due to the lower brightness of the Moon, as compared to the Sun), it can also be seen at moonrise or moonset. Even more rarely, it can be seen on an eclipsed Moon. :) In that particular case, an inversion layer caused the green flash at a relatively high altitude of ~2° above the local horizon, about seven minutes before the Moon actually set (as captured in this image).
Exposure was 1/20 second trough a 90/1000mm Refractor using a Canon EOS 300D at ISO 200.
This image was explored on flickr on July 12, 2018.
Composite of 13 pictures of the lunar eclipse, stacked together in Photoshop (poorly).
Things to remember next lunar eclipse:
1. Practice the night before to make sure camera is positioned correctly (I should have took the pics vertically).
2. Get home from work earlier to get the beginning of eclipse.
3. Live somewhere less cloudy, which is hard to do (bad coincidence this night was a rare cloudy day/night in San Diego).
4. Flash the foreground (the palm tree would look cool!).
5. Learn how to Photoshop better.
Exactly it was a partial eclipse, but almost total---the magnitude of eclipse was 98%. The weather condition was not good and thin clouds were always in front of the moon, even though the moon surface was visible through the camera.
Taken in Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan.
厳密には部分月食ですが,食分98%というほぼ皆既月食です。天気は良くなく,常に薄雲がかかっていましたが,カメラを通しては月面の模様まで見えました。
神奈川県川崎市にて撮影。
Thanks for stopping by and view this photo. The reason for posting this photo on Flickr is to learn so if you have constructive feedback regarding what I could do better and / or what should I try, drop me a note I would love to hear your input.
View on Black the way it should be seen!
-- Let the sound of the shutter always guide you to new ventures.
© 2018 Winkler
Remember to follow me on Twitter @BjarneWinkler and @NewTeamSoftware
IAPP Member: US#12002
Wide Angle Zayas Point Of View Photography of The Super Blood Wolf Moon Eclipse, January 20, 2019. with light on the lower left hand corner from The Dungeness Lighthouse in Sequim, Washington.
Thanks for stopping by and view this photo. The reason for posting this photo on Flickr is to learn so if you have constructive feedback regarding what I could do better and / or what should I try, drop me a note I would love to hear your input.
View on Black the way it should be seen!
-- Let the sound of the shutter always guide you to new ventures.
© 2021 Winkler
Remember to follow me on Social Media Facebook: Bjarne Winkler, We Capture Your Business, or Twitter @Bjarne Winkler, @CaptureWe, @NewTeamSoftware
IAPP Member: US#12002
We were lucky last night seeing the blood moon, shortly afterwards the clouds moved in, St.Albert.Alberta Canada.
The fully eclipsed moon is seen setting behind a church steeple on October 8, 2014. This was one of the reddest eclipsed moons that I've seen in quite some time. I was fortunate that the clouds and fog cleared enough to take this shot.
Mostly cloudy tonight in Chicago :( I did manage to get this picture a few minutes before totality. Still 1.5 hours to go.
Photos were taken in every 15 minutes.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Tamron EF 150-600 + 2x Extender @1200mm
2022.11.08. Tokyo
A short Youtube video about the event:
The Moon's average orbital distance is 384,402 km.
Mondfinsternis
Der Mond bewegt sich am Firmament überraschend schnell. Den Blutmond erfolgreich zu fotografieren, erfordert deshalb einigermaßen kurze Verschlusszeiten – eine Anforderung, die diametral zur verfügbaren Lichtmenge steht. Man ist versucht, die Belichtungszeit zu verlängern, und am Kamerabildschirm erscheint der Mond zunächst auch halbwegs scharf.
Am großen Monitor wird man dann über die mangelnde Schärfe sicher enttäuscht sein.
Lunar eclipse
Mondfinsternis
final End
Moon again seen
Supermoon
red moon
65x Zoom
1385 mm
last shadows
effiart_2015
and in camera art:
creative mode by Canon SX60
Moon on flickr
...
raw
Camera
Canon PowerShot SX60 HS
Exposure
0.006 sec (1/160)
Aperture
f/6.5
Focal Length
247 mm
ISO Speed
320
Exposure Bias
-2/3 EV