View allAll Photos Tagged Partial
Artwork by Jess Frederick
A Plus/Space exhibition at Five Myles Gallery
Opening Reception: May 25
Note: this is a photo only showing a portion (c/u) of the artwork
for the "Smile on Saturday" group theme 5/25
Please take a look at a selection of H2 Photographic Club images at - www.flickr.com/groups/h2showcase
Why not take a few moments to look at our club’s website - h2photo.org.uk.
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A slight thinning of cloud overhead meant I could grab a shot towards the end of the partial solar eclipse earlier today.
Taken using a 1200mm focal length telescope.
as seen from my yard in SW WI.
The cloud cover was pretty heavy.
When I got glimpses of the sun, I took the shot.
The clouds were moving very quickly at times.
This felt like an art challenge more than an eclipse challenge.
Facebook : Aegir Photography
500px : 500px.com/photo/166765871/partial-beam-by-glenn-crouch
Sunset over Wyadup rocks, near Yalingup on the south west coast of Western Australia.
Nikon D810 & Nikkor 16-35mm, Breakthrough 6 stop filter. PP in PS CC using Nik Software and luminosity masks.
Just one more shot of the partial eclipse on 10 June 21. As you can see, I had to shoot through cloud. was just happy I could see it!
This morning's partial solar eclipse taken from Christchurch. One of few locations in New Zealand where the weather afforded a decent view of the eclipse. The initial part of the eclipse was covered by some cloud on the horizon. There was no appreciable loss of light when the moon moved in front of the sun. This is a composite of a small selection from the 482 images that I took of the eclipse between 6:26am and 8:17am. if you zoom in on the images you should be able to see the small black dots on the sun. These are the sunspots which are temporary, dark, and cooler regions on the Sun's surface caused by concentrated magnetic fields that inhibit the flow of heat from the interior.
as seen from my yard in SW WI.
The cloud cover was pretty heavy.
When I got glimpses of the sun, I took the shot.
The clouds were moving very quickly at times.
This felt like an art challenge more than an eclipse challenge.
I've been enjoying book after book of Jeffery Deaver's Lincoln Rhyme. So right now forensics is front and center to me. I highly recommend this series of books. They have more twists and turns than I've ever seen. Complete fun.
ODC: Part of the Full Picture
Explore #99 7/18/11
3 images stitched
The eclipse from Lee, Massachusetts. I was hoping for some unusual cloud effects caused by the partial eclipse.
I used my old Sony A850 DSLR so I wouldn't damage the sensor on my mirrorless cameras. I used a vintage Sigma 24mm f2.8 lens and a graduated filter.
Camera was on a tripod, Images merged in Lightroom.
A gustnado is a brief, shallow surface-based vortex which forms within the downburst emanating from a thunderstorm. The name is a portmanteau by elision of "gust front tornado", as gustnadoes form due to non-tornadic straight-line wind features in the downdraft, specifically within the gust front of strong thunderstorms. Gustnadoes tend to be noticed when the vortices loft sufficient debris or form condensation cloud to be visible although it is the wind that makes the gustnado, similarly to tornadoes.
A time lapse of this brief event can be viewed at: www.flickr.com/photos/cloud_spirit/54627388607
From thedailylumenbox.com Cyanotype from old 5x7 glass plate negative. Underexposed. Toned in wine tannin.
Partial solar eclipse as seen from the UK 20/03/15. Taken using Nikon D610 with Nikkor 70-300vr lens fitted with a Lee Filters big stopper.
Partial eclipse had started already when the sun rose from behind the (remote) hill tops.
Along Mulligan Highway, Maitland Downs, N. Queensland, OZ
Explore 20-Dec-2012, #145
This is a long piece of petrified wood and this is the largest end, which was broken to expose the structure of a limb cast. It appears to have hollowed out, somewhat, before the petrification took place. Limb casts are not that common in that area. My friends, who joined us, from Corpus Christi, Texas, give most of the specimens like this one to their friend, Patty, who is known as the "Angel Lady", in Three Rivers, Texas.