View allAll Photos Tagged Partial
From thedailylumenbox.com Cyanotype from old 5x7 glass plate negative. Underexposed. Toned in wine tannin.
This is a partial view from my hotel room window, the last morning of my stay in Porto Santo, last September. It was around 9 a.m., and the sky was putting on a show, as it often does over there.
Porto Santo, Madeira Archipelago – Portugal
Esta é uma vista parcial da janela do meu quarto de hotel, na última manhã da minha estada em Porto Santo, no passado mês de Setembro. Foi por volta das 9h da manhã e o céu estava a dar um espetáculo, como é costume.
Porto Santo, Arquipélago da Madeira – Portugal
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
Partial Solar Eclipse from Embsay, North Yorkshire. As with all important astronomical events, the clouds interfered!
Over Headington, Oxford
16-07-2019
L>R
23.04 A7 mark 1
23.10 NEX-7
23:20 A7 mark 3
Taken with Minolta 500mm lens
On a transient, icy pool, formed by melted snow and ice, in a hollow on the edge of a pine woodland, there were some lovely reflections and shadows on the water as the light caught it obliquely.
Digging through the archives. From July.
My buddy Charlie and I did a little Friday evening road trip to visit the wind turbines. South of Grand Meadow, MN.
Taken at Weatherford Texas
about 75-80% coverage
I used my 1300mm 102mm Apex spotting scope alone with a solar filter to take pictures of the solar eclipse
n.*Pénombre:
French word for penumbra which means a partial shadow between regions of complete shadow and complete illumination or an area in which something exists to a lesser or uncertain degree. In fact, it is partial darkness at dusk (noirceur partielle à la tombée de la nuit).
Full moon up above, Farm in St-Janvier, Quebec, Canada.
The circumhorizontal arc is a fairly flat arc of spectral colours that occurs low in the sky, near to the horizon. It is formed by the refraction of sunlight through the ice crystals in high-level cloud, such as Cirrus, but it only occurs when the elevation of the light source (for example, the Sun) is greater than 58°. Red is always uppermost and the violet part of the spectrum is nearest the horizon.
The Mama to these babies is a blond Mallard-style hen - maybe a cross between a Mallard and a white domestic duck? She's very pretty and seems to have passed some of her blond beauty on to a couple of the babies.
A Church in which the center of gravity has, as it were, shifted, in which the co-responsible leadership of those exercising the priesthood of the baptized was the norm, would be a Church we seem not to have really imagined yet.
--John Cavadini
Unfortunately due to low clouds on the horizon, it was not possible to photograph the moonrise or the full lunar eclipse at moonrise!
Still got to see the partial lunar eclipse and photograph that.
Today’s (25th October) partial solar eclipse captured at 09.34 UT in Ha light from Kent, UK, with my Lunt LS152THa, and Altair Hypercam 174M cooled camera. This was imaged between rain showers and thick clouds. Notice the moon occulting the large prominence. As a point of information, I've orientated this to match the Global Oscillation Network Group (GONG) images. It is therefore different to the visual orientation of the sun in the sky at the time.
This image was taken near Fairbanks, Alaska between 1999 and 2001 using a Nikon FM2 Manual SLR (film camera). The 35mm Nikkor f/.4 lens was usually set at f/2.8 and expopsures where generally between 8 and 15 secs. Film speed was between iso 400 and 800.
The images I post are what I consider my favorite based on aurora structure, color, and foreground setting.
Colors are natural. I used Photoshop is remove noise (grainness) and saturate color a bit; but not too much.
For more aurora images, see: latitude64photos.com/