View allAll Photos Tagged eclipse

© All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.

 

I used a tripod. I bracketed. I still didn't get the photos I wanted, but I was delighted that for the most part the clouds stayed away, and when they didn't, they put on a spectacular show of their own. I had as much fun looking at this beautiful eclipse through my binoculars as I did through my lens.

 

If you want to see an excellent sequence, look here:

www.flickr.com/photos/swilton/2280432093/

 

See my shots on flickriver:

www.flickrriver.com/photos/mimbrava/

 

For those who still don’t know why their view count is down, perhaps way down, the reason is explained and discussed here. One day Flickr staff may figure out the solution, but I’m not holding my breath. All I know is that my view count is way down (perhaps by 60 or 70 percent), and the hits I get are often for much older photos in my stream.

 

“It will be eclipse first, the rest nowhere” – Dennis O’ Kelly

 

Roger Waters / Pink Floyd – Eclipse grooveshark.com/s/Eclipse/4BURzt?src=5

 

And all that is now

And all that is gone

And all that's to come

And everything under the sun is in tune

But the sun is eclipsed by the moon

 

*The demonym/gentilic ‘Herculino’ can refer to people from A Coruña city or to objects or concepts relating to Coruña.

 

*Photo edited with PicMonkey: sharpen, saturation, exposure.

These two Eclipse photos were taken by Johnny, last night!

As seen from central Preston England 20/03/2015

... although the livery suggests otherwise. This will soon look like the photo to the right.

 

69549 - BF12 KWK

Volvo B7RLE, Wright Eclipse Urban 2 (B42F)

First Wessex (WH)

The Esplanade, Weymouth

10 February 2017

Evolución del eclipse lunar del 15 de abril de 2014.

Deer Creek, Utah

Friday March 20, 2015. Solar eclipse over Holywood, Dumfries.

The eclipse as seen from my deck as my daughter was yelling at me from the roof to "get out side and take pictures!" I already was. Sorry to be super late posting this but that's the way it goes these days. Been really busy with regular and not so regular life adventures. Having fun and doing the important things too. Hope you are all well and I promise to check in on your photo streams here shortly.

  

This is a composite of a number of shots from Robbins Farm Park in Arlington. Used a 35mm to get the city in the background, then a 300mm to shoot the moon a number of times which I then shrunk down to 100x100 each and did a layout roughly in the shape that the moon followed. It is not terribly accurate or to scale, but it gives a sense of the view so I like it.

Here is Arriva Buses Wales Wrightbus Volvo B7RLE Eclipse CX55 FAF 8259 is seen pictured at Rhyl bus station whiles not on training duty's. 26/04/18

 

*SEE MORE OF MY ELEVATORS/LIFTS & BUSES*

 

YOUTUBE

www.youtube.com/channel/UCdOvQnqNSB_YthAxjbN_X6A

 

FACEBOOK

en-gb.facebook.com/EfanThomasELB/?ref=page_internal

 

INSTAGRAM

enthusiast175

The minute of totality. Yes, someone had to leave their car lights on :D

Solar Eclipse April 8, 2024 from Orem, Utah. Here in Orem we are about 1,500 miles from the path of totality but we still got to see a magnitude .49 eclipse. Not the big show but still plenty of fun and interest. It was mostly sunny and clear but there was one small cloud that was often in just the wrong place. Impressive show just the same.

My capture of the Supermoon lunar eclipse in January, 2019 from our front porch in Northern Virginia. I think the temperature was around 14 degrees F at the time with -2 windchill...totally worth it! So surreal to see stars around a full moon!

 

10 second tracked shot at ISO400

Meade 6000 Series 80mm APO (480mm)

Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Mount

Canon T5i modified

Orion Skyglow 2" LPS Filter.

 

Images from last evenings eclipse, Northeastern Pennsylvania.

 

Despite the rather miserable conditions and the moon breaking in and out of the clouds, I managed to salvage a few shots. None of them capture the 100% phase as thick clouds rolled in about 10 minutes before the main event. I’m still happy with the salvaged images.

 

Canon 6D mounted on a Meade 12″ LX90 telescope, hand guided.

An eclipse plumage male Blue-winged Teal liftsoff from an estuary channel in the Skagit Valley in western Washington State.

Went hunting for natural pinholes in the canopy to see the eclipse projected on our gravel lane and forest floor.

Eclipse solaire 2015 depuis Bruxelles

 

Follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/didwee.be/

Follow me on Twitter @DidWee

 

More info www.didwee.be

Eclipse de lune du vendredi 14 mars 2025.

Partial eclipse with lens flare, May 20, 2012.

Lunette Zeiss L63 x 840, filtre solaire Zeiss, photo au foyer

I didn't get the eclipse, but it was a nice sunrise on the wetland.

An image of the crescent flare off the sun created by the solar eclipse. All the others I got were to blown out and too far away even with a 10 stop ND filter and stopped down to f/22.

The lunar eclipse over Melbourne, Australia.

Annular Eclipse on June 10th 2021 taken from Wildwood Crest, New Jersey. Image taken with Canon T7i

Daylight was fast approaching as the eclipsed Moon was setting behind Kitt Peak, southwest of Tucson, AZ.

 

A larger version can be seen at:

www.pbase.com/pegsam/image/140223117

The full moon of April lies fully eclipsed in the Earth's shadow on a cold & snowy April morning in West Michigan.

 

The Full Moon of April is called the "Full Pink Moon". The grass pink or wild ground phlox is one of the earliest widespread flowers of the spring. This year it is also the Paschal Full Moon; the first full moon of the spring season.

 

About the image...

 

I had been waiting for this eclipse for a while, having seen my last one in 2008. Unfortunately it didn't look like the weather was going to cooperate. The day before we had temperatures in the high 60's with rain and thunderstorms, and the cold front went through Monday morning and dropped the temps into the 30's. And then it started snowing in the afternoon.

 

I remained cautiously optimistic, and around 2.30am I could just barely see the moon through the clouds. I took a chance, packed up my cameras, and headed east to my astronomy club's observatory. When I got there, it was completely cloudy, but I went up and opened the dome and attached my camera to one of the telescopes anyway.

 

Totality began just after 3.00am, and suddenly about 10 minutes later the clouds parted - I could easily seen the eclipsed moon, the star Spica nearby, and the planet Mars off to the right. I immediately started shooting, and took images at intervals - especially around mid-totality - until the clouds came in around 4.15am. That was fine, as totality ended about 10 minutes later.

 

I closed up, packed up, and went home. Images downloaded to the computer, quickly scanned for good ones, and here is one of the best. I've got a few wide-field ones I'll put up later.

 

(Note: I have no idea why the EXIF says I used a 50mm lens. That's the default that Canon has put in the software. I used a telescope as my lens for this image)

 

(Note 2: In a little over 10 hours this image has been viewed over 10,000 times. I am truly humbled. Even if it's not accurate - and those of us on Flickr for a while know - that quite a few people looking at this one image of mine is incredible.)

Lunar eclipse in a cloudy night

The moon during the eclipse of July 16, 2019 sadly not very sharp. Taken with the D850 and the 180-400mm lens, with the internal 1.4x converter and the external 2x. Strangely the exif tags show 1150mm but it should be 1120 (400*1.4*2)

A lunar eclipse is due January 31 in western Canada. This series was photographed in Arizona in 2014 showing the blood red moon. I used a f/2.8 400 mm Nikkor lens and 1.7 teleconverter. Unfortunately rainy skies are predicted here in British Columbia. Lots of P/S layers for this image.

Taken with a strong Graduated ND filter when the Moon had 85% coverage of the Sun. Quite an eerie darkness was caused for a few minutes at the height of the eclipse.

We were promised a Total Solar Eclipse on the Faroe Islands, but unfortunately the weather was not in my favour. I did however see a partial solar eclipse and I managed to get a couple of shots of it.

 

| Visit my website for a selection of my best landscape photos www.hansjhansen.com |

  

My last good shot of the solar eclipse before the clouds obscured the sun.

 

© 2010 CP Cheah. All rights reserved.

Lunar Eclipse from my back porch. This is a manual blend of 5x1" exposures taken with my 400mm f5.6 lens.

 

Greg's Nature Photography

Three images from this mornings partial solar eclipse over the United Kingdom - Two of 3

1 2 ••• 7 8 10 12 13 ••• 79 80