View allAll Photos Tagged eclipse2017
August 21, 2017 eclipse. Nikon D90 with manual Nikkor 75-150 zoom and W14 welder's glass as a filter.
My daughter-in-law and grandchildren observing the August 2017 solar eclipse at their home in Columbus, Ohio.
I never managed to mask out the layers correctly to get rid of that big patch of blown highlights, but I did finally notice that I had some details of the face of the moon in the shadows.
Equipment set up, all of us including the cow are patiently waiting for the eclipse to start in 2.5 hours
We traveled from SE Michigan to western North Carolina to be in the path of totality on Aug 21st. The day started out nice and clear but an hour or so before totality, the sky clouded up. Luckily, during totality, a small break in the clouds allowed us to see the total eclipse. We hooted and hollered as it was very exciting and truly unique. This movie is a compilation of a couple different time lapse segments and a separate audio recording that I started about 5 min before totality. Enjoy!
To be perfectly honest. I think this was taken well before totality. But I'd accidentally had the EV stopped way down from the previous days wildflower pix. So this ended up doing a good job of capturing how the lighting actually appeared close to totality.
Eclipse (2017) and Attenuated Lighting (at 85% totality) - 3 (of 3) - Minolta Maxxum 7000 (1985) with Sony 75-300mm 1:4.5-5.6 Zoom & Fuji ISO 200 Film - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives in Nanaimo, British Columbia where he works also as a writer and a personal trainer.
5-year old Morgan and 2-year old Chelsea decorated eclipse glasses in preparation for #Eclipse2017. Learn how to create your own at eclipse2017.nasa.gov/decorate-eclipse-glasses
Panning around the horizon to show the 360 sunset (or at least the part that that we could see).
Photo is original pixels.
Solar #Eclipse2017 photographed using the gaps between oak-tree leaves as a pin-hole lens. Lens: 50mm f/1.8 w/reverse ring filter
I believe this is shortly after the partial phase started.
These folks were from Moorhead, Minnesota.
You can see that there were some scattered clouds moving in. Nothing to note on a normal day, but this was not a normal day.
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Tenuous link: you can see through it -> you can't see through them (the glasses)
Tele Vue-TV85 with Tele Vue TRF-2008 0.8x Reducer / Flattener (converts TV-85 to 480mm, f/5.6) images of partial eclipse phases from start to the osculation of sunspot AR2671. This video spans about 44-minutes and the first frame is about 2-minutes before the start. Sony A7 II full-frame from Tellico Plains, TN.