View allAll Photos Tagged eclipse2017
from iphone6 front cam, the reflection of the eclipse is cool effect, on the left of the bright sun
taken in chantilly, VA by a friend at work (Julio Laguardia), no filter applied, just timelapse from the front camera of the his iphone6
If you can explain the effects, please leave a comment, thank you.
Handheld #Eclipse2017 image taken from @IHG Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites @ColumbiaSC 29169 car park
21.08.2017 14:43 EST
220mm 1/3200 sec f/8.0 ISO 3200
(cropped and 'enhanced' in Lightroom)
@TotalEclipseCAE @NASA
#EclipseDay
This one may be the most dramatic photo I took. Bright flash as the last of the sun is covered, lens flare to the right, and even some corona.
The total solar eclipse of 2017 captured near Anderson, SC. All frames captured with Skywatcher 80ED with Skywatcher Flattener/Reducer and a Canon 6D. Used BackyardEOS in planetary mode with 5X on and all 100 frame videos stacked in Autostakkert, then aligned in the Gimp on a black 1920X1080 background, then converted to a video using FFMPEG at 2 frames per second.
Taken in the first phase. Used the Panasonic Lumix GX85 with 14-140 lens (full telephoto) with a strong neutral density filter (not eclipse-specific). Hand-held.
This was one of the clearer shots I could get. Autofocus is a bear, and I could not seem to get manual focus to do what I wanted.
Taken at Glendo State Park, Wyoming.
Image processed with GIMP.
Timelapse of the minutes before, during and after totality during the 21/08/2017 Total Eclipse.
Totality lasted two minutes where I was in Oregon. Seeing the shadow come and go was as amazing as seeing the sun's corona!
This was captured with a GoPro (1 picture every 10seconds)
My cell phone caught this. There is also a blue looking light next to the sun. That is a reflection.
My cell phone caught this. There is also a blue looking light next to the sun. That is a reflection.
The partial sun images are with solar filter and the center totality images are without filter -amazing experience!!
iPhone #Eclipse2017 image of the eclipse shadow pre totality through pin holes taken from @IHG Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites @ColumbiaSC 29169 car park
21.08.2017 14:31 EST
29mm 1/1250 sec f/2.2 ISO 32
@TotalEclipseCAE @NASA
#EclipseDay
Handheld #Eclipse2017 image taken from @IHG Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites @ColumbiaSC 29169 car park
21.08.2017 16:04 EST
260mm 1/800 sec f/8.0 ISO 3200
(cropped)
@TotalEclipseCAE @NASA
#EclipseDay
#Eclipse2017 show time @NickTheatre at 1607 Main Street #ColumbiaSC 29201 @TotalEclipseCAE
20.08.2017 20:51 EST
44mm 1/60 sec f/4.2 ISO 720
#Eclipse2017 was only partial in our part of Michigan. This photo was taken about 5 minutes after the peak of the eclipse in our area. No, I was not directly looking at the sun when I shot this. This was shot without any filters.
Taken at Glendo State Park, Wyoming USA.
Data captured by Mary and Mark McIntyre, captured collaboratively using 4 different Canon 1100D cameras.
Widefield shots taken with an 18-55mm lens with solar filter attached until totality, then filter was removed until after the 2nd diamond ring appeared then the filter was fitted again. Collage is a stack of 40 individual images.
For totality we used our own Canon 1100D with zoom lenses to capture the corona and processed our own data separately. This was taken with a 300mm zoom lens on a Canon 1100D, hand-held.
Timelapse video was created using a Canon 1100D on Star Adventurer Mount, tracking at solar speed. Filter was removed during totality. Mark McIntyre processed the raw data then timelapse created by Mary McIntyre
Taken at Glendo State Park, Wyoming USA.
Data captured by Mary and Mark McIntyre, captured collaboratively using 4 different Canon 1100D cameras.
Widefield shots taken with an 18-55mm lens with solar filter attached until totality, then filter was removed until after the 2nd diamond ring appeared then the filter was fitted again. Collage is a stack of 40 individual images.
For totality we used our own Canon 1100D with zoom lenses to capture the corona and processed our own data separately. The close up images and zoomed in collage were made of images taken with a 300mm zoom lens on a Canon 1100D, taken hand-held.
Timelapse video was created using a Canon 1100D on Star Adventurer Mount, tracking at solar speed. Filter was removed during totality. Mark McIntyre processed the raw data then timelapse created by Mary McIntyre