View allAll Photos Tagged messy,
Technical Details:
- Telescope: Skywatcher Esprit 150
- Camera: ZWO ASI 1600 MM Pro
- Narrowband and RGB Filters by Baader Planetarium
- Mount: SkyWatcher EQ-8
- Frames: L= 9hours 50min / R = 2hours 30min / G = 2hours 30min / B = 2hours 45min / Ha = 5hours 5min
- Total acquisition time of 22hours 40min
- Image Acquisition software Sequence Generator Pro
- Pre Processing in Pixinsight
- Post Processed in Photoshop CC
- Location: Germany / Gelenau
Next to a busy Norwegian motorway is this small restaurant building left to decay. The inside witness of quite a lot of vandalism and chairs and tables are all over the place. Don't know much about it's history or when it was abandoned.
Oh if you haven't noticed, I'm going crazy with fish-eye these days... hm
More shots on my blog.
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This collage was made for a 'Messy' challenge on take a Word. Child Googled and background my own. xx
2018 data, reprocessed in SIRIL.
Total exposure time: 42 mins
Telescope: Tele Vue-60 APO refractor
Mount: Vixen Super Polaris
Bowl and Doily Weaver - Frontinella pyramitela (female)
Out birding with friends, I had to stop and look at this spider in in its complex, but rather messy, web. Happy Arachtober 7th!
Also posted at:
Well, I suppose it was rather warm and sunny when Jackson had this rather large ice cream!! It might also been a little cold!
I want to apologise for the lack of my being able to comment over the past weeks and this may continue for the next three weeks ~ we are moving home and have been very busy organising everything ... busy times!! However, when I get a moment I will do my best to comment
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all.
In 1054AD, Chinese skywatchers saw an impressive sight. That year, a star in the constellation Taurus decided to go supernova, and the supernova was so bright, it was visible in broad daylight for approximately one year after the light from the initial explosion reached Earth.
Today, the remnants of that explosion is known as Messier 1, AKA the Crab Nebula.
This is a reprocessed shot of one grabbed a couple nights ago - a 50-minute total exposure integration.
Captured with a Nikon D5100 coupled to a Meade LX200 f/6.3 Wide-Field Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope.
85 30-second exposures stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, with final processing in Photoshop CS6 and Lightroom 5.5.
Messier 13 (M13), also designated NGC 6205 and sometimes called the Great Globular Cluster in Hercules or the Hercules Globular Cluster, is a globular cluster of about 300,000 stars in the constellation of Hercules
First light with the Meade LX200. I decided to test it out on its first night - which incidentally was also the day the LX200 fork mount arrived via FedEx!
I am very pleased!
:)
Teen rooms are often messy because teens are busy with more important things than cleaning, like studying, socializing, gaming, or sleeping. Teens also have a different definition of messiness than their parents. What may look like a chaotic pile of clothes, books, and gadgets to an adult is actually a carefully organized system of personal belongings that only the teen can understand. Teens also like to express their individuality and creativity by decorating their rooms with posters, stickers, and other accessories that may not match the rest of the house. Therefore, teen rooms are often messy because they reflect the teen's personality, lifestyle, and preferences.
Source: AI Text Generator
Clear skies are amazing when they happen here in the Pacific Northwest. The last two have been no exception!
Over the course of the last two nights I have been re-shooting this gem from January - Messier 51.
I also decided to add it to data I shot in January - for a total of four hours integration.
Imaging gear:
Nikon D5100
Meade LX200 10-inch f/6.3
Software:
BackyardNIKON
Deep Sky Stacker
Adobe Photoshop CS3
The Orion Nebula (also known as Messier 42, M42, or NGC 1976) is a diffuse nebula situated south[b] of Orion's Belt in the constellation of Orion. It is one of the brightest nebulae, and is visible to the naked eye in the night sky. M42 is located at a distance of 1,344 light years away!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion_Nebula
My first proper go at stacking a number of images whilst attending the Winchester Science Centre Stargazing evening.
Taken with the EOS 5d mk3, with the 70-200 f2.8 lens fitted with both the 2x and 1.4x extenders. No tracking was used for this.
Although the camera shoots ok although I do think doubling the extenders softens the overall image..
Stacked 18 shots of 1 second and processed and stacked with deep sky stacker.
Will keep trying with this, its quite addictive!
Will now try stacking all 170 images :)
Aberkenfig, South Wales
Lat +51.542 Long -3.593
Skywatcher 254mm Newtonian Reflector, Olympus E410 at prime focus. EQ6 Syntrek Mount.
30 light frames of 50s at 800 ISO. Also 10 dark frames.
Processed with Deep Sky Stacker and final levels adjusted with G.I.M.P.
Clear skies are amazing when they happen here in the Pacific Northwest. The last two have been no exception!
This was the first time I've shot this little critter. A good friend gave the suggestion, and for that I'm happy he did! Messier 63 is an amazing target!
Imaging gear:
Nikon D5100
Meade LX200 10-inch f/6.3
Software:
BackyardNIKON
Deep Sky Stacker
Adobe Photoshop CS3