View allAll Photos Tagged messy,

Here's an image i took doing some Star Trails and named it Messy Skies due to a great deal of mess going on with Light Pollution, Air Traffic, Cloud and a bad colour correction from my LP filter.

Artist Paul Oz in his super bright RS5. Yay or nay?

 

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Great Globular Cluster in Hercules

A random snapshot of the reflections in the glassy interior of Laselle. Not sure if this works for everyone but for some strange reason I kinda like the messiness in the shot.

 

Getty Collection | Digitalrev Page

Got to straighten up my messy house tomorrow, and pack away the Halloween decorations!!!

Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade

messy but colourful | Toronto

#30x30DirectWatercolor2019

Day 3

This one got away from me.

 

Imaged Feb 26th and 28th, 2014. First night, AT6RC on the ZEQ25 guided (300 secs), second night with the AT6RC on the CEM60 unguided (120 sec's)

 

2 and 1/2 hours of 120 and 300 second exposures at ISOs 1600 and 800.

Stacked in DSS, processed in PS5 and noise removal w/Noiseware.

 

Nikon D5100 w/HEUIB-II filter. Astro tech field flattener on the AT6RC.

ISO100

F22

79 Seconds

 

Messing around last week in the flat with the torch

 

Super sexy blond model with amazing curves. She wanted to do something a little sexier and naughtier than in past shoots. One of her kinky fantasies was to tease with and pour milk on herself. I like the results...do you? Was a hard shoot to concentrate and she admitted a few times during the shoot that she was getting very turned on!!

74 x 180 Seconds = 222 Minutes Exposure (3 hr 42 min).

Camera = Canon EOS 7D Mk II

Telescope = Meade 102/700mm Apo Refractor

Mount = HEQ5 Pro

Processing with APP and PS.

Baby girl loves chocolate!

please don't repost but if you do at least credit my flickr and source my tumblr "t0o-infin1ty"

Not sure what this Ptenothrix Springtail got into - birthday cake?

Taken in Battle Ground, Clark Co., WA, USA

This really was literally poured on and left, as I had to run out the door to get my son from school, so very messy and wonky Lol!!! who cares! it tastes delicious!!!!!

"I hope that's wine" said my head (2023)

The left panel of this image shows a dazzling view of the active galaxy Messier 77 captured with the FOcal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph 2 (FORS2) instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope. The right panel shows a blow-up view of the very inner region of this galaxy, its active galactic nucleus, as seen with the MATISSE instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope Interferometer.

 

Credit:

ESO/Jaffe, Gámez-Rosas et al.

I love messy buns ! but i cant wear them everyday because my hair starts to fall out ...

no edit

These were hard to photograph! I was at school and tried to take some photos while sitting on a curb between classes, with no table surface to brace my arms against. It was windy and the snow was wet and clumpy and melting.

 

I didn't get around to posting them until now because I don't think they came out very well, but based on the weather report they might be my last snowflake photos of the year.

The Flickr Lounge-Messy

 

Made a mess of barbecued chicken legs on the grill yesterday. I really enjoyed this, I missed that flavor!

 

I destroyed a junk wig I had laying around and re-made it into a messy bun for Celia ^.^

The Messier Catalog, sometimes known as the Messier Album or list of Messier objects, is one of the most useful tools in the astronomy hobby. In the middle of the 18th century, the return of Halley's comet helped to prove the Newtonian theory, and helped to spark a new interest in astronomy. During this time, a French astronomer named Charles Messier began a life-long search for comets. He would eventually discover 15 of them. On August 28, 1758, while searching for comets, Messier found a small cloudy object in the constellation Taurus. He began keeping a journal of these nebulous (cloudy) objects so that they would not be confused with comets. This journal is known today as the Messier Catalog, or Messier Album. The deep sky objects in this catalog are commonly referred to as Messier objects.

 

This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope photo shows the majestic spiral galaxy M81. In the midsts of this galaxy is the supernova 1993J which was recently found to have a companion star which had been hidden in the glow of the supernova for 21 years. The location of the supernova can be seen in the annotated version of this image. Links: NASA Press release Artist's impression of supernova 1993J Supernova 1993J in spiral galaxy M81 Supernova 1993J Scenario for Type IIb supernova 1993J

Messier 24

Credit: ESO/Dss2, Giuseppe Donatiello

(colorized plates)

  

Birds eye view of the felty chaos resulting from 2 days of hard crafting :)

 

(This is actually our kitchen table!)

Really enjoying this idea of not having to drive to dark sites. Setting up in the backyard, leaving the telescope out, and just seeing what I can get despite the drawbacks. Restricted to bright objects, but there a quite a few nice ones in the sky at the moment.

 

So far I've discovered that increasing the distance between my camera sensor and f/6.3 focal reducer to get the "ideal" distance just gives me more vignetting and coma. So much for that. Back to f/8 or whatever.

 

Image details: 20x2min exposures at ISO 1250.

  

taken with my super budget setup:

Meade 8" SCT with Meade f/6.3 focal reducer

iOptron iEQ45pro

400 mm Spiratone f/6.3 camera lens as guide scope (a T-mount lens)

ASI120MM guide camera screwed to T-mount

ADM 75mm mount rings and ADM 8" Mini Dovetail bar for guide scope

Olympus E-M5, ISO 1000, noise reduction on (auto dark frame subtraction)

JY-710 wireless intervalometer

guided with PhD on mac

stacked in Nebulosity and processed in PS

   

The top of my t.v stand.

I've been painting my room so its been waaaaay

more disorderly than normal.

Read the notes. View It big hah.

The Flickr Lounge-Messy

 

Snapped this at Stu's gig at Stewart park. The Sea Gulls on that log are really messy!

  

Taken w/ William Optics Redcat 51, QHYCCD Polemaster, Skywatcher EQM-35, Nikon D7500.

80 x 90s lights @ ISO 800, ~45 dark, ~80 flat, ~100 bias, stacked in DSS and post-processed in Photoshop & PixInsight

Making some collage tonight.

For Our Daily Challenge topic - 'Messy.'

This pair of craters, Messier (right) and Messier A (left), are unique in their noticeably elongated shapes that are caused by the low impact angle of an impacting body that approached from the east (from the right). After creating the Messier crater, the impacting body could have rebounded and formed Messier A. A nearly linear ray of impact ejecta extends westward across the floor of Mare Fecunditatis. A series of dorsa can be seen crossing the rays at a nearly perpendicular angle.

 

Rima Messier can be seen extending downward toward the southeast near the top center of the image.

 

Meade LX850 (12" f/16), ZWO ASI290MM

Autostakkert! (stacking - best 10% of 3,000 frames)

Registax (sharpening)

Photoshop (final processing)

The Messier Catalog, sometimes known as the Messier Album or list of Messier objects, is one of the most useful tools in the astronomy hobby. In the middle of the 18th century, the return of Halley's comet helped to prove the Newtonian theory, and helped to spark a new interest in astronomy. During this time, a French astronomer named Charles Messier began a life-long search for comets. He would eventually discover 15 of them. On August 28, 1758, while searching for comets, Messier found a small cloudy object in the constellation Taurus. He began keeping a journal of these nebulous (cloudy) objects so that they would not be confused with comets. This journal is known today as the Messier Catalog, or Messier Album. The deep sky objects in this catalog are commonly referred to as Messier objects.

 

This mosaic image of the magnificent starburst galaxy, Messier 82 (M82) is the sharpest wide-angle view ever obtained of M82. It is a galaxy remarkable for its webs of shredded clouds and flame-like plumes of glowing hydrogen blasting out from its central regions where young stars are being born 10 times faster than they are inside in our Milky Way Galaxy.

Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade

Vespera 2-pass mosaic of M78, processed with PixInsight

Messy party to celebrate graduating from 8th grade

Open star cluster located between Antares and Al Niyat in the constellation scorpiu

8 light frames (90s each)+

dark frames+ flat frames+bias frames all in raw format

DSS processed

8" RCT prime focal

focusing : Bahtinov mask

This is my room just before the leavin cert...

The Messier Catalog, sometimes known as the Messier Album or list of Messier objects, is one of the most useful tools in the astronomy hobby. In the middle of the 18th century, the return of Halley's comet helped to prove the Newtonian theory, and helped to spark a new interest in astronomy. During this time, a French astronomer named Charles Messier began a life-long search for comets. He would eventually discover 15 of them. On August 28, 1758, while searching for comets, Messier found a small cloudy object in the constellation Taurus. He began keeping a journal of these nebulous (cloudy) objects so that they would not be confused with comets. This journal is known today as the Messier Catalog, or Messier Album. The deep sky objects in this catalog are commonly referred to as Messier objects.

 

This image combines Hubble observations of M 106 with additional information captured by amateur astronomers Robert Gendler and Jay GaBany. Gendler combined Hubble data with his own observations to produce this stunning colour image. M 106 is a relatively nearby spiral galaxy, a little over 20 million light-years away.

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