View allAll Photos Tagged messy,

Summenbild aus 3 Luminazaufnahmen mit je 300 sec Belichtungszeit. Aufgenommen mit T32 von iTelescope.net, D=413 mm, f=2912 mm, f/6.8

Nooo! That's just how I look after days of motorcycle riding!:)

I was trying to get some rest by watching the endless sea and letting myself be caressed by the wind.

 

This and several other photographs from that spot are very important for me, because my love used a digital camera for the very first time. If you had known how he refuses to use anything digital and his arguments for his refusal, you'd understand why I was immensely surprised when I saw him shooting me with my DSLR!

 

Messier 78

 

Can be found in the constellation of Orion & is 1600 light years from earth with a radius of 5 light years, This is my favourite deep sky object it reminds me of some kind of time warp.

 

Equipment Used;

Lacerta 200/800 photo newtonian

QHY9S CCD

Baader filters

Seafood Senso autofocuser

ZWOasi224 guide camera

 

Capture details;

34 x 600 Lum

19 x 600 red

17 x 600 green

17 x 600 blue

13 x 600 ha

Darks

Bias (super bias pixinsight)

 

Software used;

Sequence Generator Pro, PHD2, Pixinsight & Photoshop

Messier 101

 

Taken May 13 - 16, 2021 near Seattle, Washington

 

Telescope: TEC 180FL @ f/5 using Astro-Physics Quad-TCC

 

Camera: QHY600

 

Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Lodestar

 

Mount: Astro-Physics Mach2GTO

 

Capture Software: Sequence Generator Pro

 

Exposure:

 

Red: 3 hours (36 x 5 min, bin 1x1)

 

Green: 3 hours (36 x 5 min, bin 1x1)

 

Blue: 3 hours (36 x 5 min, bin 1x1)

 

Lum: 3 hours 25 minutes (41 x 5 min, bin 1x1)

 

Total Integration Time: 12 hours 25 minutes

 

Processed in PixInsight 1.8

Messier 41 Dss2 colorized

Credit: ESO/Dss2, Giuseppe Donatiello

 

Messier 41 ( M41) NGC 2287, is an open cluster in Canis Major at 2,300 light-years discovered by Giovanni Batista Hodierna before 1654.

It contains about 100 stars, including several red giants and some white dwarfs.

A great day in Castelo de Vide in the excellent company of Jacinto Oliveira and Francisco Barroqueiro.

 

One of the many Siskins that we shot last March ^^ This one still with a messy beak from the feast bellow :) Cheers everyone.

 

________________________________

 

Portugal - Castelo de Vide

 

Eurasian Siskin (Carduelis Spinus)

Lugre ou Pintassilgo Verde (Carduelis Spinus)

 

________________________________

 

Contact Luis Gaspar:

 

luis.gaspar.fotografia@gmail.com

Female Goldfinch enjoying thistle seeds around our pond. The females also use the down for their nests :)

 

Canon 1DXII, F7.1, 1/2000, ISO 1250

This mess is actually tame compared to what it is now. I'm a messy cook too, but I hear that's a good thing. I don't like cleaning up, but I need to, so see you later. Hope your week is good. :)

Early 20th century glass beads for beadwork, probably 1920s. The diameter of the beads is between 1mm and 2mm.

captured in the abandoned Farm 1881. (2015)

Shot using Skywatcher 80ED Pro, Celestron NexStar GoTo Mount 127 SLT, Nikon D3300, 85 lights x 20s, ~100 flats, ~100 bias, ISO 1600. Stacked in DSS and post processed in Photoshop

Messier 51 is actually 2 galaxies interacting with one another, hence the "toilet" like effect. HaLRGB 72:372:54:54:28

   

my friend's son w/ food on his mouth.

Messier 100

A beautiful galaxy in the Coma Berenices constellation, Taken at the L&A dark Sky Viewing Area May 7 2019.

This image also contains the supernova SN2019ehk

 

Tec

TS Photoline 130Apo f7

SW NEQ6 Pro

ZWO ASI 1600mm Pro

ZWO ASI 7p FW

ZWO ASI LRGB Filters

Orion Mini 50 guide scope

Orion SS Autoguider

Pegasus auto focuser

Field flattener

20x240s L

12x120s each RGB

 

Software

Sequence Generator Pro

PHD 2

DSS

Nebulosity

Photoshop

Liberty Hill, Texas.

 

May 24, 2022

Messier 27, NGC 6853 – Dumbbell Nebula

 

The first planetary nebula ever discovered, discovered by Charles Messier in 1764. Names a “Planetary Nebula” by William Herschel for this class of objects around 1784, because he found they resembled his newly discovered planet Uranus.

 

M 27 is an impressive object, the second brightest planetary nebula, with an impressive amount of detail. The central star is just visible at mag 13.5 The distance is not well known and an adopted value of 12000 LY is generally accepted, the nebula is about 100 times the luminosity of our sun.

 

The central star is the collapsed core of a once sun like star, now a white dwarf, it now emits most of its energy in the non visible spectrum, the hi energy radiation from the whit dwarf is the power behind the visible nebula, the nebula absorbs the hi energy ultra violet and re-emits it as visible light.

 

The central star is 60% of our suns mass and only 5% of its diameter, making it the larges white dwarf known, most of the light emitted from the nebula is at one wavelength, that of doubly ionized oxygen, this accounts for the greenish/ turquoise colour.

 

TEC

TS130 APO f7

ZWO 1600mm mono Pro

ZWO 7p FW

SS 50mm auto guider

SW NEQ6 pro

18x180s each RGB

Sequence Generator Pro

DSS, Star tools Nebulosity & Photoshopcc

North Frontenac Dark Sky Preserve

June 2018

The Pleiades. 24mins of subs, at 90 seconds each, plus darks.

No flats or bias.

 

Quite Pleased.

Sewing room table after my last project.

 

via Instagram instagr.am/p/COszUUshgMU/

All data of the Great Orion Nebula and Running Man Nebula combined. An estimated total of an hour and a half's worth of imaging data. Image data gathered in late September, 2012, and then on January 14, 15, and 16, 2013.

Messier 61 (M61) + SN 2020jfo

 

The stellar stream is faintly visible in the image.

Supernova SN 2020jfo was discovered on May 6, 2020, by the Zwicky Transient Facility. It was the eighth supernova recorded in this galaxy since observations began in 1926. It was a type II event, meaning it resulted from the collapse of the core of a supergiant star.

 

Taken with ED127mm f/9 + Canon EOS 4000D. FoV cropped in the common area between sessions. 30-second shots at 3200 ISO.

  

M61 stack image

Sessions of 02-04-2020, 25-04-2020 and 23-5- 2020

Single R frame x 480s

Gain = 100

 

ZWO ASI6200MM-Pro

TeleVue NP101is

Losmandy G11

Woke up early this morning and made it to the harbourside in time for this.

I was in cyprus last week for a few days to catch up with family and had the opportunity to go out at night to do a bit of astrophotography. This was my first attempt at photographing Andromeda Galaxy - our nearest galactic neighbour. I still got a lot to learn in this area, but for now I am happy with the results!

Discovered in 1718, Messier 106 (NGC 4258) is a large spiral galaxy found 24 million light years distant toward the constellation Canes Venatici. Visual magnitude is 8.4 and apparent size is 18’.

 

This active galaxy holds a super-massive black hole at its center. The black hole powers energetic emissions at essentially all observed wavelengths. Of particular interest is the pair of luminous jets seen flowing from the center at 8:00 and 2:00 in this image. The former appears particularly focused. These jets which are reveled here in light of excited hydrogen represent hot gas ejected from the black hole’s accretion disk which then collides with the cooler gas in the galaxy’s disk and halo. This process creates the appearance of four spiral arms, but only two contain star clouds. The other two being the gas jets. A smaller companion galaxy, NGC 4248 is seen at right.

 

This image was captured under high desert skies near Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA with a telescope of 12" aperture at f/8 and an electrically-cooled CCD camera. Total exposure was 11 hours (HaLRGB).

   

Well... you know...

Messier 106 is a Seyfert II galaxy 25 million light years away in the constellation Canes Venatici. It is a member of the Canes II group of galaxies, which is part of the Local Supercluster. This image was taken from my home observatory in Missouri.

 

Details:

 

24 x 480s, ISO 800

50 flats, 75 darks, 300 bias

 

Equipment: Canon 450D (full- spectrum modified), Explore Scientific 80mm APO Triplets @ 384mm, Televue 0.8x Reducer, Orion Atlas EQ-G

 

Software: Backyard EOS, PHD Guiding, Astrotortilla, EQMOD

 

Processed in Pixinsight

American Bullfrog relaxing in the duckweed-infesterd canal, Wildwood Park, Harrisburg, Pennsylvanias

Ilford FP4 plus/processed in ID 11

Leica M-A M 35 1,4 FLE

marina Douglas Isle of Man

Taken at the British Wildlife Centre.

Egyptian gosling in Regents Park.

it was definitely a messy day when had jet lag after long time fly.

I was very untidy in appearance and looked ugly bcuz I had a serious cold at that time.

but never mind! I was still shooting everywhere.

 

hullo there! cheer up and never stop bring your cameras everywhere!!

(↑especially to my mate AraiGordai, he just lost his laptop...)

I don't know what s up with my Stop Shot Module.....its not behaving. I cannot for the life of me get it to do what i want it to do.........the timings that i have written down over the months don't seem to work.......this is the outcome......messy but i like it.

 

View On Black

painting to music

Taken w/ Skywatcher Evostar Pro 80 ED (w/.85x reducer/corrector & QHYCCD Polemaster), Skywatcher EQM-35, Nikon D3300.

 

85 lights x 20 s @ ISO 1600 (1/2 total hours), ~45 dark, ~45 flat, ~100 bias, stacked in DSS and post-processed in Photoshop.

I can't figure out why a bird that spends half its time with its head in the water and its butt in the air needs to take a drink. And when it does, it gets water all over its head. But then, it's all water off a duck's back. Or head, as the case may be. Mallard, Turtle Pond, Salmon Creek Trail, Vancouver, WA, USA.

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

 

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

Maybe, but I like it. The old Lisbon seen from the castle. And you know who else was here today? One of the most famous couples of Flickr, Luísa and Mário! Stupid of me not having taken a photo of them! It would have been fun!

(Please view large.)

 

Lovely messy, fluffy clouds at the beach tonight

This guy was obviously a picky eater and was tossing the seeds around in order to find what he wanted.

 

Raw image processed in Lightroom Classic meaning converted to JPG and the odd tweak or cropped but no AI involved.

 

I hope you know that I appreciate your comments and visits although I may not get back to you quickly but I will try my best.

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