View allAll Photos Tagged moonscape
Moonscape featuring the northern part of Mare Imbrium, Sinus Iridum, Mare Frigoris, Plato, Vallis Alpes and Aristoteles.
Image taken at 2.700mm (Mak 180 & ASI 178mc / 9 panel mosaic)
A few minutes later (at 7:19 am), the sun had risen behind the clouds and was now faintly illuminating the Valle de la Luna with natural colors.
Valle de la Luna (Valley of the Moon) is a must-see landmark of the Chilean Atacama Desert, located just 13 km west of San Pedro.
© 2021 Jacques de Selliers. All rights reserved.
For reproduction rights, see www.deselliers.info/en/copyright.htm.
Photo ref: j8e_29980-ps1-Atacama
Moon Valley in Chilean part of Atacama where even NASA trained their austronauts... Licancabur volcano in background....
The sandstone conglomerates on Rode Island (Rode O) date back millions of years to the Carboniferous/Permian era. The landscape on this geologic anomaly looks more like something you might expect on the moon rather than on one of the most ice-bound regions in the world. Rodefjord, Scoresby Sund, East Greenland.
26/06/2020 www.allenfotowild.com
The moon was rising over the St. John's River tonight, so I went to take a shot of it. This is where the Green Cove Spring flows out into the river. The colours in this photo are the same as from the camera.
The original shot (here with a slight crop, and filters for texture), was an 87 second exposure at f/4, 28mm, ISO-100. In-camera long-exposure noise reduction was applied. The wind was blowing, so the grasses are blurred, and of course the water is smeared.
I got home very late today, and then the internet server was down, so I was unable to visit. I'll catch you tomorrow or as soon as I can!
Have a great, creative and inspired week!
Working on "Negative Space" - I love this picture, Dunkel looks very sharp and you can see some nice details, but not quite what I would think of for negative space.
If I ever get to go to the Moon I think I might see a landscape like this one located in the desert Southwest.
Thanks for your visit & feedback
The Moon framed by some moody looking clouds at first light. Taken with a Canon 5D4 and a Sigma 135mm Art lens.
Armchair Glacier and the ribbed volcanic crater rim of Mount Weart (2870 m, 9400 ft), Whistler-Blackcomb, Coast Mountains, British Columbia. Moon adjusted in postproduction. expl#138
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A pleasant evening drive across Romney Marsh the sun went and hid behind the cloud thought this made quite a nice scene with the moon in the night sky.
An other worldly landscape located in Utah. A two frame pano. Nikon D850, Nikon 24-120 lens at 52mm, f/16, 1/250 and iso 100.
Armchair Glacier and the ribbed volcanic crater rim of Mount Weart (2870 m, 9400 ft), Whistler-Blackcomb, Coast Mountains, British Columbia. Moon adjusted in postproduction. expl#22
David Schweitzer/Getty Images ©
Parte de la explanada de la Huasteca iluminada por la luna llena, tomada después de que un compañero y yo esperamos la salida de la luna para una foto que llevamos tiempo planeando.
La foto está compuesta de 15 imágenes en forma de panorama y mide 68 megapixeles, es la foto más grande que tengo y la que tiene mayor calidad.
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A beautiful sunrise at Moonscape Overlook in southern Utah just west of Hanksville. You can see frost on the landscape on this cold morning. On the horizon at right is a portion of the Henry Mountains.
The first gibbous moon over Monticello, NY taken afocally with a Canon S95 Camera through a 16mm eyepiece in an Explore Scientific 102mm ED telescope.
The waxing moon rises over the deeply eroded fissures of the badlands surrounding Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park, California.
My only previous visit to Death Valley occurred in August of 1994. My father volunteered to drive me from Oregon to Southern California at the start of my freshman year of college, and as we are both cut from the same cloth, we sensibly opted to take the desert route and camp along the way. The temperatures at that time of year were predictably hot, but nights were cool enough to be pleasant. Not so once we reached Death Valley and the Salton Sea. This time round I had thought that at least the night-time temperatures would be better in April. Evening at Zabriskie Point was beautiful and it was fascinating to watch the shadows lengthen and emerge from the crenulated crannies. However, a hot wind picked up later after dark. It was almost as miserable trying to fall asleep in that heat as I remember from 24 years ago. I ultimately gave up, and at 3:30 in the morning I opted to drive to Lone Pine for sunrise.
Technical notes: Manual blend of two exposures, one for the moon, one for the foreground. In truth, the moon was a hair too high in the sky to make it into the same frame as the hill slope. I moved it a little closer to the horizon than it actually was at the time.
One of the more out of the world places Ive been. Very surreal landscape, with the contrasting colors spread out below. Spent a couple nights here getting this photo.
Tracked, stacked, and blended.