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This is not the real thing I just turned the Super Moon red in my computer because my sky got overcast and could not take photos of it. Let's see how many read this description. :-)

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Seen from British Columbia, Canada

This was a supermoon eclipse. The watching location was in the eastern side of Hong Kong Island.

 

IMG_20210526_185049

Here is a composite of images taken last night of the Supermoon Lunar Eclipse and the stars.

  

Thank you for your comments,

Gemma

  

Copyright ©Maria Gemma June, 2015

  

Braved the cold to grab this shot of the longest lunar eclipse of the 21st century!

taken at 7:48 PST,Vashon Island looking over to Des Moines

What a moon...!! press L on keypad for a nice view of the stars too....

 

©Gerry Gutteridge

 

Supermoon eclipse.

 

Having had another unproductive weekend and with the impending closure of Ipernity I have decided to randomly post some of my favourite photos that I put on Ipernity but never got around to posting on Flickr, in this case because there were a lot of very similar images around at the time.

 

This was well worth getting up in the middle of the night to see.

Total lunar eclipse of 9/27/15, seen just a few minutes before totality ended. Very challenging (for me, anyways) exercise in photography. Not 100% satisfied with my results but it was fun anyways. Oshkosh, WI.

 

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(with apologies to the Fab Four)

 

It was cloudy but I just had to have a shot since I missed out the last time there was a blood moon due to heavier cloud cover. Plus, tonight is the "super moon" eclipse; the first since 1982 and the last until 2033.

 

7D2 + 300 L IS + 1.4x TC II

This image is a multiple exposure blend captured as the moon eclipsed over this dilapidated shack in central Maine, USA - photographed Sept 27 2015, 8PM-2AM. Processed via LR & PS CC.

 

EXIF:

Foreground & Sky:

Nikon D600 & 14-24mm @ 14mm

f/2.8 - 13 secs - ISO 1600

Moon Sequence:

Nikon D7000 & 70-300mm @ 300mm (450mm equivalent)

f/11 - multiple secs - ISO 200-3200 (changed as the moon changed)

 

© Mike Taylor - Taylor Photography

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Eclipse with Picacho Peak and the Belt of Venus.

 

I'm glad we scouted this location the day before because we definitely had a good view in the desert as the moonrise/eclipse occurred. Unfortunately it was windy, so we couldn't go to the higher point we'd originally planned to use for better views of the peak. The rise on the right was where we originally planned to set up.

 

Alas, I really messed up my eclipse sequence. I'd hoped to have a whole sequence from this location, but one of my camera quit talking to the lens. Oh well...one landscape (and lots of closeups) ain't bad, either.

Super Moon Eclipse

SuperBlueMoon Eclipse

I was monitoring the weather models and forecast reports since yesterday morning. After waking up at 2.15 am, I checked the webcams one last time before joining my friends to drive up to Crissy Field. We were the first few to get to east beach parking lot.

After settling down and shooting close up shots for few hours, I got this shot during blue hour with partially eclipsed moon sitting right on top of south tower of Golden Gate Bridge. Some thin high clouds in the zone added a bit more drama to the scene.

Even after weeks of planning, weather had the final say in allowing us watch this blood moon eclipse in one of the best viewing conditions in western US.

This is a single exposure at 200mm, f8, 0.8 sec, ISO 400

"Tell me the story about how the sun loved the moon so much he died every night to let her breathe." -unknown

  

Taken at the rise of the Supermoon a few hours before the eclipse.

  

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"Tell me the story about how the sun loved the moon so much he died every night to let her breathe." -unknown

 

Taken at the rise of the Supermoon a few hours before the eclipse.

  

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I took hundreds of photos of the super blood moon last night! (September 27 2015) To start, here is a wide shot showing the moon over Midlothian Ave, at QE Park. Two exposures were combined for this shot- one for the moon, and a long exposure to for everything else (to get streaks of light instead of cars).

 

This is the first time there has been a supermoon and lunar eclipse together since 1982, and it won't happen again until 2033!

A closeup of the lunar eclipse and supermoon from September 27 2015. It was very cool to watch this eclipse, the first eclipse I have ever seen!

 

Canon 7D Mark II | Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM + 1.4x III (560mm) | 0.6 seconds | ISO 2000 | f/8

When I shot this I really liked the clouds, but I had to compromise the single exposure to allow for eclipse detail and some clouds at the same time. I did a little photoshop trickery using the same photograph that allowed me to expose for the clouds and moon seperately and them merge them together. When I exposed for the clouds I was amazed at the subtle colors that were showing up from the remains of the eclipse.

 

This is when the sun is about to take back the moon.

It was a constant game of hide and seek in bay area tonight. I waited patiently for the cloud cover to pave way to reveal this blood moon. I was totally lucky to see the eclipse given the fact it was 80% rain all night

“Tell me the story about how the sun loved the moon so much he died every night to let her breathe.” -Unknown

 

"The moon was untouchable, surrounding herself with a blanket of darkness through the cold nights."- Avery Marianne

 

Blogpost for these photos: aleahmichele.com/uncategorized/accused-of-photoshop/

This spectacular event occured a year ago, on september 28, 2015 : Total Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

 

I forgot to share this view of the totality, which is my best image I could capture so far.

 

More precisely, this is a 50 images stacking, taken with a Canon 600D at prime focus of a 200/800 mm Newtonian.

 

Each picture has an exposure time of 4 seconds (using lunar tracking).

 

The sky was pretty amazing that night, with almost no turbulences. That made this event an unforgettable moment, namely the most impressive I have ever lived in Astronomy.

 

Location : Normandy, France.

 

Technical Datas :

Canon EOS 600D + 200/800 mm reflector + LXD75 mount

50 x 4 secs exposure

ISO 400

F/4

Autostakkert 2 + lightroom softwares

Difficult viewing on this one given the storm passing through the bay area. I searched the weather apps for a spot where there might be partial clouds, and ended up driving to Pacheco Pass in hopes of getting a glimpse. From there I could see occasional views of the moon through the clouds as the eclipse was starting, but then the hole in the clouds completely covered up and rain ensued. While on the roads driving dejectedly home I could a distant star underneath the cloud layer giving hope that maybe there was another break. Ok, long story short, ended up in San Martin w/ a decent cloud break and snapped this.

 

When processing in lightroom I slightly brightened the areas outside of the moon to expose a few stars. Also, I left my UV filter on by accident; not sure if that had an effect on the abnormal star shapes.

 

Wouldn't it be magical if light globes like this imitated the eclipse at the same time?

Here's one of the shots I snapped of the total lunar eclipse on September 27, 2015 at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA. This shot was taken during maximum eclipse.

 

Photo Details:

Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern

1370mm

f/9

ISO: 640

Exposure: 4 seconds

 

-Scott MacNeill

Setting and exiting the Earth's shadow, on Sept. 29, 2015.

A composite of the Supermoon Lunar eclipse on Septemer 27, 2015

Taken on September 27, 2015 at 7:46PM PDT at the peak of the total lunar eclipse. Numerous background stars are visible in this photo, the faintest of which are somewhat below the 12th magnitude, or less than 1% as bright as the dimmest star that you can see without the use of a telescope or other optical aid.

 

While supermoons and lunar eclipses each happen once or twice a year these events seldom occur at the same time and thus a total eclipse of a supermoon is a rare event and won't happen again until the year 2018.

 

Photographed with a 5 inch aperture, f/5.2 telescope and a Sony NEX-5R digital camera (ISO 200, a stack of ten images of the moon that where each exposed for 3.2 seconds, producing a total exposure integration time of 32 seconds). This is an improved version of an image that I first posted on the same night as the eclipse (consider that first photo as a "draft" prior to this final result).

 

This image is best seen on a dark background and/or at full size (2188 x 1370). Press the "L" key to enter the Flickr lightbox or click on the preview to see a larger size.

 

Image processing done in Photoshop CC 2015 and PixInsight.

 

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Supermoon eclipse framed with the Golden Boy statue atop the Manitoba Pronvincial Legislature building in downtown Winnipeg.

The Super Moon (Total Lunar Eclipse) on 28 September 2015, as seen from the Southern Hemisphere, South Africa. Photographed between 03:00 and 04:30 am.

 

Why does Earth's shadow on the Moon appear red?

www.space.com/30659-why-blood-moon-eclipse-is-red.html

 

The Moon's distance from Earth when photographed:

221 770 mi / 356 904 km

 

Photographed through a wide field 6" Newtonian Reflector Telescope (Astrograph) with a Canon 60Da DSLR.

 

Martin

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A break in the clouds and behold, the Super Moon revealed itself.

View from: Nottingham Lakeside Arts, University Park, Nottingham.

@ Sydur Rahman

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I was blocked from seeing it rise above the horizon by a cloud bank to the East and had to wait til it crested the clouds …just as it was coming out of totality.

]

Eclipsi total de súper lluna | Eclipse total de superluna

Disappointing view of the supposedly 'Biggest and brightest' Super Moon. 14 November 2016. Very hazy due to constant cloud cover. It made a few, very brief appearances, seconds rather than minutes.

View from: Nottingham Lakeside Arts, University Park, Nottingham.

@ Sydur Rahman

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