View allAll Photos Tagged totaleclipse
40 years ago today, Iron Maiden released their third studio album 'The Number of The beast' Here we have a cap from another fine bottle of Trooper, brewed by Robinsons brewery.
22nd March 2022
The moon obscures the sun during the totality phase of the solar eclipse on April 8, 2024, as seen from Jeffersonville, Vermont.
A picture falls far short of conveying the experience of witnessing the most incredible celestial event I have ever seen. I am still awe-struck and have permanent goose-bumps after seeing one of the many wonders of our solar system and universe.
A solar eclipse is something that cannot be described, it must be witnessed.
I took a couple hundred bracketed photos along with GoPro video at totality.
What an amazing experience.
This is a photograph of the Full Moon during the total lunar eclipse that occurred on September 7, 2025.
The photograph was the result of stacking ten exposures (each shot at ISO 1,250, f/6.3, ¼ sec) in order to reduce noise (aka to improve the signal-to-noise ratio). Focus was hard to achieve because the Μoon rose already in totality at my location where the light pollution was terrible (because of the city lights) and low clouds were moving.
Blazer & Slacks: #TSANFW 💙
Beret: #FernsCloset ☘️
Petite Model: Neo Blythe Takara RBL Doll ~ Simply Mango
Thanks Explore (#157). Position (#73)
Taken about 25 sec before 3rd contact through clouds with a Nikon Coolpix P950 at 1000mm focal length. Exposure 1/60s, iso 100.
Note the chromosphere is beaded like Bailey's Bead effect.
For a complete unedited version: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qsrj2aDJghc
For a complete edited version: www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL8nEd6V1fM
Picture of the Day x 7
I was so awe struck I did not double check my main camera’s. Yes I totally missed the shots. I have never done that. The only thing I have are my videos. Here are a few of my screen grabs. I think I have just become a Eclipse Chaser.
The Full Moon rises in partial eclipse over the sandstone formations of Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park in southern Alberta, on the evening of September 27, 2015. This was the night of a total lunar eclipse, which was in progress in its initial partial phase as the Moon rose this night. The blue band on the horizon containing the Moon is the shadow of Earth on our atmosphere, while the dark bite taken out of the lunar disk is the shadow of Earth on the Moon. The pink band above is the Belt of Venus.
This is a two-image panorama stitched to extend the scene vertically to take in more sky and ground than one frame could accommodate. Both shot with the 200mm lens and 1.4x extender, on the Canon 5DMkII.
Blood Moon, Full Moon, Lunar Eclipse seen amongst the stars in the night sky at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
Photo a day.
This shot sums up my day as I've been editing my moon shots for the past few hours.
I spent 2 and a half hours up in the woods in the middle of nowhere to get this series of shots.
Exp33
Capturing the Full Moon moving into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
The “diamond ring” phenomenon (cropped a bit to show more detail of the corona) showing the starburst that is produced on either side of the total eclipse. When the moon covers almost all of the sun but there’s a bit peeking out from the corner just like when the sun rises over the horizon.
You can see once again, that we were experiencing cloud cover which was kind of a neat addition during totality. The eclipsed sun was surrounded by a bank of clouds and made it look as if it was floating on them. It was also quite interesting to see that when the thicker clouds moved in everything got even darker than it was with the total eclipse in spite of the sun coming back out.
We missed the phases of the moon passing back away from the sun because of the clouds but the total eclipse was the real show. It was totally amazing!
2017 Total Eclipse
Young Harris, Georgia, USA
Nikon D7100
Vanguard Altra Pro 263 AT tripod
Tamron SP 150-600mm F/5-6.3 Di VC USD G2
600mm @ f/9 – 1/250 sec – ISO 800
The thin waning crescent Moon at dawn on August 20, 2017, on the last morning it could be sighted before the total eclipse on August 21. The Moon has risen over the foothills and peaks of the Grand Tetons in Wyoming, though this view is from the Idaho side looking northeast. ..Taken with the Canon 60Da and 200mm lens.
Blood moon fully eclipsed. First try at this. Pleased with the results. Took 60+ shots with varying technical adjustments and intervals. Almost gave up in the beginning as I just wasn’t able to capture the colors.
August 21, 2017
We were not in the path of totality here in Massachusetts, but we did have some fun with the partial eclipse. In this photo, the circular holes in a pasta strainer pass on multiple tiny images of the moon passing in front of the sun onto a piece of white matte board below.
Brewster, Massachusetts
Cape Cod - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2017
All Rights Reserved
...always learning - critiques welcome.
Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 6s.
No use without permission.
Please email for usage info.
Eclipse in Faroe Islands, 20.03.2015.
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VIDEO → Total Solar Eclipse 2015 Timelapse
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Nature, travel, photography: MY YOUTUBE CHANNEL
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Got lucky with the weather this morning for the eclipse. Here's the sun reappearing from behind the moon
Scott and I drove away from Ottawa today to experience the full eclipse. We were a little worried because the clouds were moving in, but luckily it cleared up enough for the main event, totality.
+1 in the comments because I liked both shots equally. Scott picked this shot for the main one.
Hope everyone is doing well.
Click "L" to view on black.
We got a decent break from heavy cloud cover that was present up until a few minutes before totality. Bronte Harbour was quite busy since it was the closest site to Toronto with totality lasting for one minute. There was quite the traffic jam still present when I walked home.
I used the "Starry Sky" feature on my camera to avoid focus issues...it sets focus to infinity. No tripod used - had I noticed the ISO was so high I would have used a slower shutter speed.
Bronte Harbour, Oakville, Ontario.
Our eclipse-chasing photo workshop originated in Texas, but due to adverse weather forecasts in the Lone Star State, we ended up next to a remote cemetery a few miles outside of Walnut Ridge, Arkansas. Here, we enjoyed clear skies, away from crowds and clouds.
This is what I waited for in the frigid (-2 F) night. The final visible total eclipse for quite a while. This is the "Super Blood Wolf moon". Super because the moon is close to the earth, Blood due to the color, caused by the light passing through the Earths atmosphere. Wolf, because this is January and wolves supposedly would howl more. The light blue color on the top left is referred to as the "Japanese lantern effect", caused by the sun light passing through the Ozone layer. I took 52 photos before and during the eclipse, these are my best.
Composite image of the Total Solar Eclipse of August 21, 2017 as viewed from Madras, Oregon, USA.
Totality and background from the same frame, others added to show progress of the eclipse and movement of the sun. This gives more of a feel of what it was like to look at the eclipse versus the tighter zoomed-in images of the eclipse detail.
This is a copyrighted image with all rights reserved. Please don't use this image on websites, blogs, facebook, or other media without my explicit permission. I will stop posting again if these images turn up in places I did not allow them to. See profile page for information on prints and licensing.
Bản quyền hình ảnh. Không sử dụng mà không được phép.
Авторское изображение. Не используйте без разрешения.
受版权保护的图像。未经许可,请勿使用。
Capturing the Full Moon moving into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
An experience unlike any other I've had. [understatement]
A wide angle photo of totality taken along the Snake River on the OR/ID border. This is a composite of seven exposures: 4s, 2s, 1s, 1/2s, 1/4s, 1/8s, 1/15s.
Of course, I took a telescope for a closer view, too ... and yes, I have a square crop.
This one will be interesting to watch the hits based on some of the tags alone ... ( O . o )
May 15, 2022
Shooting the total lunar eclipse on a very foggy night. The dense fog would thin and thicken and sometimes part altogether allowing me to get a few half decent shots of the eclipse. (The red one is what the camera saw, not me. It is a 10 second exposure, and to my eye was not actually this bright through the fog and darkness.)
Brewster, Massachusetts
Cape Cod - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2022
All Rights Reserved
...always learning - critiques welcome.
Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 11.
No use without permission.
Please email for usage info.
The clouds moving past the Full Moon during a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
Total Eclipse begins as the Full Moon moves into the shadow of the Earth resulting in a total eclipse of the Moon and a Blood Moon caused by the light bent or refracted onto the Moon by the Earth’s atmosphere. Taken at Macmasters Beach, NSW, Australia.
March, 2025 Total Lunar Eclipse.
To the naked eye, this eclipse looked like a cataract in the sky, or at maximum eclipse as though Mars had entered our orbit. Stars are visible in space behind the moon thanks to my camera’s sensor with sensitivity that still astounds me, and some high ISO noise reduction and enhancements I have up my sleeve. This image is not a composite or blend of multiple exposures.
Fairfax, Virginia, March 14th, 2025.
Photography by J. David Buerk:
www.facebook.com/DavidBuerkPhoto
@DavidBuerkPhoto