Very nice.
What happened, Brian? I'm gone for a few weeks and you turned you camera 180 degrees from bugs to the sky and from day to night.
You chose a nice phase to shoot. Viewed full size in the light box it seems a tad soft.
It is a tad soft. But there was high thin cloud and a lower layer of clouds skirting by. It's a long story but a few weeks back just for the heck of it I took a shot of Jupiter with my macro lens. I was amazed when I found that I had gotten not only Jupiter but two of his moons as well. I have always had a hankering to try astro- photography but the cost was prohibitive.
Seems that if one sticks with a camera and doesn't mind stacking lots of shots the results can be spectacular. Going to give it a shot, so to speak.
Let me hijack my own thread? I've spent enough time on the north coast of B.C. to get up close and personal with whales once or twice but I never saw what you had the pleasure to shoot and post here. Well done!
That will certainly do it. While we were down south this past winter I made a couple of random attempts at the moon. It is amazing how rarely the sky is truly clear in humid climates. Likely not noticed by the casual observer or moonstruck lover but quite the bother to the photographer.
Interesting. I guess we'll see how it goes....Seems that if one sticks with a camera and doesn't mind stacking lots of shots the results can be spectacular. Going to give it a shot, so to speak. !
Usually, I am not very interested in the skies at night. However, last night around nine PM as I was taking my dogs out for their night time potty break, I saw a bright star near the moon at about a five o'clock position. I wonder what it was.
Nice