Not all family shots are scowleries
The view from my bathroom window a few minutes ago
Newish moon over the neighbours' house
That moon again
Moon over Shea Heights
Venus with the Seven Sisters
Some lights
My street tonight
24 June 1997
Didn't focus
Looking out after midnight
Making supper
Bournemouth Pier
Downtown, my town
Waxing crescent
Lesson learnt. Maybe.
Above us, only sky
Full moon over pigeon spikes and roof
Mars presiding
Hallowe'en Moon
Warm night, long ago
Twenty-six percent illuminated
Moon by request
That moon tonight
High noise; blowy skies
Moon just showing through
I'm more the bah-humbug sort of person
Just past full, the moon over neighbours' yards
The neighbours' back gallery
Outside the front door this evening
Out the front door a few minutes ago
Quasi-Full Moon
100%
Lovely night for a walk
Not the orb of the hour
We should be glad the Outer Space Treaty is in eff…
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Shaky but pretty
If I were a more careful photographer, I would use more sturdy supports, ones that would prevent camera shake.
Instead I use what's available.
Here, I angled my camera against a post on the railing of our deck just outside the back door. It was Saturday around ten pm, and the night was already fairly dark.
I was aiming to get a picture of the bottom of the Milky Way in the SE sky. I think I did so, but some of that coloured haze may have been low light clouds lit by a car on a road a kilometre away. Maybe.
And of course every star in my sky is a short line rather than a point of light. Thus you don't want to look too closely. :)
I did get a sharp image of four moving objects, probably satellites, but maybe meteorites. You do have to look closely to see them.
Instead I use what's available.
Here, I angled my camera against a post on the railing of our deck just outside the back door. It was Saturday around ten pm, and the night was already fairly dark.
I was aiming to get a picture of the bottom of the Milky Way in the SE sky. I think I did so, but some of that coloured haze may have been low light clouds lit by a car on a road a kilometre away. Maybe.
And of course every star in my sky is a short line rather than a point of light. Thus you don't want to look too closely. :)
I did get a sharp image of four moving objects, probably satellites, but maybe meteorites. You do have to look closely to see them.
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