• Members 3 posts
    Sept. 23, 2025, 2:42 a.m.

    This is my latest project. I had been planning this for a while. The weather reports weren't good, as far as cloud cover went, so I was thinking I may not bother with it. The afternoon ended up being sunny and warmish with only the odd cloud here and there. I got my gear ready just in case. Sunset was just before 6:30 and after that I was checking the sky every half hour. Just around midnight I decided I would give it a go so I made some coffee and some sandwiches and headed off. So anyway, long story short, I had to brave the cold, the wind, a heavy dew, sea spray (the sea was quite rough and the tide was coming in fast) and quite a bit of cloud just after the full eclipse. Anyway, I'm pretty happy with this composite. It took me about three hours to put this together.

    _7RV6312_Lunar_Eclipse_Composite.jpg

    _7RV6312_Lunar_Eclipse_Composite.jpg

    JPG, 143.5 KB, uploaded by RichardA on Sept. 23, 2025.

  • Sept. 23, 2025, 6:24 a.m.

    Very impressive!

    Technical question - on those intermediate phases (crescent), does shadowed lunar surface have dark red color too or is that completely supressed by image dynamic range? In theory it should reflect similar color, but that is just practically not visible (to human eye) due to the high contrast.

    We had pretty thick fog that night, I could barely see opposite building - no possibility to even see the Moon, not talking about recording eclipse.

  • Members 2252 posts
    Sept. 23, 2025, 7:04 a.m.

    I'm impressed too. I was in Adelaide on Sept 8 but slept through the eclipse. Where did you take these from? The clarity of the surface details has me guessing that you were out of the city?
    I really like the composition here with the progressive images along a diagonal line in the frame. It appropriately suggests the passing of time of the event. Likewise the thransition of shapes and colour that begin and end with the moon we expect.
    Outstanding.