Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-27 Thread David Mann
Thanks for the feedback, everyone.

We didn't quite get totality here.  I think the photo I posted was about the 
maximum.

I realised partway through the eclipse that having the stars in there was a bit 
more interesting. I didn't quite go this far though...
https://xkcd.com/2463/

Exposure was done through trial and error.  The histogram was of no use.  I 
found that exposures of several seconds caused a bit of blur so I settled on 
1/2s at ISO800.

Getting it reasonably in focus was largely luck.  Infinity focus is pretty hard 
to get manually with that lens.  At first I used AF, then when the moon became 
too dark I switched to manual and used Live View zoomed in, which wasn't 
amazing in such dark conditions but it did the job well enough.  Once it was 
set I left it there.  I was taking my chances a bit as I had the lens wide open 
to shorten the exposure.

I was also quite lucky with the weather.  For most of the evening we had a lot 
of patchy fast-moving cloud at low altitude.  It mostly cleared away about 15 
mins before the eclipse started.  Before the eclipse I could see the moon 
through the cloud but it would have made things difficult as the moon darkened.

Cheers,
Dave

> On May 27, 2021, at 7:57 AM, Toine  wrote:
> 
> Nice! and a clear sky. We have to wait a year or so to see one.
> 
> On Wed, 26 May 2021 at 14:07, David Mann  wrote:
>> 
>> Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker 
>> template on my website but it'll have to do.
>> 
>> http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> Dave
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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread Toine
Nice! and a clear sky. We have to wait a year or so to see one.

On Wed, 26 May 2021 at 14:07, David Mann  wrote:
>
> Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker 
> template on my website but it'll have to do.
>
> http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso
>
> Cheers,
> Dave
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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread ann sanfedele

NIce!

ann

On 5/26/2021 12:21 PM, Larry Colen wrote:



On May 26, 2021, at 5:07 AM, David Mann  wrote:

Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker template 
on my website but it'll have to do.

http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso

Very well done.


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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread Paul Stenquist
Well done. Nicely framed.

Paul

> On May 26, 2021, at 8:07 AM, David Mann  wrote:
> 
> Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker 
> template on my website but it'll have to do.
> 
> http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso
> 
> Cheers,
> Dave
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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread Alan C

Well done, Dave. Unfortunately we wont see it in SA.

Alan C

On 26-May-21 02:07 PM, David Mann wrote:

Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker template 
on my website but it'll have to do.

http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso

Cheers,
Dave
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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread Larry Colen



> On May 26, 2021, at 5:07 AM, David Mann  wrote:
> 
> Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker 
> template on my website but it'll have to do.
> 
> http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso

Very well done.  


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Re: PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Excellent!

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
*



On Wed, May 26, 2021 at 8:07 AM David Mann  wrote:

> Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker
> template on my website but it'll have to do.
>
> http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso
>
> Cheers,
> Dave
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PESO: Supermoon Lunar Eclipse

2021-05-26 Thread David Mann
Just a quick upload before I go to bed far too late.  I need a darker template 
on my website but it'll have to do.

http://gallery.multi.net.nz/photo/1121/#peso

Cheers,
Dave
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-02-01 Thread John

Yup.

Posted a correction but I drew up the Earthlink server that SPAM Eating 
Monkey hates, so it bounced.


On 1/31/2018 14:12, John Francis wrote:


Nope - last night.

I happened to wake up at 4:25, so I stepped outside to take a look.
We had clear skies in San Jose, and from the deck outside the house
I had an unobstructed view.

Around half an hour later I stepped outside again; by that time  the
eclipse was total. The moon was still clearly visible, but yellowish.

I didn't wait up for the next half hor, so I have no idea how red the
moon ended up getting.


On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 01:19:52PM -0500, John wrote:

I think it's tonight (31 Jan).

On 1/30/2018 21:57, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

Is that tonight or tomorrow night?


Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53 PM, John  wrote:


Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:

Eastern standard time
  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
  Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
  (Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)

Central standard time
  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
  Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
  Moon sets before totality ends

Mountain standard time
  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
  Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
  Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
  Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST

Pacific standard time
  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
  Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
  Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
  Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST

Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
  Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
  Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
  Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST


On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:


Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
which means brightening skis

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message -

From: "John" 
Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography


Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).

Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years
ago.

I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse
from here on the east coast (of North America).







http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-ec
lipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/

https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb




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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-02-01 Thread John

On 1/31/2018 16:32, Larry Colen wrote:



John Coyle wrote:

For the first time in weeks, we had 100% cloud cover!  I went up on to our 
roof, 54 metres above sea
level, and still could not see a thing.  I guess I'm not likely to still be 
here for the next one,
in 2037 :-(


Lunar eclipses happen a couple times a year, and are visible from about
half the planet.  Are you sure the next one isn't until 2037?





I'm guessing he means the next time a lunar eclipse will occur during a 
"Blue Moon" that is also a "Supermoon".


The last time that combination occurred when the eclipse was visible 
from anywhere in the U.S. was 150 years ago.


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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Henk Terhell

Thanks Dan.

I'm not very happy with the FA 80-320/4.5-5.6 on the K-1 (nor on the 
K5), but it has fairly good length for a moon shot.


Henk

Op 2018-02-01 om 07:44 schreef Daniel J. Matyola:

Nice image Henk!

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 3:26 PM, Henk Terhell  wrote:


For W-Europe unfortunately no eclipse. All we have right now is a blue
supermoon:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mxer/39299622064/in/dateposted/

Henk

Op 2018-01-30 om 18:58 schreef John:





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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Nice image Henk!

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 3:26 PM, Henk Terhell  wrote:

> For W-Europe unfortunately no eclipse. All we have right now is a blue
> supermoon:
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/mxer/39299622064/in/dateposted/
>
> Henk
>
> Op 2018-01-30 om 18:58 schreef John:
>
>> Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
>> Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
>> Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.
>>
>> It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
>> moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years ago.
>>
>> I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse
>> from here on the east coast (of North America).
>>
>>
>
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Paul Stenquist
Cloud cover here. 

Paul

> On Jan 31, 2018, at 7:51 PM, ann sanfedele  wrote:
> 
> battling this cold I work up more than the usual amount of times and when I 
> checked the clock and saw it was
> about an hour before the time when it would be lowest and reddest I went to 
> the living room window .. the position of the moon at that point did show me 
> a bit of a pale yellow-orange look but I couldn't have viewed the best color 
> given building blockage as it dropped lower.   But today it was really nice 
> to see some stunning shots taken here (on TV) when the local news came on.
> 
> ann
> 
>> On 1/31/2018 4:09 PM, Larry Colen wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> John Francis wrote:
>>> Nope - last night.
>>> 
>>> I happened to wake up at 4:25, so I stepped outside to take a look.
>>> We had clear skies in San Jose, and from the deck outside the house
>>> I had an unobstructed view.
>> 
>> I woke up briefly at about 4:45, couldn't see the moon through the bathroom 
>> window. I decided that I didn't really want to get up after only a few hours 
>> sleep, so I went back to bed.
>> 
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread ann sanfedele
battling this cold I work up more than the usual amount of times and 
when I checked the clock and saw it was
about an hour before the time when it would be lowest and reddest I went 
to the living room window .. the position of the moon at that point did 
show me a bit of a pale yellow-orange look but I couldn't have viewed 
the best color given building blockage as it dropped lower.   But today 
it was really nice to see some stunning shots taken here (on TV) when 
the local news came on.


ann

On 1/31/2018 4:09 PM, Larry Colen wrote:



John Francis wrote:

Nope - last night.

I happened to wake up at 4:25, so I stepped outside to take a look.
We had clear skies in San Jose, and from the deck outside the house
I had an unobstructed view.


I woke up briefly at about 4:45, couldn't see the moon through the 
bathroom window. I decided that I didn't really want to get up after 
only a few hours sleep, so I went back to bed.







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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread John Francis

According to my local news broadcast (usually fairly reliable)
the next triple-hit will be in 2028, with another one coming in 2037.

But maybe the 2028 one won't be visible from Australia.
`

On Thu, Feb 01, 2018 at 08:41:02AM +1000, John Coyle wrote:
> The one I mean, Larry, is the triple-hit - blue moon, super moon and total 
> eclipse!
> 
> 
> John in Brisbane
> 
> 
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: PDML [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of Larry Colen
> Sent: Thursday, 1 February 2018 7:32 AM
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
> Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography
> 
> 
> 
> John Coyle wrote:
> > For the first time in weeks, we had 100% cloud cover!  I went up on to 
> > our roof, 54 metres above sea level, and still could not see a thing.  
> > I guess I'm not likely to still be here for the next one, in 2037 :-(
> 
> Lunar eclipses happen a couple times a year, and are visible from about half 
> the planet.  Are you
> sure the next one isn't until 2037?
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
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> 
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RE: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread John Coyle
The one I mean, Larry, is the triple-hit - blue moon, super moon and total 
eclipse!


John in Brisbane



-Original Message-
From: PDML [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of Larry Colen
Sent: Thursday, 1 February 2018 7:32 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography



John Coyle wrote:
> For the first time in weeks, we had 100% cloud cover!  I went up on to 
> our roof, 54 metres above sea level, and still could not see a thing.  
> I guess I'm not likely to still be here for the next one, in 2037 :-(

Lunar eclipses happen a couple times a year, and are visible from about half 
the planet.  Are you
sure the next one isn't until 2037?



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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Larry Colen



John Coyle wrote:

For the first time in weeks, we had 100% cloud cover!  I went up on to our 
roof, 54 metres above sea
level, and still could not see a thing.  I guess I'm not likely to still be 
here for the next one,
in 2037 :-(


Lunar eclipses happen a couple times a year, and are visible from about 
half the planet.  Are you sure the next one isn't until 2037?




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RE: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread John Coyle
For the first time in weeks, we had 100% cloud cover!  I went up on to our 
roof, 54 metres above sea
level, and still could not see a thing.  I guess I'm not likely to still be 
here for the next one,
in 2037 :-(

John in Brisbane



-Original Message-
From: PDML [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of Igor PDML-StR
Sent: Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:51 AM
To: PDML@pdml.net
Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography



Mark, for you, with the sunrise at 6:59am, it was probably bad.
But in Detroit, which is considerably west from you,  the sunrise was at 7:47am.
So, I'd say the partial eclipse (in "umbra") was probably still visible for 
Ken. (Ken, how was it?)


In our neck of the woods, we had a very tight schedule:
   Moon's
 Azimuth   Altitude
  h  moo
Moon enters umbra  2018 Jan 31  05:48.1   279.5 17.5
Moon enters totality   2018 Jan 31  06:51.4   286.5  4.8
Moonset2018 Jan 31  07:19 289.8 
Sunrise: 7:17am


The totality was starting when the moon was rather low, and would be 
obscured by the houses nearby.
So, last night I thought of the observation point that is on the
"hill" (it is very flat here, so, it is hard to find a real hill),
and on the eastern side of the major highway (which doesn't go "high" in 
this area).
So, there was a clear view to the moon as the totality was starting.

The timing was perfect: we didn't have to wake up to early, just 10 
minutes earlier than usually. We left from our house some 15 minutes prior
to the time we usually leave for the school bus. We saw the onset of the 
totality, and then drove to the school.

It was a very good timing for us. The sky was a bit bright because of the 
approaching sunrise, but overall, everything reasonably visible.
No need for early rising and no school classes missed.

Cheers,

Igor


  Mark Roberts Wed, 31 Jan 2018 05:36:56 -0800 wrote:

Igor PDML-StR wrote:

>Ken Waller Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:12 -0800 wrote:
>
>Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 
AM
>which means brightening skis
>
>You can find your eclipse phases times, e.g. here:
>https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2018-january-31
>or here:
>http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/LunarEclipse.php
>
>Note the altitude. I've just realized that we'll need to get to a hill
>to see it...


Well, since it's winter we'll presumably be able to descend the hill
on our brightening skis.
;-)

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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Larry Colen



John Francis wrote:

Nope - last night.

I happened to wake up at 4:25, so I stepped outside to take a look.
We had clear skies in San Jose, and from the deck outside the house
I had an unobstructed view.


I woke up briefly at about 4:45, couldn't see the moon through the 
bathroom window. I decided that I didn't really want to get up after 
only a few hours sleep, so I went back to bed.




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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography [traveling-with-tripod question]

2018-01-31 Thread Stanley Halpin
Dan, you say
> I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
> I gave it up a few years back,

Not sure what baggage regulations you refer to.
I used to remove the head from the legs, put my tripod inside my large 
suitcase. Larger suitcase than I needed, but anything for the tripod…
Every single time, that suitcase was spotted and opened by TSA. And they often 
don’t do an acceptably neat repacking job.

Someone on this list, one of the other relatively frequent travelers (Mark? 
Ken? Paul?) said “not to worry, just carry it with you.” So, with some 
trepidation, I did. And have continued to do. My Lowe camera backpack has 
straps designed to hold a tripod. Works well.

My usual first flight from our small regional airport is on a CRJ-200 50 seater 
commuter jet. My camera backpack will not fit in the overhead. Surprisingly it 
does fit under the seat in front of me. So, once aboard, the tripod comes off 
the pack and into the overhead, the backpack goes under the seat, and off we go!

I do take the ball head off the tripod to reduce the weight and bulk of the 
tripod; the head goes into the backpack. The backpack often gets a 2nd or 3rd 
look from the x-ray guy, but I can’t remember the last time anyone asked me to 
open the pack to inspect my gear.

Stan


> On Jan 29, 2018, at 6:40 PM, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:
> 
> I heard there was going to be a "Blue Moon" on Jan 31, but ignored it,
> because that is not a real astronomical event.  I even heard something
> about a lunar eclipse, but that didn't seen to apply to me.
> 
> So, I am here, in the middle of the Pacific, and it suddenly dawns on me
> that there will be a total eclipse of the moon, right over my head, in just
> 36 hours, and I am totally unprepared.  Of course, the weather is still a
> problem, but I would hate to miss such an opportunity.
> 
> I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
> I gave it up a few years back, first substituting a monopod and then one of
> those 8' models that you can place on a table or wrap around a pole.  This
> year I have nothing.
> 
> Had I given it some thought, I would have brought a prime lens, or even my
> old 500 mm reflector lens with an adapter.
> 
> What I have now is:
> 
> GoPro
> Pentax WG-3 gps
> K-5 IIs
> DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
> DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
> FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
> Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9
> 
> My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
> the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
> to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?
> 
> TIA, Dan
> 
> 
> 
> Dan Matyola
> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Henk Terhell
For W-Europe unfortunately no eclipse. All we have right now is a blue 
supermoon:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mxer/39299622064/in/dateposted/

Henk

Op 2018-01-30 om 18:58 schreef John:

Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full 
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years ago.


I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse 
from here on the east coast (of North America).





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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Ken Waller

So, I'd say the partial eclipse (in "umbra") was probably still visible
for Ken. (Ken, how was it?)


Very comfortable and warm - I was asleep - I couldn't be botheed.


Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "Igor PDML-StR" 

Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography





Mark, for you, with the sunrise at 6:59am, it was probably bad.
But in Detroit, which is considerably west from you,  the sunrise was at 
7:47am.

So, I'd say the partial eclipse (in "umbra") was probably still visible
for Ken. (Ken, how was it?)


In our neck of the woods, we had a very tight schedule:
  Moon's
Azimuth   Altitude
 h  moo
Moon enters umbra  2018 Jan 31  05:48.1   279.5 17.5
Moon enters totality   2018 Jan 31  06:51.4   286.5  4.8
Moonset2018 Jan 31  07:19 289.8 
Sunrise: 7:17am


The totality was starting when the moon was rather low, and would be 
obscured by the houses nearby.

So, last night I thought of the observation point that is on the
"hill" (it is very flat here, so, it is hard to find a real hill),
and on the eastern side of the major highway (which doesn't go "high" in 
this area).

So, there was a clear view to the moon as the totality was starting.

The timing was perfect: we didn't have to wake up to early, just 10 
minutes earlier than usually. We left from our house some 15 minutes prior
to the time we usually leave for the school bus. We saw the onset of the 
totality, and then drove to the school.


It was a very good timing for us. The sky was a bit bright because of the 
approaching sunrise, but overall, everything reasonably visible.

No need for early rising and no school classes missed.

Cheers,

Igor


 Mark Roberts Wed, 31 Jan 2018 05:36:56 -0800 wrote:

Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Ken Waller Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:12 -0800 wrote:

Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8

AM

which means brightening skis

You can find your eclipse phases times, e.g. here:
https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2018-january-31
or here:
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/LunarEclipse.php

Note the altitude. I've just realized that we'll need to get to a hill
to see it...



Well, since it's winter we'll presumably be able to descend the hill
on our brightening skis.
;-)



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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread John Francis

Nope - last night.

I happened to wake up at 4:25, so I stepped outside to take a look.
We had clear skies in San Jose, and from the deck outside the house
I had an unobstructed view.

Around half an hour later I stepped outside again; by that time  the
eclipse was total. The moon was still clearly visible, but yellowish.

I didn't wait up for the next half hor, so I have no idea how red the
moon ended up getting.


On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 01:19:52PM -0500, John wrote:
> I think it's tonight (31 Jan).
> 
> On 1/30/2018 21:57, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
> > Is that tonight or tomorrow night?
> > 
> > 
> > Dan Matyola
> > http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
> > 
> > On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53 PM, John  wrote:
> > 
> > > Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:
> > > 
> > > Eastern standard time
> > >  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
> > >  Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
> > >  (Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)
> > > 
> > > Central standard time
> > >  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
> > >  Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
> > >  Moon sets before totality ends
> > > 
> > > Mountain standard time
> > >  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
> > >  Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
> > >  Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
> > >  Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST
> > > 
> > > Pacific standard time
> > >  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
> > >  Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
> > >  Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
> > >  Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST
> > > 
> > > Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
> > >  Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
> > >  Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
> > >  Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
> > >  Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST
> > > 
> > > 
> > > On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:
> > > 
> > > > Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 
> > > > AM
> > > > which means brightening skis
> > > > 
> > > >Kenneth Waller
> > > > http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
> > > > 
> > > > - Original Message -
> > > > > From: "John" 
> > > > > Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography
> > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > > Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
> > > > > > Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
> > > > > > Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
> > > > > > moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years
> > > > > > ago.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the 
> > > > > > eclipse
> > > > > > from here on the east coast (of North America).
> > > > > > 
> > > > > 
> > > > 
> > > > 
> > > http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-ec
> > > lipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/
> > > 
> > > https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb
> > > 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
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> Religion - Answers we must never question.
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread John

I think it's tonight (31 Jan).

On 1/30/2018 21:57, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

Is that tonight or tomorrow night?


Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53 PM, John  wrote:


Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:

Eastern standard time
 Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
 Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
 (Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)

Central standard time
 Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
 Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
 Moon sets before totality ends

Mountain standard time
 Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
 Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
 Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
 Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST

Pacific standard time
 Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
 Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
 Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
 Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST

Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
 Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
 Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
 Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
 Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST


On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:


Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
which means brightening skis

   Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message -

From: "John" 
Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography


Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).

Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years
ago.

I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse
from here on the east coast (of North America).







http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-ec
lipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/

https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb





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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Igor PDML-StR



Mark, for you, with the sunrise at 6:59am, it was probably bad.
But in Detroit, which is considerably west from you,  the sunrise was at 
7:47am.

So, I'd say the partial eclipse (in "umbra") was probably still visible
for Ken. (Ken, how was it?)


In our neck of the woods, we had a very tight schedule:
  Moon's
Azimuth   Altitude
 h  moo
Moon enters umbra  2018 Jan 31  05:48.1   279.5 17.5
Moon enters totality   2018 Jan 31  06:51.4   286.5  4.8
Moonset2018 Jan 31  07:19 289.8 
Sunrise: 7:17am


The totality was starting when the moon was rather low, and would be 
obscured by the houses nearby.

So, last night I thought of the observation point that is on the
"hill" (it is very flat here, so, it is hard to find a real hill),
and on the eastern side of the major highway (which doesn't go "high" in 
this area).

So, there was a clear view to the moon as the totality was starting.

The timing was perfect: we didn't have to wake up to early, just 10 
minutes earlier than usually. We left from our house some 15 minutes prior
to the time we usually leave for the school bus. We saw the onset of the 
totality, and then drove to the school.


It was a very good timing for us. The sky was a bit bright because of the 
approaching sunrise, but overall, everything reasonably visible.

No need for early rising and no school classes missed.

Cheers,

Igor


 Mark Roberts Wed, 31 Jan 2018 05:36:56 -0800 wrote:

Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Ken Waller Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:12 -0800 wrote:

Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 

AM

which means brightening skis

You can find your eclipse phases times, e.g. here:
https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2018-january-31
or here:
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/LunarEclipse.php

Note the altitude. I've just realized that we'll need to get to a hill
to see it...



Well, since it's winter we'll presumably be able to descend the hill
on our brightening skis.
;-)

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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-31 Thread Mark Roberts
Igor PDML-StR wrote:

>Ken Waller Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:12 -0800 wrote:
>
>Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
>which means brightening skis
>
>You can find your eclipse phases times, e.g. here:
>https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2018-january-31
>or here:
>http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/LunarEclipse.php
>
>Note the altitude. I've just realized that we'll need to get to a hill
>to see it...

Well, since it's winter we'll presumably be able to descend the hill
on our brightening skis. 
;-)
 
-- 
Mark Roberts - Photography & Multimedia
www.robertstech.com





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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread lrc
Tonight

On January 30, 2018 6:57:59 PM PST, "Daniel J. Matyola"  
wrote:
>Is that tonight or tomorrow night?
>
>
>Dan Matyola
>http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
>
>On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53 PM, John  wrote:
>
>> Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:
>>
>> Eastern standard time
>> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
>> Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
>> (Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)
>>
>> Central standard time
>> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
>> Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
>> Moon sets before totality ends
>>
>> Mountain standard time
>> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
>> Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
>> Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
>> Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST
>>
>> Pacific standard time
>> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
>> Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
>> Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
>> Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST
>>
>> Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
>> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
>> Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
>> Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
>> Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST
>>
>>
>> On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:
>>
>>> Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring
>around 8 AM
>>> which means brightening skis
>>>
>>>   Kenneth Waller
>>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
>>>
>>> - Original Message -
>>>> From: "John" 
>>>> Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
>>>>> Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of
>January.
>>>>> Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same
>full
>>>>> moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150
>years
>>>>> ago.
>>>>>
>>>>> I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the
>eclipse
>>>>> from here on the east coast (of North America).
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>> http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-ec
>> lipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/
>>
>> https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb
>>
>> --
>> Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>> Religion - Answers we must never question.
>>
>>
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>and
>> follow the directions.
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Is that tonight or tomorrow night?


Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 9:53 PM, John  wrote:

> Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:
>
> Eastern standard time
> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
> Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
> (Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)
>
> Central standard time
> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
> Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
> Moon sets before totality ends
>
> Mountain standard time
> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
> Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
> Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
> Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST
>
> Pacific standard time
> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
> Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
> Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
> Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST
>
> Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
> Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
> Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
> Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
> Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST
>
>
> On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:
>
>> Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
>> which means brightening skis
>>
>>   Kenneth Waller
>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
>>
>> - Original Message -
>>> From: "John" 
>>> Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography
>>>
>>>
>>> Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
>>>> Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
>>>> Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.
>>>>
>>>> It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
>>>> moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years
>>>> ago.
>>>>
>>>> I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse
>>>> from here on the east coast (of North America).
>>>>
>>>
>>
>>
> http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-ec
> lipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/
>
> https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb
>
> --
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> Religion - Answers we must never question.
>
>
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread John

Total eclipse times in North America, according to EarthSky.org:

Eastern standard time
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 6:48 a.m. EST
Total eclipse not visible; moon sets beforehand
(Photographer's Ephemeris says Raleigh Moon-set is 8:02 a.m.)

Central standard time
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 5:48 a.m. EST
Total eclipse begins: 6:52 a.m. CDT
Moon sets before totality ends

Mountain standard time
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 4:48 a.m. MST
Total eclipse begins: 5:52 a.m. MST
Greatest eclipse: 6:30 a.m. MST
Total eclipse ends: 7:08 a.m. MST

Pacific standard time
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 3:48 a.m. PST
Total eclipse begins: 4:52 a.m. PST
Greatest eclipse: 5:30 a.m. PST
Total eclipse ends: 6:08 a.m. PST

Hawaii-Aleutian standard time:
Partial umbral eclipse begins: 1:48 a.m. HAST
Total eclipse begins: 2:52 a.m. HAST
Greatest eclipse: 3:30 a.m. HAST
Total eclipse ends: 4:08 a.m. HAST


On 1/30/2018 13:48, Ken Waller wrote:

Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
which means brightening skis

  Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller


- Original Message -
From: "John" 
Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography



Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years ago.

I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse
from here on the east coast (of North America).





http://www.ajc.com/news/world/first-blue-moon-total-lunar-eclipse-150-years-coming-late-january/yXxui9lY8LUCqmdyD7MbtM/

https://tinyurl.com/ycrr3tqb

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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread Igor PDML-StR


You can find your eclipse phases times, e.g. here:
https://www.timeanddate.com/eclipse/lunar/2018-january-31
or here:
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/LunarEclipse.php

Note the altitude. I've just realized that we'll need to get to a hill
to see it...

Igor



Ken Waller Tue, 30 Jan 2018 10:49:12 -0800 wrote:

Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
which means brightening skis

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HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread Ken Waller

Weather guy here in the Detroit area says it will be occurring around 8 AM
which means brightening skis

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "John" 

Subject: Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography



Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full 
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years ago.


I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse 
from here on the east coast (of North America).



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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread John

Super Moon because it's close to perigee (appears about 7% larger).
Blue Moon because it's the second full moon in the month of January.
Blood Moon because it's going to be a total lunar eclipse.

It's a fairly rare thing for all three to occur during the same full 
moon. The last time one was visible from North America was 150 years ago.


I think we're supposed to be able to see the beginning of the eclipse 
from here on the east coast (of North America).


On 1/29/2018 22:52, David Mann wrote:

The news here called it a "super blue blood moon eclipse" because it'll be a 
supermoon as well.

I can't be bothered trying to get photos of it.

Cheers,
Dave


On Jan 30, 2018, at 12:40 PM, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:

I heard there was going to be a "Blue Moon" on Jan 31, but ignored it,
because that is not a real astronomical event.  I even heard something
about a lunar eclipse, but that didn't seen to apply to me.

So, I am here, in the middle of the Pacific, and it suddenly dawns on me
that there will be a total eclipse of the moon, right over my head, in just
36 hours, and I am totally unprepared.  Of course, the weather is still a
problem, but I would hate to miss such an opportunity.

I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
I gave it up a few years back, first substituting a monopod and then one of
those 8' models that you can place on a table or wrap around a pole.  This
year I have nothing.

Had I given it some thought, I would have brought a prime lens, or even my
old 500 mm reflector lens with an adapter.

What I have now is:

GoPro
Pentax WG-3 gps
K-5 IIs
DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9

My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?

TIA, Dan









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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-30 Thread John
I've given this a bit more thought and it seems to me you go to the same 
place every time you go out to Hawaii. If that's true, might there be 
someplace out there where you could store a tripod between visits?


Alternatively, you might consider shipping the tripod to where-ever you 
are going to stay and have them hold it until you arrive; then shipping 
it back just before you leave for home.


On 1/29/2018 20:41, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

Thanks, Larry and John!

I have already though about the bean bag approach, and even picked up some
dried peans to put in a bag.  I also though of using the ir remote to fire
to shutter, to avoid shutter shake.

Years ago I framed the full moon between two palm trees, and I might try
that again.

Going up the mountain to the 10,000 foot level would probably get me above
the clouds, but it is a hell of a drive at night.

I will play around and see what develops.  :)





Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Mon, Jan 29, 2018 at 7:54 PM, Larry Colen  wrote:




Daniel J. Matyola wrote:



What I have now is:

GoPro
Pentax WG-3 gps
K-5 IIs
DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9

My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might
afford
to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?



I hear that some folks a Mauna Kea have some awesome telephoto lenses,
maybe they'd loan you one?

You seriously are not going to even be able to get close capturing shots
of the moon itself that folks with serious gear will be able to do. My
suggestion is that you find a place that would have some really nice night
time scenery to put in front of the moon and set up some night landscape
photos with the moon in the background.  It should be in roughly the same
place about 40 minutes earlier tonight, so you could go do some
test/practice shots.

If you don't want to invest in a cheap tripod, you could make, or buy a
beanbag, and set up photos using that and the 2 second delay.

Alternatively, you could just not worry about trying to get an awesome
shot of this lunar eclipse, and enjoy the show.

--
Larry Colen  l...@red4est.com (postbox on min4est) http://red4est.com/lrc






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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-29 Thread David Mann
The news here called it a "super blue blood moon eclipse" because it'll be a 
supermoon as well.

I can't be bothered trying to get photos of it.

Cheers,
Dave

> On Jan 30, 2018, at 12:40 PM, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:
> 
> I heard there was going to be a "Blue Moon" on Jan 31, but ignored it,
> because that is not a real astronomical event.  I even heard something
> about a lunar eclipse, but that didn't seen to apply to me.
> 
> So, I am here, in the middle of the Pacific, and it suddenly dawns on me
> that there will be a total eclipse of the moon, right over my head, in just
> 36 hours, and I am totally unprepared.  Of course, the weather is still a
> problem, but I would hate to miss such an opportunity.
> 
> I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
> I gave it up a few years back, first substituting a monopod and then one of
> those 8' models that you can place on a table or wrap around a pole.  This
> year I have nothing.
> 
> Had I given it some thought, I would have brought a prime lens, or even my
> old 500 mm reflector lens with an adapter.
> 
> What I have now is:
> 
> GoPro
> Pentax WG-3 gps
> K-5 IIs
> DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
> DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
> FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
> Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9
> 
> My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
> the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
> to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?
> 
> TIA, Dan
> 
> 
> 
> Dan Matyola
> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
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> the directions.


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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-29 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Thanks, Larry and John!

I have already though about the bean bag approach, and even picked up some
dried peans to put in a bag.  I also though of using the ir remote to fire
to shutter, to avoid shutter shake.

Years ago I framed the full moon between two palm trees, and I might try
that again.

Going up the mountain to the 10,000 foot level would probably get me above
the clouds, but it is a hell of a drive at night.

I will play around and see what develops.  :)





Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

On Mon, Jan 29, 2018 at 7:54 PM, Larry Colen  wrote:

>
>
> Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>
>
>> What I have now is:
>>
>> GoPro
>> Pentax WG-3 gps
>> K-5 IIs
>> DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
>> DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
>> FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
>> Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9
>>
>> My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
>> the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might
>> afford
>> to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?
>>
>
> I hear that some folks a Mauna Kea have some awesome telephoto lenses,
> maybe they'd loan you one?
>
> You seriously are not going to even be able to get close capturing shots
> of the moon itself that folks with serious gear will be able to do. My
> suggestion is that you find a place that would have some really nice night
> time scenery to put in front of the moon and set up some night landscape
> photos with the moon in the background.  It should be in roughly the same
> place about 40 minutes earlier tonight, so you could go do some
> test/practice shots.
>
> If you don't want to invest in a cheap tripod, you could make, or buy a
> beanbag, and set up photos using that and the 2 second delay.
>
> Alternatively, you could just not worry about trying to get an awesome
> shot of this lunar eclipse, and enjoy the show.
>
> --
> Larry Colen  l...@red4est.com (postbox on min4est) http://red4est.com/lrc
>
>
>
> --
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> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and
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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-29 Thread Larry Colen



Daniel J. Matyola wrote:



What I have now is:

GoPro
Pentax WG-3 gps
K-5 IIs
DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9

My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?


I hear that some folks a Mauna Kea have some awesome telephoto lenses, 
maybe they'd loan you one?


You seriously are not going to even be able to get close capturing shots 
of the moon itself that folks with serious gear will be able to do. My 
suggestion is that you find a place that would have some really nice 
night time scenery to put in front of the moon and set up some night 
landscape photos with the moon in the background.  It should be in 
roughly the same place about 40 minutes earlier tonight, so you could go 
do some test/practice shots.


If you don't want to invest in a cheap tripod, you could make, or buy a 
beanbag, and set up photos using that and the 2 second delay.


Alternatively, you could just not worry about trying to get an awesome 
shot of this lunar eclipse, and enjoy the show.


--
Larry Colen  l...@red4est.com (postbox on min4est) http://red4est.com/lrc


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Re: HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-29 Thread John

Check out local camera stores. Maybe you can rent a tripod.

How far are you from that volcano that you sometimes post images from 
when you're in Hawaii? Can you drive up to the top to get above the weather?


Given your available equipment, I'd go with the FA 1:2.8 100 mm Macro, 
and I think the K-5 IIs has a built in intervalometer. Someone else may 
know how often you want to set it to trigger the shutter.


Try this B&H tutorial for the info you need to determine your exposure:

https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/photography/tips-and-solutions/22-tips-for-photographing-a-lunar-eclipse

Hope this helps. Wish I was out there somewhere to photograph it.

On 1/29/2018 18:40, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

I heard there was going to be a "Blue Moon" on Jan 31, but ignored it,
because that is not a real astronomical event.  I even heard something
about a lunar eclipse, but that didn't seen to apply to me.

So, I am here, in the middle of the Pacific, and it suddenly dawns on me
that there will be a total eclipse of the moon, right over my head, in just
36 hours, and I am totally unprepared.  Of course, the weather is still a
problem, but I would hate to miss such an opportunity.

I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
I gave it up a few years back, first substituting a monopod and then one of
those 8' models that you can place on a table or wrap around a pole.  This
year I have nothing.

Had I given it some thought, I would have brought a prime lens, or even my
old 500 mm reflector lens with an adapter.

What I have now is:

GoPro
Pentax WG-3 gps
K-5 IIs
DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9

My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?

TIA, Dan



Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola




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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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HELP! Advice on Lunar Eclipse Photography

2018-01-29 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
I heard there was going to be a "Blue Moon" on Jan 31, but ignored it,
because that is not a real astronomical event.  I even heard something
about a lunar eclipse, but that didn't seen to apply to me.

So, I am here, in the middle of the Pacific, and it suddenly dawns on me
that there will be a total eclipse of the moon, right over my head, in just
36 hours, and I am totally unprepared.  Of course, the weather is still a
problem, but I would hate to miss such an opportunity.

I used to bring a tripod with me, but with the tighter baggage regulations,
I gave it up a few years back, first substituting a monopod and then one of
those 8' models that you can place on a table or wrap around a pole.  This
year I have nothing.

Had I given it some thought, I would have brought a prime lens, or even my
old 500 mm reflector lens with an adapter.

What I have now is:

GoPro
Pentax WG-3 gps
K-5 IIs
DA 1:4 12-24 ED AL [IF]
DA 1:3.5-5.6 18-135 mm ED AL [IF} DC WR
FA 1:2.8 !00 mm Macro
Tamron AF 75-300 1:4-5.6 LD Tele-Macro /1:3.9

My principal concern of course is the weather, then staying up late to see
the event.  Assuming all goes well, any suggestions as to what might afford
to best opportunity to capture the eclipse?

TIA, Dan



Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Jack Davis
Here's my first contribution; "The
night was humid."

J

Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 28, 2015, at 12:55 PM, Bob W-PDML  wrote:
> 
> Write a book's worth of first lines then.
> 
>> On 28 Sep 2015, at 20:22, P.J. Alling  wrote:
>> 
>> I wish I had a story that would go with.  I write better first lines than 
>> most authors, it's the rest that escapes me.
>> 
>>> On 9/28/2015 3:12 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
>>> I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or novel...
>>> 
>>> "The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
>>> the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
>>> the dog didn't care."
>>> 
>>> Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary types  
>>> writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
>>> what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a couplet, 
>>> repeat folding paper... around the room and then the
>>> last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting work.
>>> 
>>> ann
>>> 
 On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
 The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for about two 
 hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he wanted to go out.  
 Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I threw on some clothes, and 
 gave him the treat, of an after midnight walk.
>>> The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured in the 
>>> night sky, the dog didn't care.
 
> On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:
> Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
> if it was visible.
> 
> Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
> started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
> is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
> through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
> shadow.
> 
> When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
> spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
> instant or so before more clouds rolled in.
> 
> I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
> to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
> anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher clouds.
> 
> So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never enough
> to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.
> 
>> On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
>> had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... about
>> 20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
>> anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (
>> 
>> ann
>> 
>>> 
 On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
 The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can
 still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.
 
 .
> 
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RE: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Bob W
> -Original Message-
> From: PDML [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of John
> 
> Found two sites with collected photos from the Super-Moon Eclipse:
> 
> http://petapixel.com/2015/09/28/the-best-photos-and-videos-from-
> supermoon-lunar-eclipse-2015/
> 
> http://twistedsifter.com/2015/09/photos-of-the-super-mega-ultra-blood-
> moon-eclipse-that-you-probably-didnt-see/
> 
> Don't know how many fakes there are among them.
> 
> The next Super-Moon eclipse is supposed to be in 2033. The way my life
> goes, even if I live long enough to see it, it's bound to be cloudy.
> 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAA67a2-Klk



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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread ann sanfedele

MARK , Mark

ann

On 9/28/2015 4:23 PM, Toralf Lund wrote:

On 28/09/15 21:16, P.J. Alling wrote:
I wish I had a story that would go with. I write better first lines 
than most authors, it's the rest that escapes me.
Doesn't this look like one of those spots where someone tends to say 
Mark! ??


- Toralf



On 9/28/2015 3:12 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or 
novel...


"The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
 the dog didn't care."

Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary 
types  writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a 
couplet, repeat folding paper... around the room and then the
last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting 
work.


ann

On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for 
about two hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he 
wanted to go out.  Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I 
threw on some clothes, and gave him the treat, of an after midnight 
walk. 
  The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung 
unobscured in the night sky, the dog didn't care.


On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:
Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to 
check

if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see 
there

is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get 
something
to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to 
get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher 
clouds.


So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never 
enough

to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled 
in... about

20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. 
One can

still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 


wrote:
Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low 
in the
sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over 
the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 


wrote:
Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. 
Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout 
North

America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky 
shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during 
convenient

evening ones.

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Toralf Lund

On 28/09/15 21:16, P.J. Alling wrote:
I wish I had a story that would go with.  I write better first lines 
than most authors, it's the rest that escapes me.
Doesn't this look like one of those spots where someone tends to say 
Mark! ??


- Toralf



On 9/28/2015 3:12 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or 
novel...


"The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
 the dog didn't care."

Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary 
types  writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a 
couplet, repeat folding paper... around the room and then the

last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting work.

ann

On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for 
about two hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he 
wanted to go out.  Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I 
threw on some clothes, and gave him the treat, of an after midnight 
walk. 
  The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured 
in the night sky, the dog didn't care.


On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:
Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to 
check

if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see 
there

is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get 
something

to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher 
clouds.


So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never 
enough

to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... 
about

20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. 
One can

still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:
Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low 
in the
sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over 
the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 


wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky 
shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during 
convenient

evening ones.

--
Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.

--
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and

follow the directions.

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread John

Found two sites with collected photos from the Super-Moon Eclipse:

http://petapixel.com/2015/09/28/the-best-photos-and-videos-from-supermoon-lunar-eclipse-2015/

http://twistedsifter.com/2015/09/photos-of-the-super-mega-ultra-blood-moon-eclipse-that-you-probably-didnt-see/

Don't know how many fakes there are among them.

The next Super-Moon eclipse is supposed to be in 2033. The way my life
goes, even if I live long enough to see it, it's bound to be cloudy.

--
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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Bob W-PDML
Write a book's worth of first lines then.

> On 28 Sep 2015, at 20:22, P.J. Alling  wrote:
> 
> I wish I had a story that would go with.  I write better first lines than 
> most authors, it's the rest that escapes me.
> 
>> On 9/28/2015 3:12 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
>> I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or novel...
>> 
>> "The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
>> the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
>> the dog didn't care."
>> 
>> Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary types  
>> writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
>> what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a couplet, 
>> repeat folding paper... around the room and then the
>> last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting work.
>> 
>> ann
>> 
>>> On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
>>> The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for about two 
>>> hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he wanted to go out.  
>>> Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I threw on some clothes, and 
>>> gave him the treat, of an after midnight walk.
>>  The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured in the 
>> night sky, the dog didn't care.
>>> 
 On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:
 Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
 if it was visible.
 
 Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
 started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
 is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
 through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
 shadow.
 
 When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
 spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
 instant or so before more clouds rolled in.
 
 I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
 to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
 anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher clouds.
 
 So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never enough
 to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.
 
> On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
> had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... about
> 20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
> anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (
> 
> ann
> 
>> 
>>> On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
>>> The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can
>>> still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.
>>> 
>>> .

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread P.J. Alling
I wish I had a story that would go with.  I write better first lines 
than most authors, it's the rest that escapes me.


On 9/28/2015 3:12 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or 
novel...


"The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
 the dog didn't care."

Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary 
types  writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a 
couplet, repeat folding paper... around the room and then the

last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting work.

ann

On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for 
about two hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he 
wanted to go out.  Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I threw 
on some clothes, and gave him the treat, of an after midnight walk. 
  The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured 
in the night sky, the dog didn't care.


On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:

Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher 
clouds.


So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never 
enough

to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... 
about

20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One 
can

still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:
Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in 
the
sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the 
Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 


wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky 
shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during 
convenient

evening ones.

--
Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.

--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly 
above

and

follow the directions.

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Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my 
brevity.


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I don't want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve 
immortality through not dying.
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread ann sanfedele

I suggest this line of yours for the beginning of a short story or novel...

"The eclipse was over the clouds were gone,
the moon hung unobscured in the night sky,
 the dog didn't care."

Or , as a line to start that game I played long ago with literary types  
writing a line or two, folding over the paper so only part of
what you wrote showed, passing it to the next person to write a couplet, 
repeat folding paper... around the room and then the

last person opens up the whole thing and reads aloud the resulting work.

ann

On 9/28/2015 3:02 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for about 
two hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he wanted to 
go out.  Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I threw on some 
clothes, and gave him the treat, of an after midnight walk. 
  The eclipse was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured 
in the night sky, the dog didn't care.


On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:

Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher 
clouds.


So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never enough
to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:
had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... 
about

20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:

The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can
still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the
sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the 
Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 


wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky 
shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during 
convenient

evening ones.

--
Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.

--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly 
above

and

follow the directions.

--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my 
brevity.


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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread P.J. Alling
The absolute worst part, is I went to bed and slept fitfully for about 
two hours, woke up and the dog noticed, and let me know he wanted to go 
out.  Having nothing better to do, except sleep, I threw on some 
clothes, and gave him the treat, of an after midnight walk.  The eclipse 
was over the clouds were gone, the moon hung unobscured in the night 
sky, the dog didn't care.


On 9/28/2015 1:58 PM, John wrote:

Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher 
clouds.


So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never enough
to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:

had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... about
20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:

The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can
still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the
sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the 
Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 

wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during 
convenient

evening ones.

--
Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.

--
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PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above

and

follow the directions.

--
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my 
brevity.


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I don't want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve 
immortality through not dying.
-- Woody Allen


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Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread John

It's a much better image than the best view I was able to see.

Looks kind of like Schiaparelli's Martian "canals".

On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:

I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up on
the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be high
clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm
f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have was
also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the
moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going to
post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the attempt.

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html


Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid Catadioptric
f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.

Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try to
focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to force
it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the camera onto
the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest anyone thing this
might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot with every lens
combination whether manual or auto focused looked pretty much like the
one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do kind of like it as an
abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more detail.



On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

 From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola






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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread John

Despite the local weather forecast, I went outside a few times to check
if it was visible.

Got one fairly good glimpse at the moon through the clouds before it
started. Not enough to see any details; just barely enough to see there
is texture to the moon's surface. Later there was another glimpse
through thinner clouds when the moon was half covered by the earth's
shadow.

When I checked at the time it was supposed to peak, I saw a dark grey
spot in the clouds where the moon should have been. It lasted for an
instant or so before more clouds rolled in.

I thought about setting my camera up anyway, maybe try to get something
to use for the "Wind" PUG, but I couldn't really figure out how to get
anything other than a grey smear against the darker grey of higher clouds.

So, anyway, I did see some of the super-moon & eclipse, but never enough
to justify burning any electrons to try to capture an image.

On 9/27/2015 10:53 PM, ann sanfedele wrote:

had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... about
20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:

The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can
still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the

sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 

wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred

in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

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Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Jack Davis
I went to bed at my usual 8:00 PM and left the shooting up to you young folks.
I may try it in 2033. ;o)

J

- Original Message -
From: "ann sanfedele" 
To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" 
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2015 6:37:56 AM
Subject: Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

ActuallY I saw it for about 45 minutes ... but no colors.. up to where 
it became a very thin ")" - I did make anattempt with the 55-300
but using my dressmaker dummy as a tripod and I'msure all I got ws a 
fuzzy cresent .. then the clouds rolled in..

saw a faint glimmer of reddish color around 11 but no shape.. but on the 
local news this morning I saw some neat shots locals got from
different vantage points than mine... although not far - I probably 
should have stayed by the bedroomwindow - wasn't up to going to the roof
it gets a little difficult to navigate for me these days. Bummer... I 
saw the last oneat least.  18 years... to the next one.. if I get to 96
I'll probably need someone to hold my head up

ann

On 9/28/2015 1:02 AM, Knarf wrote:
> I walked along the lake for about a 1/2 hour, hoping the light clouds would 
> lift, but they didn't. Gave up, went home. About midnight I brought the 
> garbage out and there it was: about 1/4 obscured by the earth's shadow.
>
> Quite spectacular!
>
> Like Ann, I don't have the equipment to do anything about it, but at least I 
> saw it. 'T'was pretty cool.
>
> And earlier, after a significant dry spell, I got a few okay street shots 
> today. Can't wait to look at them on a big monitor and process a few...
>
> Cheers,
>
> frank
>
> On 27 September, 2015 11:59:12 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  
> wrote:
>> LOvely to get to see the colors - glad you and Paul got us something
>> anyway...
>>
>> ann
>>
>> On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
>>> I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up
>> on
>>> the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be
>> high
>>> clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm
>>> f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have
>> was
>>> also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the
>>> moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going
>>> to post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the
>> attempt.
>>>
>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html
>>
>>>
>>> Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid
>>> Catadioptric f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.
>>>
>>> Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try
>>> to focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to
>>> force it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the
>>> camera onto the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest
>>> anyone thing this might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot
>>> with every lens combination whether manual or auto focused looked
>>> pretty much like the one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do
>> kind
>>> of like it as an abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more
>>> detail.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>>   From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>>
>>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>> America
>>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which
>> occurred
>>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>>> evening ones.
>>>>
>>>> This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the
>> Earth’s
>>>> dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time
>> and
>>>> continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next
>> hour.
>>>> Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
>>>> hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
>>>> from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
>>>> the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality
>> itself,
>>>> while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
>>>> early rising bright wint

Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread ann sanfedele
ActuallY I saw it for about 45 minutes ... but no colors.. up to where 
it became a very thin ")" - I did make anattempt with the 55-300
but using my dressmaker dummy as a tripod and I'msure all I got ws a 
fuzzy cresent .. then the clouds rolled in..


saw a faint glimmer of reddish color around 11 but no shape.. but on the 
local news this morning I saw some neat shots locals got from
different vantage points than mine... although not far - I probably 
should have stayed by the bedroomwindow - wasn't up to going to the roof
it gets a little difficult to navigate for me these days. Bummer... I 
saw the last oneat least.  18 years... to the next one.. if I get to 96

I'll probably need someone to hold my head up

ann

On 9/28/2015 1:02 AM, Knarf wrote:

I walked along the lake for about a 1/2 hour, hoping the light clouds would 
lift, but they didn't. Gave up, went home. About midnight I brought the garbage 
out and there it was: about 1/4 obscured by the earth's shadow.

Quite spectacular!

Like Ann, I don't have the equipment to do anything about it, but at least I 
saw it. 'T'was pretty cool.

And earlier, after a significant dry spell, I got a few okay street shots 
today. Can't wait to look at them on a big monitor and process a few...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 11:59:12 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  wrote:

LOvely to get to see the colors - glad you and Paul got us something
anyway...

ann

On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:

I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up

on

the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be

high

clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm
f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have

was

also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the
moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going
to post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the

attempt.



https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html



Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid
Catadioptric f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.

Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try
to focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to
force it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the
camera onto the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest
anyone thing this might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot
with every lens combination whether manual or auto focused looked
pretty much like the one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do

kind

of like it as an abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more
detail.



On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

  From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred

in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the

Earth’s

dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time

and

continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next

hour.

Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality

itself,

while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this

event

unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at

the

time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral

shadow.

There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the

Earth’s

shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in

its

orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the u

Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-28 Thread Jack Davis
Enjoyed "spending" the evening with
You pursuing the event, Knarf!
2033(?) may be a clear night. (G)

J

Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 27, 2015, at 10:02 PM, Knarf  wrote:
> 
> I walked along the lake for about a 1/2 hour, hoping the light clouds would 
> lift, but they didn't. Gave up, went home. About midnight I brought the 
> garbage out and there it was: about 1/4 obscured by the earth's shadow.
> 
> Quite spectacular!
> 
> Like Ann, I don't have the equipment to do anything about it, but at least I 
> saw it. 'T'was pretty cool.
> 
> And earlier, after a significant dry spell, I got a few okay street shots 
> today. Can't wait to look at them on a big monitor and process a few...
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> frank
> 
>> On 27 September, 2015 11:59:12 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  
>> wrote:
>> LOvely to get to see the colors - glad you and Paul got us something 
>> anyway...
>> 
>> ann
>> 
>>> On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
>>> I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up
>> on 
>>> the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be
>> high 
>>> clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm 
>>> f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have
>> was 
>>> also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the
>> 
>>> moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going 
>>> to post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the
>> attempt.
>> https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html
>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid 
>>> Catadioptric f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.
>>> 
>>> Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try
>> 
>>> to focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to
>> 
>>> force it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the 
>>> camera onto the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest 
>>> anyone thing this might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot 
>>> with every lens combination whether manual or auto focused looked 
>>> pretty much like the one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do
>> kind 
>>> of like it as an abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more
>> 
>>> detail.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>> From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>> 
>>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>> America
>>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which
>> occurred
>>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>>> evening ones.
>>>> 
>>>> This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the
>> Earth’s
>>>> dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time
>> and
>>>> continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next
>> hour.
>>>> Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
>>>> hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
>>>> from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
>>>> the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality
>> itself,
>>>> while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
>>>> early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
>>>> Planet Locator to identify them)
>>>> 
>>>> There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this
>> event
>>>> unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
>>>> range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
>>>> another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at
>> the
>>>> time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral
>> shadow.
>>>> There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
>>>> all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
>>>> look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
>>>&

Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Knarf
I walked along the lake for about a 1/2 hour, hoping the light clouds would 
lift, but they didn't. Gave up, went home. About midnight I brought the garbage 
out and there it was: about 1/4 obscured by the earth's shadow.

Quite spectacular!

Like Ann, I don't have the equipment to do anything about it, but at least I 
saw it. 'T'was pretty cool.

And earlier, after a significant dry spell, I got a few okay street shots 
today. Can't wait to look at them on a big monitor and process a few...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 11:59:12 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  wrote:
>LOvely to get to see the colors - glad you and Paul got us something 
>anyway...
>
>ann
>
>On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
>> I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up
>on 
>> the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be
>high 
>> clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm 
>> f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have
>was 
>> also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the
>
>> moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going 
>> to post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the
>attempt.
>>
>>
>https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html
>
>>
>>
>> Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid 
>> Catadioptric f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.
>>
>> Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try
>
>> to focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to
>
>> force it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the 
>> camera onto the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest 
>> anyone thing this might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot 
>> with every lens combination whether manual or auto focused looked 
>> pretty much like the one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do
>kind 
>> of like it as an abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more
>
>> detail.
>>
>>
>>
>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>  From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>
>>>
>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>
>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>America
>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which
>occurred
>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>> evening ones.
>>>
>>> This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the
>Earth’s
>>> dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time
>and
>>> continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next
>hour.
>>> Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
>>> hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
>>> from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
>>> the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality
>itself,
>>> while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
>>> early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
>>> Planet Locator to identify them)
>>>
>>> There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this
>event
>>> unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
>>> range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
>>> another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at
>the
>>> time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral
>shadow.
>>> There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
>>> all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
>>> look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
>>> Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
>>> brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the
>Earth’s
>>> shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
>>> through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
>>> something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
>>> that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in
>its
>>> orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
>>> at roughly its own diameter each hour.
>>>
>>> While

Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread David Mann
Sky is clear for me but unfortunately the ground isn't :(

Cheers,
Dave

> On Sep 28, 2015, at 12:19 pm, John  wrote:
> 
> Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch of
> clear skies is several hundred miles away.
> 
> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>> From an email I received this afternoon:
>> 
>> 
>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>> 
>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>> evening ones.
> 
> 
> -- 
> Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
> Religion - Answers we must never question.
> 
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> PDML@pdml.net
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
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to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
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Re: PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread ann sanfedele
LOvely to get to see the colors - glad you and Paul got us something 
anyway...


ann

On 9/27/2015 11:44 PM, P.J. Alling wrote:
I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up on 
the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be high 
clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm 
f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have was 
also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the 
moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going 
to post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the attempt.


https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html 



Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid 
Catadioptric f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.


Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try 
to focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to 
force it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the 
camera onto the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest 
anyone thing this might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot 
with every lens combination whether manual or auto focused looked 
pretty much like the one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do kind 
of like it as an abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more 
detail.




On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

 From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola







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the directions.


PESO -- Cloudy Moon (was) Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread P.J. Alling
I went out to try to shoot the Super Moon/Eclipse and I've given up on 
the photography at least.  Not a total bust, but there seem to be high 
clouds obscuring any detail.  I tried to use the SMC Pentax M*300mm 
f4.0, my copy of which is a bit sharper than the A*300 I also have was 
also a bust.  coupled with the 1.7x AF adapter the camera thought the 
moon should be in focus but they all looked like the image I'm going to 
post just because I tried.  It's not good, but I did make the attempt.


https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/1604247/PESO/PESO%20--%20superbloodmoon.html

Equipment: Pentax K-5II w/vmc Vivitar Series 1 600mm Solid Catadioptric 
f8.0 and smc Pentax F 1.7x AF Adapter.


Note:  There was so little light the K-5II just simply refused to try to 
focus with the AF adapter and the Solid Cat lens mounted, I had to force 
it to focus to infinity with a different lens then mount the camera onto 
the Solid cat which was mounted on the tripod.  Lest anyone thing this 
might be the reason for the bad focus, every shot with every lens 
combination whether manual or auto focused looked pretty much like the 
one posted, just smaller on the frame.  I do kind of like it as an 
abstract, but I really wish that I had captured more detail.




On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

 From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola




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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Brian Walters
On Mon, Sep 28, 2015, at 01:24 PM, Knarf wrote:
> Stayed cloudy here. Not impressed.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> frank
> 


Nice and clear here - unfortunately we didn't get to see the eclipse.

I guess that's the way it goes - the last two total moon eclipses here
have been cloudy...



Cheers

Brian

++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney Australia
http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/




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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Knarf
Stayed cloudy here. Not impressed.

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 10:53:57 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  wrote:
>had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in...
>about 
>20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of
>anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (
>
>ann
>
>>
>> On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
>>> The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One
>can 
>>> still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.
>>>
>>> Hope that situation changes...
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> frank
>>>
>>> On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele 
>>>  wrote:
>>>> I see the moon from my window now
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>>> It's overcast here, unfortunately.
>>>>>
>>>>> Dan Matyola
>>>>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>>> Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in
>the
>>>> sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the
>Lake.
>>>>>> Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cheers,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> frank
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John
>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>> Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest
>>>> patch
>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>> clear skies is several hundred miles away.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>>>>>>From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>>>>>>> America
>>>>>>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows
>–
>>>> a
>>>>>>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which
>>>> occurred
>>>>>>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during
>convenient
>>>>>>>> evening ones.
>>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>>> Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>>>>>>> Religion - Answers we must never question.
>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>> follow the directions.
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>brevity.
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread ann sanfedele
had a decent view until about 10:15.. then the clouds rolled in... about 
20 minutes later I could just barely make out a hint of

anorangepenetratingthe light cloud cover.   :- (

ann



On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:
The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can 
still see moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.


Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele 
 wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the

sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 

wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred

in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

--
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread ann sanfedele
I can still see it but I'm hopeless at photographing this sort of 
thing... it is still just silver with a chunk out of its left side

hope it doesn't cloud over before it the moon turns red

ann

On 9/27/2015 9:02 PM, Knarf wrote:

The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can still see 
moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  wrote:

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 

wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the

sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 

wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest

patch

of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

   From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows –

a

total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which

occurred

in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

--
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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
No stars, no moon here, only clouds.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:57 PM, ann sanfedele  wrote:
> I see the moon from my window now
>
>
>
> On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>
>> It's overcast here, unfortunately.
>>
>> Dan Matyola
>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf  wrote:
>>>
>>> Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the sky
>>> and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.
>>>
>>> Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> frank
>>>
>>> On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 
>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch
>>>> of
>>>> clear skies is several hundred miles away.
>>>>
>>>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>   From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>>>
>>>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>>>>
>>>> America
>>>>>
>>>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>>>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
>>>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>>>> evening ones.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>>>> Religion - Answers we must never question.
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Knarf
The moon just disappeared behind a thin layer of clouds here. One can still see 
moonlight peeking through the clouds, but no moon.

Hope that situation changes...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 8:57:34 PM EDT, ann sanfedele  wrote:
>I see the moon from my window now
>
>
>On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>> It's overcast here, unfortunately.
>>
>> Dan Matyola
>> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf 
>wrote:
>>> Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the
>sky and clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.
>>>
>>> Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> frank
>>>
>>> On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John 
>wrote:
>>>> Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest
>patch
>>>> of
>>>> clear skies is several hundred miles away.
>>>>
>>>> On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>>>   From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>>>
>>>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>>>> America
>>>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows –
>a
>>>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which
>occurred
>>>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>>>> evening ones.
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>>>> Religion - Answers we must never question.
>>>>
>>>> --
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread ann sanfedele

I see the moon from my window now


On 9/27/2015 8:31 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf  wrote:

Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the sky and 
clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John  wrote:

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch
of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

  From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North

America

will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.


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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
It's overcast here, unfortunately.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 8:02 PM, Knarf  wrote:
> Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the sky and 
> clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.
>
> Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...
>
> Cheers,
>
> frank
>
> On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John  wrote:
>>Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch
>>of
>>clear skies is several hundred miles away.
>>
>>On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>>  From an email I received this afternoon:
>>>
>>>
>>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>>
>>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>>America
>>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
>>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>>> evening ones.
>>
>>
>>--
>>Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>>Religion - Answers we must never question.
>>
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Knarf
Looks like it might get a bit hazy but the moon's still low in the sky and 
clearly seen.  I think I missed a nice moonrise over the Lake.

Maybe I'll wander down and see what's what...

Cheers,

frank

On 27 September, 2015 7:19:31 PM EDT, John  wrote:
>Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch
>of
>clear skies is several hundred miles away.
>
>On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
>>  From an email I received this afternoon:
>>
>>
>> Total Lunar Eclipse!
>>
>> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North
>America
>> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
>> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
>> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
>> evening ones.
>
>
>-- 
>Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
>Religion - Answers we must never question.
>
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread John

Unfortunately, it's still heavily overcast around here. Nearest patch of
clear skies is several hundred miles away.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

 From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.



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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Ken Waller

That would be Hillary-us.

Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

- Original Message - 
From: "Daniel J. Matyola" 

Subject: Re: Total Lunar Eclipse



Go ahead, play your trump card.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 2:54 AM, Brian Walters  
wrote:

On Fri, Sep 25, 2015, at 03:36 PM, David Mann wrote:

On Sep 25, 2015, at 12:24 am, Daniel J. Matyola 
wrote:
>
> On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  
> wrote:

>> I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.
>
> I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics, 
> 


Hair hair.



Keep that up and there'll hell toupee...


Cheers

Brian

++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney Australia
http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Go ahead, play your trump card.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 2:54 AM, Brian Walters  wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 25, 2015, at 03:36 PM, David Mann wrote:
>> On Sep 25, 2015, at 12:24 am, Daniel J. Matyola 
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:
>> >> I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.
>> >
>> > I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics,  
>>
>> Hair hair.
>
>
> Keep that up and there'll hell toupee...
>
>
> Cheers
>
> Brian
>
> ++
> Brian Walters
> Western Sydney Australia
> http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/
>
> --
> --
>
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>
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-24 Thread Brian Walters
On Fri, Sep 25, 2015, at 03:36 PM, David Mann wrote:
> On Sep 25, 2015, at 12:24 am, Daniel J. Matyola 
> wrote:
> > 
> > On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:
> >> I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.
> > 
> > I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics,  
> 
> Hair hair.


Keep that up and there'll hell toupee...


Cheers

Brian

++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney Australia
http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-24 Thread David Mann
On Sep 25, 2015, at 12:24 am, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:
> 
> On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:
>> I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.
> 
> I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics,  

Hair hair.

Cheers,
Dave


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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-24 Thread John

I might have heard stories about politicians making sacrifices when I
was a young child.

On 9/24/2015 9:11 AM, P.J. Alling wrote:

I used to like it better when we didn't sacrifice humans, only politicians.

On 9/24/2015 8:24 AM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:

I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.

I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral
politics,  

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola






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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-24 Thread P.J. Alling

I used to like it better when we didn't sacrifice humans, only politicians.

On 9/24/2015 8:24 AM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:

I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.

I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics,  

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola




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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-24 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 1:13 AM, David Mann  wrote:
> I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.

I thought we were avoiding discussions of American electoral politics,  

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-23 Thread David Mann
Oh, I thought we were going to get to make some human sacrifices.

Cheers,
Dave

> On Sep 23, 2015, at 7:30 pm, Alan C  wrote:
> 
> Really, I don't know what all the fuss is about, unless perhaps you are a 
> statistician or just plain superstitious. A so called Super-Moon occurs if 
> the full moon is approximately at the closest point to earth on it's slightly 
> elliptical orbit. It appears slightly brighter than normal but the difference 
> is hardly noticeable. A lunar eclipse occurs if the full moon passes through 
> the shadow cast behind the earth by the sun.  It all depends on the alignment 
> of the three celestial bodies. On average, the alignment is right twice a 
> year. The odds of a total eclipse coinciding with a Super-Moon is quite 
> small. A partial eclipse is quite widely visible but the total eclipse is 
> only visible in a fairly narrow band. The term "Blood Moon" arises because, 
> at totality, the moon is illuminated only by red light refracted through the 
> earth's atmosphere.
> 
> Mind you, it still remains a sight to behold. Imagine if the Earth had 10 
> moons!
> 
> Alan C


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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-23 Thread John

It's just that when the "supermoon" lines up with the earth's shadow for
a total eclipse you get a deeper, more satisfying eclipse experience.

IF you have good weather to see it.

On 9/23/2015 3:30 AM, Alan C wrote:

Really, I don't know what all the fuss is about, unless perhaps you are
a statistician or just plain superstitious. A so called Super-Moon
occurs if the full moon is approximately at the closest point to earth
on it's slightly elliptical orbit. It appears slightly brighter than
normal but the difference is hardly noticeable. A lunar eclipse occurs
if the full moon passes through the shadow cast behind the earth by the
sun.  It all depends on the alignment of the three celestial bodies. On
average, the alignment is right twice a year. The odds of a total
eclipse coinciding with a Super-Moon is quite small. A partial eclipse
is quite widely visible but the total eclipse is only visible in a
fairly narrow band. The term "Blood Moon" arises because, at totality,
the moon is illuminated only by red light refracted through the earth's
atmosphere.

Mind you, it still remains a sight to behold. Imagine if the Earth had
10 moons!

Alan C

-Original Message- From: David Mann
Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2015 7:17 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

The media here said it’s going to be a supermoon as well.  We don’t get
to see the eclipse here :(

Cheers,
Dave


On Sep 23, 2015, at 7:18 am, Daniel J. Matyola 
wrote:

From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-23 Thread John

It's also supposed to be a "super-moon". Not sure how much good it's
going to do for me though.

Local forecast: Cloudy skies with patchy drizzle and light rain.

I'll give it a shot, but I ain't expecting much.

On 9/22/2015 3:18 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

 From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola



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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-23 Thread Alan C
Really, I don't know what all the fuss is about, unless perhaps you are a 
statistician or just plain superstitious. A so called Super-Moon occurs if 
the full moon is approximately at the closest point to earth on it's 
slightly elliptical orbit. It appears slightly brighter than normal but the 
difference is hardly noticeable. A lunar eclipse occurs if the full moon 
passes through the shadow cast behind the earth by the sun.  It all depends 
on the alignment of the three celestial bodies. On average, the alignment is 
right twice a year. The odds of a total eclipse coinciding with a Super-Moon 
is quite small. A partial eclipse is quite widely visible but the total 
eclipse is only visible in a fairly narrow band. The term "Blood Moon" 
arises because, at totality, the moon is illuminated only by red light 
refracted through the earth's atmosphere.


Mind you, it still remains a sight to behold. Imagine if the Earth had 10 
moons!


Alan C

-Original Message- 
From: David Mann

Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2015 7:17 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

The media here said it’s going to be a supermoon as well.  We don’t get to 
see the eclipse here :(


Cheers,
Dave

On Sep 23, 2015, at 7:18 am, Daniel J. Matyola  
wrote:


From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-22 Thread David Mann
The media here said it’s going to be a supermoon as well.  We don’t get to see 
the eclipse here :(

Cheers,
Dave

> On Sep 23, 2015, at 7:18 am, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:
> 
> From an email I received this afternoon:
> 
> 
> Total Lunar Eclipse!
> 
> On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
> will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
> total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
> in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
> evening ones.
> 
> This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
> dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
> continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
> Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
> hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
> from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
> the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
> while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
> early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
> Planet Locator to identify them)
> 
> There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
> unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
> range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
> another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
> time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
> There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
> all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
> look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
> Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
> brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
> shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
> through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
> something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
> that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
> orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
> at roughly its own diameter each hour.
> 
> While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
> alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
> best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
> 10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
> second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
> relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
> coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
> suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
> amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
> 3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
> in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
> described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!
> 
> —James Mullaney
> Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
> books on stargazing.
> 
> Dan Matyola
> http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
> 
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Re: Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-22 Thread Igor PDML-StR


Dan, thank you for the heads-up.

The timing might allow me showing this interesting phenomenon to my
little daughter (for the first time).
I am hoping for a sufficiently clear sky.

Just a quick comment on your correspondent's statement:
"Notice, too, that the Earth's
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round.
something recognized by many early skywatchers."

But it is not yet a complete proof that Earth is not flat! The same 
could be observed if the Earth were, say, a disk.

(That's a physicist speaks. :-) )

Igor


Daniel J. Matyola Tue, 22 Sep 2015 12:19:18 -0700 wrote:


From an email I received this afternoon:



Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature.s grandest celestial sky shows . a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth.s
dark inner shadow (the .umbra.) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics. Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

...

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Total Lunar Eclipse

2015-09-22 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
From an email I received this afternoon:


Total Lunar Eclipse!

On the evening of September 27th, skywatchers throughout North America
will be treated to one of nature’s grandest celestial sky shows – a
total eclipse of the Moon. And unlike the one in April which occurred
in the early predawn hours, this one will happen during convenient
evening ones.

This cosmic spectacular begins with the full Moon entering the Earth’s
dark inner shadow (the “umbra”) at 9:06 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time and
continuing to become ever-more fully immersed in it for the next hour.
Totality itself will start at 10:11 p.m. EDT and last more than an
hour until 11:23 EDT, after which the Moon begins to slowly emerge
from the cone of darkness in reverse order. Adding to the beauty of
the overall scene at this eclipse (especially during totality itself,
while the sky is dark), the Moon will be accompanied by some of the
early rising bright winter stars. (Use your Scientifics’ Star and
Planet Locator to identify them)

There are several interesting things to notice as you watch this event
unfold. Most obvious are the darkness of the eclipsed Moon and the
range of colors displayed, both of which vary from one eclipse to
another. These depend on the clarity of the Earth’s atmosphere at the
time, which refracts or bends sunlight around into the umbral shadow.
There have actually been eclipses so dark that the Moon remained
all-but invisible during totality — and ones so pale that you had to
look carefully to see that there was even an eclipse in progress!
Among the colors that have been seen are shades of reddish-orange,
brown, copper, rose, and even blood-red. Notice, too, that the Earth’s
shadow is curved at all phases of the eclipse, as the Moon passes
through it. This is direct proof that the Earth itself is round —
something recognized by many early skywatchers. And finally, realize
that you’re actually seeing our lovely satellite move eastward in its
orbit — as it first passes into, through, and then out of the shadow
at roughly its own diameter each hour.

While lunar eclipses can certainly be enjoyed with the unaided eye
alone (as they have been throughout most of history!), they are
best-seen in binoculars. An ideal pair for this would be a 7×50 or
10×50 glass, the first number indicating its magnification and the
second the aperture in millimeters. Telescopes themselves, with their
relatively narrow fields of view, typically don’t provide enough sky
coverage around the Moon to get the full effect of its globe being
suspended in space. An exception here, however, is Scientifics’
amazing Astroscan wide-field reflecting telescope. Providing a
3-degree actual field of view at it low magnification of 16x, it takes
in an astounding six full-Moon-diameters of sky — something many have
described as looking through the porthole of a spaceship!

—James Mullaney
Former assistant editor at Sky & Telescope magazine and author of 10
books on stargazing.

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-09 Thread Stanley Halpin
Nice sequence Larry - thanks.

On Oct 8, 2014, at 2:57 PM, Larry Colen  wrote:

> 
> 
> Igor PDML-StR wrote:
>> 
>> Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
>> As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
>> Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
>> http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
>> And here is how to watch it:
>> http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html
>> 
>> I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.
> 
> Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.
> 
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/
> 
> The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept wishing 
> my bigma were longer and faster though.  Tight crops are 1048 pixels on a 
> side.
> 
> 
>> Cheers,
>> 
>> Igor
>> 
> 
> -- 
> Larry Colen  l...@red4est.com (postbox on min4est)
> 
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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Larry Colen
Thanks Ann and Igor.

On October 8, 2014 6:51:07 PM PDT, Ann Sanfedele  wrote:
>Good to see, LArry - next best thing to in person - which was not 
>possible here :-(
>
>ann
>
>On 10/8/2014 14:57, Larry Colen wrote:
>>
>>
>> Igor PDML-StR wrote:
>>>
>>> Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
>>> As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
>>> Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
>>> http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
>>> And here is how to watch it:
>>> http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html
>>>
>>> I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.
>>
>> Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.
>>
>> https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/
>>
>> The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept
>> wishing my bigma were longer and faster though.  Tight crops are 1048
>> pixels on a side.
>>
>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>
>>> Igor
>>>
>>

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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Ann Sanfedele
Good to see, LArry - next best thing to in person - which was not 
possible here :-(


ann

On 10/8/2014 14:57, Larry Colen wrote:



Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.


Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/

The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept
wishing my bigma were longer and faster though.  Tight crops are 1048
pixels on a side.



Cheers,

Igor





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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Igor PDML-StR


Larry,

Those are very nice images!
I've been woken up by my daughter at 4:40am local time, but at that point 
I didn't recall about the eclipse, and didn't try to look out of the 
window... :-(


For others: sorry about the smoke-screen over your front-row seats. :-)

Igor


Larry Colen Wed, 08 Oct 2014 11:57:41 -0700 wrote:


Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.


Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/

The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept 
wishing my bigma were longer and faster though. Tight crops are 1048 
pixels on a side.





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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread J C OConnell
One of these days Im going to drag out  my 1000mm/F8 takumar and give it 
a try on digital/lunar.

jco
On 10/8/2014 2:57 PM, Larry Colen wrote:



Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.


Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/

The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept 
wishing my bigma were longer and faster though.  Tight crops are 1048 
pixels on a side.




Cheers,

Igor






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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Larry Colen



Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.


Thanks.  It was already on my todo list.  I've posted a few so far.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/sets/72157648530723801/

The astrotracer really rocked the red moon. As to be expected I kept 
wishing my bigma were longer and faster though.  Tight crops are 1048 
pixels on a side.




Cheers,

Igor



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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Ann Sanfedele

NOthing but clouds here, and actually my little four pawed roomie
woke me up just about the right time :-(

ann

On 10/8/2014 09:30, Bruce Walker wrote:

Thanks for the heads-up, Igor. The sky cleared here and I was able to
catch some glimpses through a window at 1/4, 3/4 and full eclipse.
Pretty cool colour. I was unable to get any shots though; terrible
sight lines and it was just about to go below the neighbor's roofline
at 6:25 AM at full eclipse.


On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 1:18 AM, Igor PDML-StR  wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New Zealand
got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.

Cheers,

Igor

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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Bruce Walker
Thanks for the heads-up, Igor. The sky cleared here and I was able to
catch some glimpses through a window at 1/4, 3/4 and full eclipse.
Pretty cool colour. I was unable to get any shots though; terrible
sight lines and it was just about to go below the neighbor's roofline
at 6:25 AM at full eclipse.


On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 1:18 AM, Igor PDML-StR  wrote:
>
> Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
> As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New Zealand
> got the "best seats" for the spectacle.
> http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
> And here is how to watch it:
> http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html
>
> I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Igor
>
> --
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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread Brian Walters

Quoting Igor PDML-StR :


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New  
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.



Sadly, not me.  Cloud rules in western Sydney.



--
Cheers

Brian

++
Brian Walters
Western Sydney Australia
http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/



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Re: lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-08 Thread P.J. Alling
As usual with any interesting astronomical event, the weather is bad, 
rain and wind...


On 10/8/2014 1:18 AM, Igor PDML-StR wrote:


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New 
Zealand got the "best seats" for the spectacle.

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.

Cheers,

Igor




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immortality through not dying.
-- Woody Allen


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lunar eclipse tonight

2014-10-07 Thread Igor PDML-StR


Well, just in case: there will be a lunar eclipse tonight.
As far as I understand the chart, US West Coast, Austalia and New Zealand 
got the "best seats" for the spectacle.

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-29522648
And here is how to watch it:
http://www.space.com/27353-total-lunar-eclipse-october8-guide.html

I hope some PDMLers might benefit from this info.

Cheers,

Igor

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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread David Mann
Maybe in your part of NZ.  It was raining down here so I saw nothing.

I wouldn't have photographed it anyway...

Cheers,
Dave

On Apr 15, 2014, at 10:20 pm, Alastair Robertson  
wrote:

> Good views here in NZ - cloudless following a southerly straight from
> antarctica to clean the air yesterday. Unfortunately camera was at
> work!
> 
> Alastair
> 
> On 15 April 2014 21:25, Brian Walters  wrote:
>> Quoting Joseph McAllister :
>> 
>>> Though I started setting up the telescope, and readied the K5 on a tripod,
>>> as predicted yesterday by the evil weather forecasters, Puget Sound's skies
>>> filled with medium to thick clouds tonight. The moon, shining brilliantly
>>> with it's accompanying stars the past three nights, could only present a
>>> faint and fuzzy version of itself beginning shortly after sunset.
>>> 
>>> Begrudgingly packed it all away tonight after realizing there would be no
>>> skyjoy in my land tonight.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Sadly, the same here.
>> 
>> I didn't even bother setting up - the cloud was present from mid afternoon.
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Cheers
>> 
>> Brian
>> 
>> ++
>> Brian Walters
>> Western Sydney Australia
>> http://lyons-ryan.org/southernlight/
>> 
>> 
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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread Darren Addy
You are right P.J.
Thanks for pointing that out. That's what I get for working on a dusty
monitor. Wiped the dust away and I could clearly see it. DOH!

Back to the drawing board.

On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 1:54 PM, P.J. Alling  wrote:
> I'm seeing a lot more digital noise in the black of space here.
>
>
> On 4/15/2014 2:41 PM, Darren Addy wrote:
>>
>> Thanks to all who looked and all who commented.
>>
>> I had a little more time to massage the image over my lunch break. I
>> think this is a bit of an improvement, but you be the judge:
>>
>> Original: https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/
>> Improved? : https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13877115103/
>>
>> This is simply working on the out-of-camera JPEG. I'm sure that much
>> more could be accomplished by starting with the RAW file.
>>
>
>
> --
> A newspaper is a device for making the ignorant more ignorant, and the
> crazy, crazier.
>
>  - H.L.Mencken
>
>
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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread P.J. Alling

I'm seeing a lot more digital noise in the black of space here.

On 4/15/2014 2:41 PM, Darren Addy wrote:

Thanks to all who looked and all who commented.

I had a little more time to massage the image over my lunch break. I
think this is a bit of an improvement, but you be the judge:

Original: https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/
Improved? : https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13877115103/

This is simply working on the out-of-camera JPEG. I'm sure that much
more could be accomplished by starting with the RAW file.




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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread steve harley

on 2014-04-15 10:28 Ann Sanfedele wrote

Well I say good job!
How beautiful it is -  staying up until 2 am would have been easy for me but we
had solid cloud cover in the Big Apple :-(  Foggy and drizzly now - storm 
coming..


i just popped out onto my bedroom balcony at twoish (a.m., MST) and got a 
lovely view of it, cold night, through the branches of a not-yet-leafed-out locust


made no effort to photograph, but i have some minor envy of Darren's 
astrophotography course




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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread Darren Addy
Thanks to all who looked and all who commented.

I had a little more time to massage the image over my lunch break. I
think this is a bit of an improvement, but you be the judge:

Original: https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/
Improved? : https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13877115103/

This is simply working on the out-of-camera JPEG. I'm sure that much
more could be accomplished by starting with the RAW file.

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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread P.J. Alling
As others have noted weather in Northeast is miserable early spring.  
Starting with Cloudy last night cold rain today.  I can expect this 
whenever there's an interesting astronomical event.


On 4/14/2014 5:27 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

Anyone going to try to photograph the lunar eclipse tonight?

It will be a bust in the eastern part of the US, but should be
beautiful out west:

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/04/14/total-lunar-eclipse-to-reveal-blood-moon-in-night-sky/

Damn, I wish I could be in Maui tonight.  The Kihei Canoe Club in
having a moonlight paddle, which it does every month, but this one
will be something really special!

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola




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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread Ann Sanfedele

Well I say good job!
How beautiful it is -  staying up until 2 am would have been easy for me 
but we had solid cloud cover in the Big Apple :-(  Foggy and drizzly now 
- storm coming..


(i've done that AM PM switch more often than I care to remember :-( )

ann

On 4/15/2014 10:08, Darren Addy wrote:

This was one of our planned astrophotography classes, but since my
wife was ill, and I figured I could do it as easily from my yard, I
did not attend the class at the observatory. I set my phone alarm to
1:35 AM (I thought) but somehow made it PM. I awoke a couple of
minutes after 3 AM and hurried out the front door with the equipment I
had set up the night before.

One dumb thing I did was attache my p0 ballhead to the K-01, instead
of the Bigma's tripod foot. No idea why I did that, but the Arca-Swiss
monoball p0 did a find job of supporting the whole thing with no sag,
even racked out to 500mm. I was very impressed with that.

I haven't had time to closely look at all of the images, but it was
obvious on the Live View/Focus Peaking that there were moments of
better seeing and other moments of blur, due to the atmosphere. I shot
with the 2 sec self-timer to hopefully let any movement from my
pressing the shutter button settle down. (No mirror flop to worry
about with the K-01)

Three images up on Flickr (sorry to those of you who hate it)
The last image is a straight crop of the 2nd, which shows the full
frame at 500mm.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871281925/in/photostream/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871747733/in/photostream/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/in/photostream/


If it is clear for the next one in October, I think I will try to
bracket and HDR to include some stars in the image. Hopefully I will
be a little better acquainted with my tracking equipment and will be
able to do a time lapse, of that one, as well. With a little planning
I could probably be shooting both cameras on different tracking
equipment (K-5 II and the K-01).

On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 8:11 AM, Steve Sharpe  wrote:

On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 22:20:53 +1200, Alastair Robertson wrote:

Good views here in NZ - cloudless following a southerly straight from
antarctica to clean the air yesterday. Unfortunately camera was at
work!


My wife, who's one of those Early Morning People, dragged me out of bed
at 5:15am to have a look. It was quite a pretty sight under a hazy sky,
with Mars and Spica nearby. Didn't photograph it, though. Went back to
bed, instead.

---

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d...@eastlink.ca

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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Excellent!

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola


On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 10:08 AM, Darren Addy  wrote:
> This was one of our planned astrophotography classes, but since my
> wife was ill, and I figured I could do it as easily from my yard, I
> did not attend the class at the observatory. I set my phone alarm to
> 1:35 AM (I thought) but somehow made it PM. I awoke a couple of
> minutes after 3 AM and hurried out the front door with the equipment I
> had set up the night before.
>
> One dumb thing I did was attache my p0 ballhead to the K-01, instead
> of the Bigma's tripod foot. No idea why I did that, but the Arca-Swiss
> monoball p0 did a find job of supporting the whole thing with no sag,
> even racked out to 500mm. I was very impressed with that.
>
> I haven't had time to closely look at all of the images, but it was
> obvious on the Live View/Focus Peaking that there were moments of
> better seeing and other moments of blur, due to the atmosphere. I shot
> with the 2 sec self-timer to hopefully let any movement from my
> pressing the shutter button settle down. (No mirror flop to worry
> about with the K-01)
>
> Three images up on Flickr (sorry to those of you who hate it)
> The last image is a straight crop of the 2nd, which shows the full
> frame at 500mm.
>
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871281925/in/photostream/
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871747733/in/photostream/
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/in/photostream/
>
>
> If it is clear for the next one in October, I think I will try to
> bracket and HDR to include some stars in the image. Hopefully I will
> be a little better acquainted with my tracking equipment and will be
> able to do a time lapse, of that one, as well. With a little planning
> I could probably be shooting both cameras on different tracking
> equipment (K-5 II and the K-01).
>
> On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 8:11 AM, Steve Sharpe  wrote:
>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 22:20:53 +1200, Alastair Robertson wrote:
>>> Good views here in NZ - cloudless following a southerly straight from
>>> antarctica to clean the air yesterday. Unfortunately camera was at
>>> work!
>>
>> My wife, who's one of those Early Morning People, dragged me out of bed
>> at 5:15am to have a look. It was quite a pretty sight under a hazy sky,
>> with Mars and Spica nearby. Didn't photograph it, though. Went back to
>> bed, instead.
>>
>> ---
>>
>> Steven Sharpe - The Office Gallery
>>
>> d...@eastlink.ca
>>
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Re: Lunar Eclipse

2014-04-15 Thread Bruce Walker
I love the colour and detail in that crop image.


On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 10:08 AM, Darren Addy  wrote:
> This was one of our planned astrophotography classes, but since my
> wife was ill, and I figured I could do it as easily from my yard, I
> did not attend the class at the observatory. I set my phone alarm to
> 1:35 AM (I thought) but somehow made it PM. I awoke a couple of
> minutes after 3 AM and hurried out the front door with the equipment I
> had set up the night before.
>
> One dumb thing I did was attache my p0 ballhead to the K-01, instead
> of the Bigma's tripod foot. No idea why I did that, but the Arca-Swiss
> monoball p0 did a find job of supporting the whole thing with no sag,
> even racked out to 500mm. I was very impressed with that.
>
> I haven't had time to closely look at all of the images, but it was
> obvious on the Live View/Focus Peaking that there were moments of
> better seeing and other moments of blur, due to the atmosphere. I shot
> with the 2 sec self-timer to hopefully let any movement from my
> pressing the shutter button settle down. (No mirror flop to worry
> about with the K-01)
>
> Three images up on Flickr (sorry to those of you who hate it)
> The last image is a straight crop of the 2nd, which shows the full
> frame at 500mm.
>
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871281925/in/photostream/
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871747733/in/photostream/
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/pixelsmithy/13871717785/in/photostream/
>
>
> If it is clear for the next one in October, I think I will try to
> bracket and HDR to include some stars in the image. Hopefully I will
> be a little better acquainted with my tracking equipment and will be
> able to do a time lapse, of that one, as well. With a little planning
> I could probably be shooting both cameras on different tracking
> equipment (K-5 II and the K-01).
>
> On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 8:11 AM, Steve Sharpe  wrote:
>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2014 22:20:53 +1200, Alastair Robertson wrote:
>>> Good views here in NZ - cloudless following a southerly straight from
>>> antarctica to clean the air yesterday. Unfortunately camera was at
>>> work!
>>
>> My wife, who's one of those Early Morning People, dragged me out of bed
>> at 5:15am to have a look. It was quite a pretty sight under a hazy sky,
>> with Mars and Spica nearby. Didn't photograph it, though. Went back to
>> bed, instead.
>>
>> ---
>>
>> Steven Sharpe - The Office Gallery
>>
>> d...@eastlink.ca
>>
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>
>
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> look like photographs.
> ~ Alfred Stieglitz
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-- 
-bmw

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