Author | Thread |
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03/05/2007 09:22:50 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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03/03/2007 07:05:14 PM |
Try taking a photo when it isn't full. You will be much more pleased with the results. During the gibbous or cresent stage, the interface between dark and light will reveal the topography of the moon's surface. Apply some curves, some filters, and you'll have one heck of a photo!
Also, if you have the time, take a photo every 5 minutes. Also watch carefully at the shadows, you will see them move. Essentially you will observe sunrise/sunset on the moon! |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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03/03/2007 05:32:24 PM |
beautiful i just love these pictures, so does this mean you live on the moon? :) |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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03/03/2007 03:32:16 PM |
Good moon shot, I can never do those. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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03/03/2007 12:38:45 PM |
You know there's a lunar eclipse today? NASA Eclipse Page
It would be visible where you are if it weren't happening during broad daylight. But in the future I expect to see eclipse shots from you. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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