Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/12/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Just found this, a time-lapse sequence of the entire Winter Solstice lunar eclipse from start to finish, as seen from Florida. Well worth watching, and you don't have to stand out in the cold for hours to see it. And the rendition of some of the partial phases demonstrates how and why automation doesn't always give the best exposure. <http://laughingsquid.com/winter-solstice-lunar-eclipse-time-lapse/> Here in Seattle, we had variable high, thin clouds for the first half of the eclipse, so we could see the moon some of the time. I saw the first little "cookie bite" out of the moon, and also the first few minutes of totality--a nice view of the coppery moon with a tiny bit of brightening along the edge. The thin clouds made the moon's features variably fuzzy, it wouldn't have made a good picture. And the coppery hue was much more apparent through binoculars. Then thicker clouds rolled in, and that was that. I didn't try to photograph, I just enjoyed the experience. --Peter