Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
12.00" x 7.00"
Mat Border:
2.00"
Frame Width:
0.88"
Overall:
17.50" x 12.50"
2019 Lunar Eclipse composite image sequence from Wisconsin Framed Print
by Peter Herman
Product Details
2019 Lunar Eclipse composite image sequence from Wisconsin framed print by Peter Herman. Bring your print to life with hundreds of different frame and mat combinations. Our framed prints are assembled, packaged, and shipped by our expert framing staff and delivered "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
It was a bitter cold last night (close to 0F), but so very clear, so I just had to attempt a lunar eclipse sequence and create some sort of aesthetic... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Framed Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (1)
Artist's Description
It was a bitter cold last night (close to 0F), but so very clear, so I just had to attempt a lunar eclipse sequence and create some sort of aesthetic composite result. Each moon image is a separate frame, aligned in the order and approximate position that they occurred as the moon slid into earth's shadow - proceeding from "full moon" up to totality and then beyond as it slid out of shadow. First stages are recorded in ~15 minute jumps up to totality. Totality was a single longish exposure (~10sec) since moon gets very dim then. And final blurred stage is a ~15 minute long exposure to let the moon slide out of the frame (due to earth rotation).
Captured 1/20/19 with Pentax K-1 and DA*300mm lens - various exposure settings (up to 10 sec with polar tracking on the totality image, and ~15 minute exposure for final image)
About Peter Herman
Peter Herman was born and raised on a farm in North Dakota. He first became interested in photography during high-school, and after acquiring a Pentax SLR, began taking photos for the school yearbook and developing/printing B&W images in school darkroom. He continued shooting through college, taking portraits, group pictures, weddings, but after beginning his engineering career at Cummins, he let his photography interests go dormant until about 2005 when he acquired his first DSLR and started shooting scenic landscapes from around the US, but concentrating especially on rural areas in ND and WI. Many of his images were encountered while riding motorcycle down random backroads during "golden hour", searching for that magic light...
$89.00
Christopher McKenzie
Thanks for braving the low temperatures to capture this...it was cloudy where I was.