Supermoon Sunday...
Posted: Mon May 07, 2012 12:36 pm
We headed down to Dawes Point under the southern end of the Sydney Harbour Bridge because The Photographers Ephemeris indicated that the moon would rise directly behind the Sydney Opera House and as luck would have it also approximately at the same time as sunset and twilight (moonrise at 5:06PM and sunset at 5:09PM behind us):
Sunset and early twilight was very pretty with soft pastel colours in the sky
Unfortunately we'd setup too far to the right and the moon was already above the horizon behind the Opera House before we moved over to the left just in front of the main bridge pilon. From here we could watch as the moon rose whilst there was still a little light and a touch of colour left in the sky
Actually truth be told it didn't seem all that much bigger than normal but having it lined up with the Sydney Opera House with a nice clear sky behind it was pretty good.
As the moon rose and twilight headed towards full night and it became progressively much darker we moved back up the hill a little towards our original setup location
By now I was bracketing exposures (at +-2 stops with a base exposure of at least -4EV to cope with the very bright moon). The -6EV exposure results in an almost black sky but with a nicely exposed moon and the -2EV exposure results in some colour in the sky and detail on the SOH but a nuclear moon. For the following I took the three exposures into photoshop and blended the moon from the better layers into the layer for the environment
Eventually we moved back to where we'd started with the moon directly above the sails (and a little behind) but the sky was so dark by this stage that nothing I took at this time with the sails was really salvageable.
Sunset and early twilight was very pretty with soft pastel colours in the sky
Unfortunately we'd setup too far to the right and the moon was already above the horizon behind the Opera House before we moved over to the left just in front of the main bridge pilon. From here we could watch as the moon rose whilst there was still a little light and a touch of colour left in the sky
Actually truth be told it didn't seem all that much bigger than normal but having it lined up with the Sydney Opera House with a nice clear sky behind it was pretty good.
As the moon rose and twilight headed towards full night and it became progressively much darker we moved back up the hill a little towards our original setup location
By now I was bracketing exposures (at +-2 stops with a base exposure of at least -4EV to cope with the very bright moon). The -6EV exposure results in an almost black sky but with a nicely exposed moon and the -2EV exposure results in some colour in the sky and detail on the SOH but a nuclear moon. For the following I took the three exposures into photoshop and blended the moon from the better layers into the layer for the environment
Eventually we moved back to where we'd started with the moon directly above the sails (and a little behind) but the sky was so dark by this stage that nothing I took at this time with the sails was really salvageable.