Supermoon over Banff, Alberta
Taken by Alan Dyer on August 10, 2014 @ Banff, Alberta, Canada
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  Camera Used: Canon Canon EOS 6D
Exposure Time: 6/1
Aperture: f/5.6
ISO: 400
Date Taken: 2014:08:11 10:18:00
 
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A much-publicized “super moon” rises over Mt. Rundle and Banff townsite. I joined a small crowd of moon watchers at the Mt. Norquay viewpoint last night, Sunday, August 10, to view the rising of the super moon, the closest Full Moon of 2014. Of course, no one could possibly detect that this moon was any bigger or brighter than any other moon. Nevertheless, everyone saw an impressive sight and went away happy. I shot this image at the end of a 700-frame time-lapse, at about 10:15 p.m. This is an HDR “high-dynamic-range” stack of 8 exposures, from dark and underexposed (to capture the bright sky around the Moon) to bright and overexposed (to capture the foreground and dark trees). Yes, I have cranked up the HDR effect a little, to beyond “natural.” But I think the result looks striking and brings out the structure in the clouds that hid the Moon at first. Think what you will of “super moons,” they get people outside, looking up and marvelling. In this case, the PR prompted a moonwatch party on a fine summer Sunday evening in one of the most scenic places on the planet.
Photographer's website:
http://www.amazingsky.net
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