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acr_astro

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Posts posted by acr_astro

  1. Dear all,

    after coming home from work this afternoon, I decided to do a solar sketch in my garden at pretty hot 35°C. Now cooling down in my 23°C living room with the blinds down, I'd like to share a striking large prominence at the limb with you. I have never seen such a large one before:

    20200731_Sun_H_alpha_01.JPG.bfff079d9a05ef796d7254482817adb2.JPG

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT
    Eyepiece: Celestron X-Cel 10mm
    Date & Time: July 31st, 2020 / 1600-1630 CEST
    Location: home garden, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: reddish Koh-i-Noor Toison d'Or pastels and pastel pens on black Hahnemühle mould-made pastel paper
    Size: 24 x 31 cm

    Clear and sunny skies!

    Achim

    • Like 13
  2. Dear all,

    today we're having a sunny day with just some small cumulus over here in Germany. So a great opportunity to try my new black mould-made paper doing a pastel sketch of the H alpha sun. Here's the result:

    20200713_Sun_H_alpha_small.jpg.902ec3f835659b56837624bf36617d29.jpg

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT

    Eyepiece: Celestron X-Cel 10mm

    Date & Time: July 13th, 2020 / 1530-1600 CEST

    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany

    Technique: reddish Koh-i-Noor Toison d'Or pastels and pastel pens on black Hahnemühle mould-made pastel paper

    Size: 24 x 31 cm

    Clear and sunny skies!

    Achim

    • Like 7
  3. Dear all,

    I have recently purchased dark blue mould-made pastel paper and yesterday I had the opportunity to use it in dusk to do a chalk sketch of the waxing crescent moon. The paper color fit well with the evening sky.

    But since charcoal for the shadows would have been looking odd, I decided to try a new technique for the dark areas. Even though you're lacking the ability to sketch really small details, I used a kneadable eraser for the terminator and craters. For the smaller craters, I additionally used a metal erasing pattern to erase just a small circle.

    So in the end, this moon is made of just chalk.
    (apparently no cheese :grin:)

    20200624_Moon_3d_01.JPG.75f24a0f888854288c80d4fb9970450d.JPG

     

    Telescope: TS 70/420 ED
    Eyepiece: ExploreScientific 6.7mm/82°
    Date & Time:  June 24th, 2200-2300 CEST
    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: Koh-i-Noor chalk pen and kneadable eraser on dark blue Hahnemühle mould-made pastel paper
    Size: 24 x 31 cm

    Clear and skies!

    Achim

    • Like 3
  4. Hello Mike,

    a very detailed sketch! I like the realistic 3D way your're depicting the crater rims and shadows and the grey tones and textures of the lunar surface!

    Clear skies!

    Achim

  5. Dear all,

    tonight I have hoped to get a clear sky to observe and sketch the Golden Handle of Sinus Iridum and I've been lucky: Just interrupted by some smaller clouds and dimmed by cirrus, I was able to sketch it. Here you are:

    20200601_Golden_Handle_small.JPG.3e233f7ce2c5cb4e715b9d0177d955d4.JPG

    Telescope: Martini 10" f/5 truss-tube Dobsonian
    Eyepiece: Explore Scientific 6.7mm/82°
    Date & Time: June 1st, 2020 / 2215-2315 CEST
    Location: Home terrace, Dusseldorf Region, Germany
    Technique: Koh-i-Noor chalk, extra charcoal and whitecoal pens and pieces on black sketching paper
    Size: appr. 25x25cm

    Clear skies!

    Achim

    • Like 3
  6. Hello Mike,

    that's a wonderful sketch of this large - and famous - lunar area!

    I have the three craters named after the Apollo 11 astronsuts on my lunar target list for quite some time. I should make them some evening.

    So I see your sketch as an awesome reminder for me ;)

    Clear skies!

    Achim

    • Thanks 1
  7. Dear all,

    yesterday I've sketched the 134km pre-nectarian lunar crater Walther at the terminator. Whether it's Walter or Walther is a bit of a mystery: Rukl, the "Atlas and Gazetteer of the near side of the moon" and the Clementine Atlas call it Walter, John Moore, Wikipedia and the IAU call it Walther. So it's a bit like "Where's Waldo"...

    However here it is:

    20200529_Crater_Walther_small.thumb.jpg.f922844ba83d5e0dd94e4132e5b81534.jpg

    Telescope: Martini 10" f/5 truss-tube Dobsonian

    Eyepiece: Explore Scientific 6.7mm/82°

    Date & Time: May 29th, 2020 / 2230-2330 CEST

    Location: Home terrace, Dusseldorf Region, Germany

    Technique: Koh-i-Noor chalk, extra charcoal and whitecoal pens and pieces on Seawhite of Brighton black sketching paper

    Size: appr. 20x25cm

     

    Clear skies!

    Achim

    • Like 6
  8. Dear all,

    as visible on the GONG H alpha network monitor on the internet, there's a nice, pretty large prominence on the solar limb. So I set up my gear and looked by myself during my lunch break. As usual the sketch is R/L-mirrored. Here it is:

    IMG_20200526_210003.jpg.1826957c9d16845db1e4bee957b38e72.jpg

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT

    Eyepiece: Celestron X-Cel 10mm

    Date & Time:  May 26th, 2020 / 1315-1345 CEST

    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany

    Technique: reddish Koh-i-Noor Toison d'Or pastels and pastel pens on grey Hahnemühle mould-made pastel paper

    Size: 24 x 31 cm

     

    Clear and sunny skies!

    Achim

    • Like 5
  9. Dear all,

    compared to four days ago, the solar disc and the prominences looked a bit more interestingly varied. I could do a sketch during the lunch break:

    20200519_Sun_H_alpha_small.jpg.09e3dc1fdbcdd908b2c648880fb8bda3.jpg

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT
    Eyepiece: Celestron X-cel 10mm
    Date & Time: May 19th, 2020 / 1300-1330 CEST
    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: red and orange Koh-i-Noor pastels and pastel pens on grey Canson Mi-Teintes pastel paper
    Size: 24 x 32 cm

    Clear (and sunny) skies!

    Achim

     

    • Like 1
  10. Hi all,

    as well today the sun is shining brightly here. I set up the Lunt to have a look at it, at first just for observing. However, somehow I cannot resist and have to do a sketch wink.gif This time I've chosen reddish pastels on grey paper to better catch the color of the view in the eyepiece.

    20200515_Sun_H_alpha_small.JPG.343279f1fa19fc751cf4c05660dba14e.JPG

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT
    Eyepiece: Celestron X-cel 10mm
    Date & Time: May 15th, 2020 / 1400-1430 CEST
    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: red and orange Koh-i-Noor pastels and pastel pens on grey Canson Mi-Teintes pastel paper
    Size: 24 x 32 cm

    Clear (and sunny) skies!

    Achim

    • Like 4
  11. Dear all,

    after a fast-changing mixture of sun, clouds and showers yesterday, it cleared up during the evening -- as promised in the weather forecast. I had carried my 10" f/5 truss-tube dobsonian telescope to the terrace at 6 p.m. already. So it was perfectly cooled down at 9 p.m. when the clouds had vanished. The air was clear and seeing was good too. Honestly I don't remember such a clear view on the moon for years.

    This time I selected the famous crater Tycho - which I have never sketched since starting with lunar sketching six years ago! So this time it was up to Tycho to be finally sketched. Named after the famous Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) who worked on a star catalogue, a model of the solar system (with the earth in the center, the sun, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn circulating around it - but Mercur and Venus circulating around the sun crazy.gif ) and who discovered a Super Nova in Cassiopeia in 1572. Tycho has been working in his observatory on the small island Ven in the Oresund between Denmark and Sweden. We have visited the island and the museum two years ago during our summer holiday. And last autumn, I brought a commemorative 20 DKK coin from our vacation in Denmark:

    20200503_113743_01.JPG.0284693c5aaea0f07d8640622b527a70.JPG

    But now back to the crater: When looking at the moon with binoculars you see the dominant bright rays from Tycho's impact across the south west of the moon. Tycho has a diameter of 85km and is about 4.8 kilometers deep. I was impressed by the wonderful pair of central peaks. The slopes on the southwestern rim and the structured crater floor where great to observe and sketch as well. I added the smaller craters (listed starting from North in counter-clockwise direction) Sasserides F, Tycho T, F and U, Tycho E and Tycho B in the south west. Now I've learned that Surveyor 7 has landed in January 1968 between Sasseriedes F and Tycho T.

    All right, after all of this text, here's the sketch:

    20200502_Tycho_small.jpg.efa9f50ce64429ba947f7615ce47d382.jpg

    Telescope: Martini 10" f/5 truss-tube Dobson
    Eyepiece: ExploreScientific 6.7mm/82°
    Date & Time: May 2nd, 2020, 2100-2145 CEST
    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: Koh-i-Noor chalk and carcoal pens on black sketching paper
    Size: appr. 10" x 10"

    Clear skies!

    Achim

    • Like 11
  12. Dear all,

    yesterday evening I did a tiny sketch of the waxing crescent moon. While observing, I detected a star half a lunar diameter away from the lunar north pole. I looked it up and identified it as 105 Tau.

    At the beginning of the sketch at 0900 CEST, the earth shine was not visible yet. But during sketching it appeared.

    IMG_20200427_113502.jpg.4db9b8791f9803027c966df406776030.jpg


    Telescope: TS 70/420 ED

    Eyepiece: ES 6.7mm/82°

    Date and Time: April 26th, 2020 / 2100-2200 CEST

    Location: Home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany

    Technique: Koh-I-Noor chalk, charcoal and whitecoal pens on black sketching paper

    Size: diameter 2.5"


    Clear skies!
    Achim 

     

    • Like 7
  13. Dear all,

    today I tried to improve my pencil sketching capabilities for the H-alpha solar disc. I must admit that at least for me, the result pretty much depends of the selected material - at least I get better results with charcoal compared with pencil.
    However, it was fun to do it:

    20200417_Sun_H_alpha.jpg.db710418c3ded3c254dee535b74d2329.jpg

    Telescope: Lunt LS50THaB600PT
    Eyepiece: Celestron X-cel 10mm
    Date & Time: April 17th, 2020 / 1130-1200 CEST
    Location: home terrace, Dusseldorf region, Germany
    Technique: Koh-i-Noor 1900 Toison d'or pencils (4H, 2H, HB, 2B) on sketching paper
    Size: 3.25" diameter

    Clear and sunny skies!

    Achim

    • Like 6
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