Hello folks, [October 28] was very, very cold but the Moon with his Glory looks wonderful, so I thought that I must to draw it:)
Date: 28.10.2012, ~20:00-20:40UT
Location: Bełchatów, Poland
Object: 98% Moon
Weather: High Fog but seeing was very good
I used watercolor crayon on black paper
Object Name : M35
Object Type : Open Cluster in Gemini
Location : But-gogae Yangdong-myeon Yangpyeong-gun Gyeonggi-do South.KOREA)
Date : 2013.2.11 Monday
Media : A4 paper, HB pencil
Equipment : 10’ dobsonian, XW 20mm
Observing conditions : A little cloudy
I could identify starchains but, could not define the NGC 2158(Probably the sky is not clear much)
Spent 1hour to sketch, 19:40 ~ 20:00
after long time I sketched a brighter m-objekt. M45 was very nice in my TMB 115/805. The refractor shows me in the wide field all the nice stars of this object.
It was very hard work at the 36mm eyepiece and I´ve got some problems to fix the distances and the ratio of the stars.
When I finished my first sketch, I forgot to transfer three stars in this picture. But now it´s done and a sketch will be a sketch, not a photo. Hope it´s o.k.
Hi, I send my sketch of NGC 6934. This is a spherical cluster of stars located in the constellation of Dolphin. Currently, the best conditions observation-object is located high in the sky. My telescope with 200mm aperture hardly ojedyncze showed barely visible stars.
[An excerpt from Dale Holt’s blog: Chippingdaleobservatory Blog ]
…I pushed onto the great Orion nebula, just intending to take a look but ended up once again trying to be artistic in a rendering of M43 the little brother to the much better known M42, to me this nebula is a ‘morsel’ about to be swallowed by the Angel fish that is M42 the great Orion Nebula. Putting dazzling M42 just out of the field to avoid its distraction one could view this nebula as a standalone and appreciate its form and the intricate darker regions and lanes that bisect it. When I showed my pastel sketch to friend Es Reid the next day, flatteringly he referred to it as like an ‘impressionist’s painting’ that will do for me 🙂
Object Name: NGC 1980
Location: RA: 05h 35m 25.9s, Dec: -05 ° 54 ’35 ”
Magnitude: 2.5
Dimensions: 14′ x 14’
Constellation: Orion
Type: Open Cluster associated with nebulosity.
Observing Location: Bonilla. Cuenca. SPAIN
Date: December 9, 2012.
Time: 23:15 T.U.
Material used: Graphite pencil on white paper. Inverted image and processed with Photoshop.
Celestron Telescope S / C 8″ Mount Cgt-5
Eyepiece: Hyperion Aspheric 31 mm; Magnification: 65x.
Conditions: NEML: 6.13 (Zone 6 Peg.) Temp.: 0.4°C; Humidity 68%.
Planetary nebula in the constellation Cepheus, 22h 40.4m, +61deg17´, 0>20´, m12.9v
Erika Rix – Liberty Hill, Texas
www.pcwobservatory.com
16” Zhumell reflector f/4.5 on a non-tracking Dobsonian mount, Baader Planetarium Hyperion 8-24mm Mark III (75-225x magnification)
NGC7354 is a small, slightly faint planetary nebula in Cepheus. Through the telescope, it is located the middle of a star pattern that resembles Sagitta where Delta Sagittae would have been. The star pattern consists of TYC4265-877-1 (m11.7) and USNO J2240137+612011 (m13.2) to the north with TYC4265-347-1 (m10.68) to the south. A strand of three other stars to the west, along with the pattern of stars that resembled Sagitta and NGC7354, resembled the shape of an ear or an ammonite fossil.
75x magnification: Small, soft circular disk, with a hint of slight elongation. O-III adds contrast and there was a hint of brightness in the center of it. A 14.75 magnitude star to the southwest and a 15.3 magnitude star to the southeast of NGC7354 were observed at this magnification just outside of the disk.
225x magnification: A third star with a magnitude of 14.9 was observed just outside of the disk to the west. Using an O-III, the NE and SW edges of the disk were fainter and I could see a brightened edge to the nebula around the rest of the disk with a fainter center. I detected a faint, diffuse haze outside of the brighter borders and there may have been a hint of the central star as it looked slightly grainy in the center of the disk.
Sketches created with AL template, #2 graphite pencil, loaded blending stump with charcoal, super-fine Faber-Castell Pitt artist pen “S”, 0.5mm mechanical pencil.
I hereby send you my latest sketch of some nice and interesting Moon Craters. Each of the craters was visible in different ways and this is the spice of the whole thing. Hommel was almost fully in dark, Nearch and Viacq was half in dark but half in sunlight, and Rosenberg in fully sunlight. It made the sketching more difficult, but for me it was even more interesting.
Date: 31st October 2011, UT: 16:30 – 17:30
Equipment used: 130/650 SW, 130x, Meade neutral filter
Media: Graphite pencil used on white paper