Charlie Hein
Postmaster
   
Reged: 11/02/03
Posts: 7961
Loc: 26.06.08N, +80.23.08W
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Welcome to the February 2008 Cloudy Nights Imaging/Sketching Contest poll!
Each month the best images selected from the individual Cloudy Nights Imaging and Sketching forums will be presented for the userbase to vote on. The monthly winner receives the coveted Cloudy Nights t-shirt! At the conclusion of the poll, the entry with the highest total will be the winner of the contest..
Please choose your favorite out of all the images. This poll will remain open through March 15th at midnight EST.
Here are the entries for February!
Beginning Imaging's Finalist - JSnuff1:

M45 The Pleiades 1/31/08
Imaging: WO FTL 110 TEC @ F/6.5, SBIG ST4000XCM Mount: Losmandy GM-8 auto guided with internal SBIG guide camera
18x600s Reduced aligned and combined in CCDSoft, touches in PS2.
Film Astrophotography's Finalist - AstroBobo:

here's my eclipse sequence:
Mamiya Super 23 (medium format, 6x9), 100mm lens, Kodak E200. One shot every 6 minutes. Unfortunately thin clouds interfered, so the sequence looks uneven. Minimal postprocessing, cropped.
DSLR & Digital Camera Astro Imaging & Processing's Finalist - Igor Chekalin:

NGC2264 "Cone" and "Fox Fur" Nebulas
H-alpha channel taken on Feb 12, 2008 8 frames x 20min @ ISO1600, Astrodon 6nm Halpha filter Ambient temp. -5C
RGB (unfiltered) taken on Jan 6, 2008 10 frames x 20min @ ISO1600 Ambient temp. -17C
Here is (Ha)GB-composition. Scale is about 30%.
Self-modded 350Da in prime focus of Mizar 110/800mm Newton. EQ6-Pro Syn Scan mount.Autoguided with 75/600 refractor + QHY6 CCD.
Processing - Iris & PhotoShop 9
CCD Imaging & Processing's Finalist - dietmar:

NGC 2392 - the Eskimo nebula
Date: 8.11.2007 Location: 35 km north of Linz seeing 7-(8)/10; transp. 8/10
Scope: 9" TMB Apo f/18 (TV Big Barlow)
CCD: SXV H36; 18x4 min L; 7 darks; R,G,B 5x4min @ f/9 (RGB seeing 5/10)
Software: AstroArt4 image acqu. guiding, preprocessing: Maxim DL, CCD Sharp, Registax
Processing: postprocess. PS CS2; Pix Insight LE
Solar System Imaging's Finalist - Bart Declercq:

Saturn
Taken 2008-02-10 01hUT from Zottegem, Belgium
Telescope : Celestron C9.25 at F/27 (using Skywatcher Shorty barlow extended to 2.7x) Camera : The Imaging Source DMK31AF Filters: Astronomik RGB interference filters in an ATIK manual filter wheel Image alignment & quality estimation using ninox (AKA ppmcentre) Stacking and slight waveletting in Registax - stacked 4000 of 9999 frames R, 5000 of 9999 G and 6000 of 9999 B Post-processing (RGB-combine, additional sharpening and denoising) in Photoshop CS2
This image was taken in quite exceptional seeing conditions by Belgian standards.
Sketching Forum's Finalist - kraterkid:

Subject: Naked eye view of the lunar eclipse on February 21, 2008
Time: 8:59 PST to 9:07 PST Seeing: Antoniadi IV Weather: Cloudy with intermittent light showers Phase: 359.2 deg Colongitude: 86 deg Lunation: 14.05 Days Notes: A perfect bite, a bit hazy about the edge Medium: White Conte' Crayon on black Strathmore Artagain paper Sketch size: 9" X 12"
Good Luck to all our finalists!
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Beginning Imaging's Finalist - JSnuff1:
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Film Astrophotography's Finalist - AstroBobo:
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DSLR & Digital Camera Astro Imaging & Processing's Finalist - Igor Chekalin:
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CCD Imaging & Processing's Finalist - dietmar:
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Solar System Imaging's Finalist - Bart Declercq:
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Sketching Forum's Finalist - kraterkid:
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-------------------- "He's dead, Jim - I'll get his wallet, you get his tricorder." - Leonard "Bones" McCoy
Weston CSC:
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Dick Lipke
sage
   
Reged: 02/20/07
Posts: 282
Loc: Marine City,Mich.
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Why dose everyone insist on referring to the these photos and sketching as work of the amateur astronommer.They surpass any professionals work I have seen on this Earth.
-------------------- LX90 8",Cornado Max 40,Miyauchi 20x100 Bino's,and way to many eyepieces and filters,
Thousand Oaks 8" Ha filter
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Protheus
Vaguely offended
   
Reged: 09/01/07
Posts: 5065
Loc: Illinois, US
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Quote:
Why dose everyone insist on referring to the these photos and sketching as work of the amateur astronommer.They surpass any professionals work I have seen on this Earth.
Simply because they are. None of these people are professionals. That is, they don't get paid to do astronomy. 
Chris
-------------------- "To tread the sharp edge of a sword;
to run on smooth-frozen ice,
one needs no footsteps to follow..."
"Well, people sometimes ask me 'how did you get involved in astronomy?' I said 'I got born, what's your problem?'" -- John Dobson
"In discussing the large-scale structure of the cosmos, astronomers sometimes say that space is curved, or that the universe is finite but unbounded. Whatever are they talking about?" -- Carl Sagan
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Cow Jazz
professor emeritus
Reged: 11/24/03
Posts: 669
Loc: Toronto, Ontario
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The Pleaides shot is REALLY deep, pinpoint stars, lots of nebulousity (and this is the "beginner" catagory?), the rest are also terrific, but I have to go for the Eskimo Nebula; something a bit different, and great detail of the Eskimo's "face". Way to go, everyone.
-------------------- John aka: Byrdzeye
NYAA, Toronto
Observatorium Orionis
XT10i w/PT (push-to)
ED80 on AZ3 or LXD55 Frankenmount
350D w/17-85 IS & 70-200 f4 L
Taylor guitar & IPod
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Scott Horstman
Vendor- Backyard Observatories
   
Reged: 03/11/04
Posts: 8074
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It's alway so hard to pick in this poll. It's like going to a fine restaraunt and having to decide between the Prime Rib or Lobster or.....
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poweruser
member
Reged: 06/27/07
Posts: 97
Loc: The Final Frontier
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I voted for M45, although I was really, really close to going for the sketch.
-------------------- Orion 127mm Mak
EQ-3
Astro-Tech 1.25" Dielectric Diagonal
7mm, 9mm, 12.5mm UO Abbe
25mm Sirius Plössl
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boogie
member
Reged: 04/30/07
Posts: 73
Loc: Israel
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Beginning Imaging ???? My dear god ... That's the BEST Pleiades image I've EVER seen, and that includes the ones taken by HST or any other observatory class scope. It's just RIDICULOUSLY good And the eclipse sequence ... WOW!!!
-------------------- "A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."
"It's at times like this, when I'm stuck in a Vogon airlock with a man from Betelegeuse about to die of asphyxiation in deep space, that I really wish I'd listened to what my mother told me when I was little."
"Why, what did she tell you?"
"I don't know, I didn't listen!"
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Max
journeyman
Reged: 06/27/04
Posts: 7
Loc: Canary Islands
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Voted for NGC2264, despite I don't like the diffraction spikes. Look at the equipment used! Fantastic image, considering it was taken by DSLR camera!
-------------------- www.canaryskies.com
460mm F/4 dob(under construction), TEC-160FL, CGE-1400XLT, С11S-GT XLT, Synta Sky-Watcher 100ED, 120ED, TeleVue 76, Coronado 60/15, 2x EQ6 Pro.
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astroleo
journeyman
Reged: 04/16/07
Posts: 5
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Am voting for the Saturn.. "stacked 4000 of 9999 frames R, 5000 of 9999 G and 6000 of 9999 B Post-processing (RGB-combine, additional sharpening and denoising) in Photoshop CS2" IMHO, this dude deserves full credit for the amazing level of commitment.. Keep it up..
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w orchid
scholastic sledgehammer
Reged: 04/23/07
Posts: 832
Loc: Tampa, Fl
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Great job to all.
-------------------- Celestron C8 orange tube circa 1982
Stellarvue SV102ED
Celestron NS1100GPS
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wlsweather
newbie
Reged: 02/22/08
Posts: 1
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Kudos to everyone here. Going with M45 as best of the best. Terrific nebulosity and tack-sharp stars. JSnuff... if you're a beginner, then I can't wait to see what type of imaging you'll be capable of when you get good!!!
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Steenhoek27
sage
Reged: 05/26/06
Posts: 212
Loc: Torrance, CA
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I think that these "Finalists" need to be renamed "WINNERS" in their respective category as they are ALL truly fantastic displays of the heavens!!!
There is still room for a "Overall Monthly Winner" but these entries deserve to be called something better than "finalists"!!!!
just my opnion....
-------------------- Jim
www.laas.org
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sunnynights
member
Reged: 08/26/06
Posts: 23
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-Once again, a well-deserved congratulations to all. I second Boogie's comments about the quality of the M45 image. The distinct images of the stars of varying magnitudes were especially noteworthy. Keep up the good work, and I imagine many of us are looking forward to more of it.
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markseibold
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 01/19/08
Posts: 1082
Loc: Portland Oregon
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To all at Cloudy Nights
I am new to the site. I find the discussion about the term professional artist or photographer interesting- I believe it merely means if you are paid for the work and that you show some mastery and skill in the use of the medium. I just received an email notice of a contest for images but misread it as sketching only, to then arrive at the site and see so much astrophotography- As I do not have that equipment, and although I had two of my astrophoto images published in Astronomy Magazine as full page time exposures in 1994, one awarded, I then recently turned back to my art and submitted pastel sketches of the sun as I observed it through my h-alpha filtered telescope- NASA sites such as Astronomy Picture of the Day and Spaceweather.com began running them in their front pages- I received emails from all over the world to commend me- The same responses from many non-artists; Are you aa professional? How much money do your works demand? etc, etc, etc. I would say, if a good artist could make a living at this, we would never have adopted the phrase 'starving artist'- yet I received some amazing responses on the art- One such, was a lady artist in Sedona who indicates to me that the web is so oversaturated with digital photography that real hand drawn art has a new appeal again. I will try to post some photo images then pastel sketches below (the Hand Drawn Mercury Transit was featured in Astronomy Picture of the Day Nov17th 2006; all others in Spaceweather.com)- Mark >
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Starry-Eyed
newbie
Reged: 10/18/07
Posts: 3
Loc: British Columbia, Canada
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That is awesome! Keep up the good work!!!
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Pasquale
Encrypted
   
Reged: 10/12/05
Posts: 2219
Loc: Olympia, Washington
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Each one of these photos is a winner in my book, it's like having to pick "Best of Show" at Westminster Kennel Club! Extremely hard to do! Well done, all of you...
-------------------- Pasquale
Go Seahawks!
NexStar 9.25 GPS / SkyAlign
Stellarvue SV102ED
WO ZS80FD Anniversary
WO ZS66ED Triplet
Vixen Sphinx SXW
Canon EOS XT/350D, Meade DSI, NexImager
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markseibold
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 01/19/08
Posts: 1082
Loc: Portland Oregon
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I am trying to add some of the astro images for reference- yet find that they are dismissed as oversized even after I reduce their size below 100kb adjusted them to just below 100 kb- So I'll stick with the pastels for now - Mark >
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markseibold
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 01/19/08
Posts: 1082
Loc: Portland Oregon
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Protheus- Yes I agreee with you. This was one of my award winners which I sold many matted and framed prints of since I produced the fist enlarged framed print in 1994 - Mark >
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markseibold
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 01/19/08
Posts: 1082
Loc: Portland Oregon
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Or this one, my 19" X 22" pastel as the Hand Drawn Transit featured in Astronomy Picture of the Day on November 17th 2006 Mark >
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lightfever
Pooh-Bah
   
Reged: 09/27/04
Posts: 1272
Loc: Macomb Michigan
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These are just fantastic and are all winners. I'm picking NGC2264 but almost went for the sketch.
-------------------- Mark
Tasco 15-TE 76mm
Sky Watcher 80mm ED
AT-111 Triplet
XT8i (with Woden re-figured mirror)
Discovery 12.5" f/5 Premium DHQ (PDHQ Split-tube Dobsonian)
12.5" f/6.3 Dob (Underconstruction)
Celestron CG-5GT EQ Mount
Celestron C4 EQ Mount
"Life is not about waiting for the storm to pass, but learning to dance in the rain" unknown
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