Kevin Palmer

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By The Light of the Moon

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Early June is wildflower season in the Bighorns and entire mountainsides were blooming with color. I took advantage of the clear weather by shooting the milky way from Red Grade Road outside of Sheridan. It was dark for a couple hours before the galaxy started to fade and the sky became bluer. At 1AM the 65% moon peeked over the distant ridge and cast a warm glow across the arrowleaf balsamroot flowers shaking in the breeze. I’ve always found a late night moonrise to be one of the toughest scenes to capture accurately. While my eyes could easily see details of the moon, the camera only shows it as a burst of light because the moon is significantly brighter than it’s surroundings.

Copyright
Kevin Palmer
Image Size
5631x3759 / 11.5MB
Keywords
2018, United States, arrowleaf balsamroot, astronomy, astrophotography, big horn, bighorn mountains, blue, flowers, forest, galaxy, grass, green, kevin palmer, milky way, moon, moonlight, moonrise, mountainside, night, nikon d750, red grade road, rokinon 14mm f2.8, saturn, sky, spring, starry, stars, summer, trees, wildflowers, yellow
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Recent Work, Wyoming
Early June is wildflower season in the Bighorns and entire mountainsides were blooming with color. I took advantage of the clear weather by shooting the milky way from Red Grade Road outside of Sheridan. It was dark for a couple hours before the galaxy started to fade and the sky became bluer. At 1AM the 65% moon peeked over the distant ridge and cast a warm glow across the arrowleaf balsamroot flowers shaking in the breeze. I’ve always found a late night moonrise to be one of the toughest scenes to capture accurately. While my eyes could easily see details of the moon, the camera only shows it as a burst of light because the moon is significantly brighter than it’s surroundings.