Chile (Las Campanas Observatory) evening twilight (spectrum of colours tinted reddish-purple from Mt. Pinatubo volcanic ash), with waxing crescent Moon in sky. Yes, this is an evening scene -- Moon looks backwards because this is 30° S latitude. Makes a good comparison with Arizona Twilight, with similar Moon but at different angle due to latitude difference of 60° (Arizona = aboout 30° N) April 1993, Las Campanas Observatory 28mm lens, Kodachrome 25 slide film
This is a composite image showing a pass of the International Space Station on June 21, 2011, summer solstice night, taken from my home in southern Alberta. This is from a stack of 104 3-second exposures at f/4 with the 8mm Sigma fish-eye lens and Canon 5D MkII camera. North is at the bottom, west to the left and east to the right. The images were stacked with Chris Schur's Photoshop Action for creating star trails.
Earth's shadow, looking east, at sunset, with pink Belt of Venus above dark blue shadow. Gibbous Moon above that in SE. Taken with 16mm full-frame fish-eye lens