A 200° panorama of the waxing gibbous (8-day-old) Moon in the spring evening twilight over Lake MacGregor in southern Alberta, on June 2, 2017. The Sun has set to the northwest at right and the Moon shines in the west. To the left of the Moon is Jupiter and Spica. Shot from the east shore of the lake, with a 24mm lens in 8 segments, and stitched with PTGui.
Venus on April 25, 2020, the day before its date of greatest brilliancy for the 2020 evening apparition with the waxing crescent Moon below. Capella is above Venus; Aldebaran is below the Moon; Orion is at left setting. This is a single 5-second exposure at f/2.8 and ISO 100 with the Nikon D750 and Sigma 24mm lens.
A 120° panorama of the dawn sky on July 16, 2017 with the northeast horizon (left) colourful with dawn twilight, Venus in the east (centre) near Aldebaran, and the waning Last Quarter Moon in the southeast (at right). This serves to demonstrate the 90° angle between the waning quarter Moon and the sunrise point (and the Sun). And also the twiight colours on a very clear morning. The sky is also much darker toward the Moon at the 90° point due to natural sky polarization. This is a 5-section panorama with the 14mm Rokinon lens and Canon 6D, stitched with PTGui. ACR would not stitch this.