S-O Double Cluster consisting of: IC4756 in Serpens (at left) and NGC6633 in Ophiuchus (right), two good binocular objects. Thru Vixen 108DD astrograph at f/5 with Pentax 67 body and Fujichrome 400F slide film. 540mm focal length with about 7.5° wide field. Exposure about 20 minutes long taken in moonlight from rising waning Moon. Thus the blue sky which has been emphasized rather than neutralized. Taken July 2003 from home.
The pair of large and loose star clusters on the Serpens-Ophiuchus border known as the S-O Double Cluster. IC 4756 is at left; NGC 6633 is at right. Both are fine targets for binoculars. The 7.5 x 5° field is close to a binocular field of view. This is a stack of 10 x 6-minute exposures with the SharpStar 61mm apo refractor at f/4.5 and with the Canon R6 at ISO 800. Taken from home Oct 3, 2021. Diffraction spikes added with Astronomy Tools actions.
A portrait of a dim comet, PanSTARRS C/2017 K2, passing above the Serpens-Ophiuchus (S-O) Double Cluster at bottom, consisting of IC 4756 at lower left and NGC 6633 at lower right. This was the night of May 25-26, 2022. The comet is at top as a fuzzy green star, very small with a stubby tail. It was about 8th magnitude. This is a stack of ten 5-minute exposures with the William Optics RedCat 51 at f/4.9 and the Canon R5 at ISO 800.