IC 4756 and NGC 6633 S-O Double Cluster, taken Aug 15, 2007 from home. Stack of 3 x 4 minute exposures at ISO800 with Canon 20Da and 135mm L-lens at f/2.8. Field equals 7° bino field. Slight trailing (not guided).
Jupiter in Taurus above Aldebaran and the Hyades and below the Pleiades, on January 4, 2013. Taken from home from the front yard, with the Sigma 50mm lens at f/2.8 and Canon 60Da camera at ISO 800 for 4 x 4 minutes + 2 x 3 minutes with the Kenko Softon filter for the star glows. Taken on the Kenko SkyMemo tracker. NGC 1647 and NGC 1746 clusters are also in the field, at left.
This is the asterism of stars known as Kemble's Cascade, named by Walter Scott Houston for Canadian amateur astronomer and Franciscan friar Father Lucien Kemble who popularized the stellar star chain. It is an obvious sight in binoculars or a telescope at low power but is off the beaten track in Camelopardalis. The star cluster NGC 1502 lies at the south end of the star chain. Below 1502 is a tiny vivid green dot, the planetary nebula NGC 1501. The field of view here is similar to that of binoculars. This is a stack of 8 x 5-minute exposures with the SharpStar 61mm refractor at f/4.5 and Canon R6 at ISO 1600. Diffraction spikes added for artistuc effect with AstronomyTools actions.