Orion on a clear winter night in downtown Calgary and shining over the pedestrian Peace Bridge over the Bow River. I shot this on January 20, 2018. This is a real scene, though the sky is a single longer exposure of 6 seconds at ISO 400, while the ground is a blend of 4 exposures from 1.6 to 8 seconds at ISO 100, all at f/2.8 with the 24mm Sigma Art lens and Nikon D750. A NISI Natural Night filter helped cut through light pollution and provide a more natural blue sky, though this was a moonless night. The ground images were blended with luminosity masks generated with ADP Pro v3, to prevent the lights on the bridge from blowing out too much. Star diffraction spikes added with Astronomy Tools actions.
A 240° panorama of a not very active display of Northern Lights to the north (left of centre), then sweeping around to the south (at right) and the winter stars of Orion and Canis Major. Sirius is bright and in some cloud, accentuating its size and colour. Leo is rising at centre. The Big Dipper and Ursa Major are left of centre. The Milky Way appears at far left, in the area of Perseus and Cepheus, and again at far right through Monoceros and past Orion and Canis Major. The aurora display the characteristic green and red curtains from oxygen, but there is also a dim red curtain at left (northwest) and at centre (east) south of the main curtain and separated. It looks like a dim Steve arc but this was not visible to the eye and never became well formed or bright. This is a stitch of 8 segments with the 14mm Sigma Art lens, at f/2 for 13 seconds each, and Nikon D750 at ISO 3200. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw. Taken from home January 13, 2018. The constellations are distorted slightly by the panorama projection and warping. I began a time-lapse after this, but clouds rolled in from the northwest.
A moonlit nightscape of the badlands loop road in Dinosaur Provincial Park, arcing off toward the Big Dipper in the northern sky. Vega is setting at far left. Polaris is at top centre. Light is from the 8-day waxing Moon. A stack of 6 x 15-second exposures mean combined to smooth noise for the ground, and a single 15-second exposure for the sky, all at f/2.5 with the Rokinon 14mm lens and Canon 6D MkII at ISO 2000.