The constellation of Cassiopeia (the W at right) behind the old Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Dalum, south of Drumheller, Alberta. It was built in 1929 by the Danish settlers in the area, using traditional Danish architechtural styles. I shot this May 2, 2015 on the night before Full Moon which provides most of the illiumination. Streetlights added yellow tints but I minimized those in processing. This is a single 30-second exposure at ISO 400 with the Canon 6D and f/5.6 with the 35mm lens.
Venus, very bright as an evening star, shines over the old historic Atlas Coal Mine in the Red Deer River Valley, Alberta, near East Coulee. The mine buildings are the last standing from many coal mines that operated in the valley up until the 1970s. The Atlas Coal Mine is now a museum and National Historic Site. Mercury shines at right just above the horizon. The nearly Full Moon provides much of the illumination, though a sodium vapour light also provides some of the warm light to the foreground.
Venus (bright at top) and Mercury (faint and low in the twilight) with both planets about as high as they will get this spring at my latitude of 51° N in Alberta. Mercury’s date of greatest elongation is May 6. I shot this May 2, 2015 from the bridge over the Red Deer River near Dorothy, Alberta. Light from the nearly Full Moon rising in the east behind me provides some of the landscape illumination. This is a high dynamic range stack of 5 exposures at 1-stop intervals, using the Canon 6D and 35mm lens.