Sunset at the City of Rocks State Park, New Mexico on May 2, 2014. The waxing crescent Moon is at top right. This is a 7-exposure high dynamic range stack to capture both the bright sky and darker foreground detail in one image, as the eye saw it. I used the 14mm Rokinon lens and the Canon 5D MkII.
The waxing crescent Moon, just over a day old, in the evening spring sky as seen from New Mexico, near Silver City, April 30, 2014. The sky was quite dark by the time I took this set, revealing the stars as well as the illuminated Earthshine on the dark side of the Moon. Aldebaran and the Hyades are at left, and the Pleiades at right of the Moon. The sky was also quite hazy from wind-borne dust earlier in the day. In this case, headlights from an approaching car lit the trees. Very handy! This is a high dynamic range stack of 6 images at 2/3 stop intervals from 2 to 20 seconds at f/2.8 and ISO 800 with the 35mm lens and Canon 6D. Stacked in Photoshop HDR Pro and tone mapped in Adobe Camera Raw 32 bit mode.
The waning crescent Moon amid the sunrise clouds on the morning of Feb 27, 2014 from southern Alberta, from home. This is a 1/100-second exposure with the 200mm lens at f/4 and with the Canon 5D MkII at ISO 100.