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Honestly I remember it being at 7 o'clock too but I think it might've just been that my camera was rotated a bit weird because it was mounted to a star tracker. I was really happy with how crisp it came out. I used a longer lens (this photo was at 400mm) and also made sure to use f8 as that's been noted to be the sharpest aperture for my lens. Beyond that I had focused on the sun using the sun spots and then didn't change the focus at all. I also had a remote trigger so I wouldn't shake the camera while taking the image. Also for this image I brought down the highlights which helped cut down on the blooming around the brightest features and helped them look more defined. I am very happy I was able to get this result because this was the first time I've tried shooting an eclipse and really wasn't sure if I was doing it right.
I was like 30-40 min north of Burlington so maybe that is what made the difference? And those shots look awesome dude! I get the beads came out a little fuzzy but the totality shot looks great! Especially for being at 200mm. You could always use this at motivation to start planning a Spain trip for the one in 2 years haha
Yeah actually just looking around the way the light changed and that weird darkness with light all around you in the distance was really cool
The orientation of the sun and moon relative to the horizon actually depend on your latitude. Think of it in the extremes: Teo peoplee standing on the North and South Poles see the sky upside down relative to each other.