Backyard photons, deep sky scale

NightSkyLens

A polished astrophotography journal for finished images, sky locations, observing workflow, and the long project of imaging the Messier catalog.

19Portfolio images
6Published stories
3Workflow guides
Finished WorkFinished Work

A curated wall of galaxies, nebulae, lunar work, and small targets captured through the changing rig.

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Field WorkflowField Workflow

Planning, equipment, and processing presented as a clear guide path for how each image becomes possible.

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Celestial AtlasCelestial Atlas

See the portfolio plotted across the sky with object thumbnails, coordinates, and linked stories.

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Recent field notes

Latest stories from the archive

New Telescope First Light: Seeing M51 in a New Way

April 13, 2026

New Telescope First Light: Seeing M51 in a New Way

This image marks first light with my new telescope, the Celestron EdgeHD 800, an 8-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain designed for longer focal length imaging. With a native focal length of 2000mm, and about 1422mm using a 0.7x reducer, this setup ope

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Beyond the Belt: Exploring Orion’s Nebulae

March 31, 2026

Beyond the Belt: Exploring Orion’s Nebulae

The Orion constellation is easy to recognize, marked by three bright stars forming its belt and a “sword” hanging below. What’s less obvious is that this small patch of sky is packed with a variety of nebulae. That sword is home to the Orio

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Celestial Photobomb: Vesta and the Monkey Head Nebula

August 30, 2025

Celestial Photobomb: Vesta and the Monkey Head Nebula

I set out to capture the Monkey Head Nebula (NGC 2174 in Orion) with my usual astrophotography setup, aiming for a gorgeous deep-sky image. I took 70 frames at 300 seconds each (about 6 hours total exposure) and stacked them to reveal the n

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Galaxy Portraits: A Collection of Distant Worlds

August 3, 2025

Galaxy Portraits: A Collection of Distant Worlds

Galaxies I’ve Captured Over the Past Two Years I don’t have the ideal telescope focal length for imaging tiny galaxies. My current setup is a wide-field telescope, which is great for big nebulae but makes most distant galaxies appear small.

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The Veil Nebula: A Massive Star’s Explosive Legacy

April 18, 2025

The Veil Nebula: A Massive Star’s Explosive Legacy

The Veil Nebula is a supernova remnant in the constellation Cygnus (the Swan). It represents the visible remains of a star that exploded in a supernova thousands of years ago. This vast nebula stretches across an area of sky about 3 degrees

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