You have every good reason to show those off, Gregg, thanks!
Larry
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 11:19
PM
Subject: Re: One of the most amazing
space photos I have ever seen...
I've posted a collection at http://www.io.com/~iareth/spaceimages.html All
the descriptions are a little rough, since I've mostly been doing it for a
few friends. I started this when I got Photoshop and realized how
much easier it was to produce color composites in Photoshop than in Corel
Photopaint.
Gregg
At 06:11 PM 11/30/2004, you
wrote: >Is your image available online
somewhere? > >Larry > >----- Original Message
----- >From: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Gregg
Geist >To: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Sent:
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 6:32 PM >Subject: Re: One of the most amazing
space photos I have ever seen... > > >At 05:30 PM
11/30/2004, you wrote: > >I agree with you - but what is it? >
>Keira > >As soon as I saw the three B&W images on the
Cassini raw pics site I made a >composite like this. (Mine is more
orange than theirs, color balanced >based on what I see when I look at
Saturn. Maybe they used the basic color >data, maybe we're both
just guessing.) Anyway, I sent it to a few friends >who were very
confused. The planet Saturn fills most of the frame. If
you >could see the whole disk it would be ten times the size of
the >image. North is up. The rings are being illuminated
from below and to the >right. The ring shadows are the streaks
crossing the upper part of the >planet. The moon Mimas is visible
in the
foreground. > > >Gregg > > >== >You
are subscribed to the Europa Icepick mailing >list: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Project
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