Faraway views (right lens of my binoculars)

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Croatia
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Croatia

seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from Ukraine

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from Bangladesh

seen from Singapore
Faraway views (right lens of my binoculars)
i’ll be the lookout [ shot by @ohseephotography ]
Inktober! I wanted to draw more creepy illustrations this year, but....I am just better at comedy :D So it is mix. It is ink+g-pen with no sketches before, I think all this messy lines suits horror theme ♥
Spyglasses and binoculars, 18th- 20th century
Photo by me- IMM Hamburg
Venus and Jupiter are about to have their closest evening encounter of 2026.
On June 9, the two brightest planets in our night sky will appear just 1.5° apart above the western horizon after sunset — close enough to fit comfortably in the same binocular view.
Learn more - here.
For a few evenings around the event, you'll be able to step outside and see a stunning planetary pairing with your own eyes:
✨ Venus blazing at magnitude -4.2 ✨ Jupiter shining nearby at magnitude -1.7 ✨ One of the most beautiful naked-eye astronomy events of the year
No telescope required.
Just find a clear view toward the west-northwest horizon about 30–60 minutes after sunset and look for the two brilliant lights hanging together in the twilight.
If you have binoculars, the view becomes even better, with Jupiter's four largest moons potentially visible as tiny points of light beside the giant planet.
Events like this remind us that some of the most spectacular sights in astronomy don't require expensive equipment—just a clear sky and a few minutes of attention.
🌌 June 9, 2026 🔭 Venus–Jupiter Conjunction 📍 Low in the WNW after sunset
Who's planning to watch?
Patchwork Wildlife Binocular/Camera Strap by Laterzees
Theatre Binoculars
Art Nouveau
c. 1900
German