What to Photograph in November 2023

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These are some of the best events to photograph in November 2023: Jupiter and Uranus at opposition, the Leonids meteor shower, the full Moon, 4 conjunctions of the Moon with Venus, Mercury, Saturn and Jupiter, the aurora borealis (northern lights) and Australis and the Milky Way.

At the end of the video I’m sharing some of the best photos you’ve submitted to the PhotoPills awards and we’ve featured in October.

TIME INDEX

01:00 Jupiter and Uranus at opposition
01:58 Leonids meteor shower
03:04 Full Moon
04:21 Moon-Planet conjunctions
05:22 Aurora
06:25 Milky Way
07:50 Featured Photos

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RECOMMENDED PHOTOGRAPHY GUIDES:

- Astronomical Events Photography Guide:
+ 15 Photography guides collection:

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T-SHIRTS:

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PHOTOS PLANNED BY PHOTOPILLERS

SUBMIT YOUR PHOTOS (PHOTOPILLS AWARDS)

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INSPIRATION
- What to Photograph in 2023
- The 36 Best Photos in 2022

PHOTOGRAPHY FUNDAMENTALS
- Understanding Natural Light: Golden Hour, Blue Hour and Twilights
- Understanding Depth of Field (DoF) and How to Calculate it
- Understanding the Hyperfocal Distance
- Learn How To Focus at the Hyperfocal Distance in 1 Minute!

MILKY WAY PHOTOGRAPHY
- Milky Way Photography Planning
- Learn Milky Way Photography
- Milky Way Photography Masterclass with Alyn Wallace
- How to Post Process the Milky Way with Nick Page
- How to Calculate the Milky Way Photography Exposure Time
- Photographing the Milky Way with a Natural Arch

MOON PHOTOGRAPHY
- How to Plan a Photo of the Next Full Moon with a Building
- How to Photograph the Moon with Foreground
- How to Get in Focus Both The Moon and The Subject
- Moon Photography Masterclass with Jennifer Khordi
- Photographing a Full Moon Silhouette from Another Galaxy

SUNSET & SUNRISE PHOTOGRAPHY
- How to Plan a Powerful Sunset Photo | When You Know the Date
- How to Plan Any Sunset Photo You Imagine
- How to Plan a Sunset Photo in a Valley | Or a Sunrise
- Photographing the Sun setting through the natural arch of Es Pont d’En Gil

LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
- Landscape Photography with Nigel Danson
- Landscape Photography Post Processing with Albert Dros
- How to Edit Your Landscape Photography in Photoshop with Sean Bagshaw

LONG EXPOSURE PHOTOGRAPHY WITH LENS FILTERS
- Calculating Long Exposure Times Using ND Filters

SEASCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
- Seascape Photography Masterclass with Francesco Gola

METEOR SHOWER PHOTOGRAPHY
- How to Plan Any Meteor Shower Photo You Imagine
- How to Plan a Photo of the Perseids Meteor Shower 2021
- How to Plan a Photo of the Geminids 2020
- Perseids Meteor Shower Photography Masterclass with Ian Norman
- Photographing the Perseids Meteor Shower with an Ancient Oak Tree

STAR TRAILS PHOTOGRAPHY
- How to Plan Any Star Trails Photo You Imagine
- How to Photograph Star Trails

CONJUNCTIONS
- How to Photograph the 2020 Great Conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn

TIMELAPSE PHOTOGRAPHY
- How to Calculate Timelapse Settings

LEARN PHOTOPILLS
- How to Enable and Use the Widgets
- How to move the Red Pin of the Planner
- How to Save, Share and Import Plans and Locations
- Mastering the Load button of the Planner
- Calibrating the Augmented Reality Views
- Understanding the Map Buttons of the Planner
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Need help planning or photographing these cool events? Comment below!
👉 To download our super detailed Astronomical Events Photography Guide:

PhotoPills
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Thank you so much for sharing my photo of the full moon over the Wisconsin state capital building in your video. Keep up the great work, PhotoPills.

Thefishmanfirm
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Not sure Amy wrote the correct location for her shot, since I do not believe the solar eclipse looked like that in Moab. I happened to be in Moab at that time and had to head to Bryce Canyon for the eclipse, since it was not going to be that great in Moab. Maybe she lives in Moab, but took the photo in a different place? Regardless, what a great photograph!

I should mention how impressed I was with PhotoPills during the eclipse. I set my camera up so the eclipse would occur over a large number of hoodoos, and PhotoPills could not have been any more accurate. I watched the shadow of the hoodoos approach and travel just below my camera, as my camera was tracking the sun/eclipse using my BP tracker.

-JohnEdwards
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