
Build your own eclipse viewer
Learn how to construct a viewer that will let you see the eclipse safely without looking directly at the Sun.
Watch the Annular Eclipse Event on October 14th, 2023 in safety, comfort, and style. Made with an advanced impregnated polymer filter material.
NOTE: Explore Scientific Eclipse Glasses are rated ISO12312–2, tested and approved by ICS Labs for Direct Observation of the Sun. In addition, Expl...
View full details7"-12" diameter filter will NOT fit on 10-inch and 12-inch truss-tube Dobsonian telescopes. Cassiopeia Observatory Review - Click Here Features 1...
View full detailsFeatures Black carbon fiber wrapped FirstLight 80 mm telescope 80mm aperture will reveal impressive lunar details ranging from craters to rilles,...
View full detailsFeatures Explore FirstLight 80mm Refractor Black carbon fiber wrapped FirstLight 80 mm telescope 80mm aperture will reveal impressive lunar detai...
View full details"This is the ultimate portable system as far as I am concerned."-Jim Johnston Astrophotographer Get an ideal astrophotography companion with the iE...
View full detailsLearn how to construct a viewer that will let you see the eclipse safely without looking directly at the Sun.
The first step to understanding a solar eclipse is to understand the Earth-Moon system.
Renowned eclipse expert Fred Espenak captured the March 29, 2006, total solar eclipse