The images in this photo set are from the night of 5/19/07. On this night, Venus and the moon were quite close together--within one degree. Unfortunately, it was not possible to telescopically image them in a single frame using my 102mm Mak-Cass, though it would have been possible with a fast refractor. All images taken using a Konica Minolta DImage Z2 Included in this image set are: moon.jpg: An image of the moon taken through the eyepiece using the digiscoping technique on an Orion Steady Pix. Equiptment: Orion 102 mm Mak-Cass, Celestron 32 mm Plossl eyepiece. moonlit.jpg: Shows the moon and Venus along with Castor, Pollux and several dimmer stars with low layer clouds reflecting moon light to illuminate the night sky. Taken through camera lens. moonset.jpg: Shows the moon setting high magnification, long exposure image of moon set. Earthshine visibily illuminates the dark portion of the moon and a combination of moon light and light pollution show trees near the horizon. moonVenus0.jpg: With the camera lens at full zoom, we can see cratering and other details of the moon along with the bright dot that is Venus. moonVenus1.jpg: A wider angle shot shows the moon, Venus, Castor and Pollux. The dot above the moon to the right is an artifact, not a star. Some earthshine is visible. Note: I took many images of Venus through the telescope though none even show the crescent disk.