Appreciate the comments - thanks!

Quote:

I can't work out the wraparound effect




Agreed - at first it would appear that the moon is rising between two big cloud banks, one in front and one behind. Of course this is not physically possible. Both cloud banks are between my camera and the moon but the lower density of the second cloud bank allows the moon to shine through. Overexposing the moon (exposing for the clouds) allows the moon to dominate the second less dense cloud bank, thus creating the illusion that the moon is in front of it.

This is the most interesting of a whole series I shot over a 15 minute period. As the moon rises a bit higher the reality becomes obvious.