As sunrise approached, the Moon and Venus tried to shine through the twilight’s glare. Here’s photo from my Canon XS on a tripod in front of the house.
Venus is to the upper left of the crescent Moon. Just above the highest wire on the set connected to the utility pole in the distance. Our sister planet is swinging back behind the Sun, from Earth’s point of view as the next planet out from the Sun. So, it’s bright and gibbous, but getting smaller as it heads toward conjunction with the Sun in June. A the time of this photo, about 25 minutes before sunrise, Venus was 10 degrees above the horizon (a fist-width when held at arm’s length) and the Moon was 7 degrees high. The next two planets to the lower right of Venus were Mars and then Mercury. The sky was too bright for me to catch them.
Photo data: Canon XS on tripod. Zoom lens set at 55mm (maximum zoomed in setting), f/7.1 for sharpness, 1/50 second exposure at ISO 400. Some lower ISO levels provided more color to the dawn sky. This photo was earlier when Venus wasn’t as overwhelmed by the twilight.