This is the waxing gibbous moon, 8 days past new, as seen on October 14, 2021:

The darker regions are called Mare, meaning ‘sea’ in Latin – these are regions formed as a result of volcanic activity a long time ago, and there are 22 of them.

Visible in this image at the 3 o’clock position is Mare Crisium, immediately to the left is the bright white area which is an impact crater called Proclus. Going diagonally from the top left of the moon near the 11 o’clock position, toward the bottom right in a straight line is Mare Imbrium, Mare Serenitalis, Mare Tranquillitatis to the right of center of the image, and Mare Fecunditatis, with the crater Langrenus attached to the right; Mare Nectaris is the dark region below Mare Tranquillitatis.

When captured using Slooh.com Canary 2 telescope, this is a black and white image. I colorized the image by referencing color images of the full moon. I also added the stars that were actually surrounding the moon at the time of the observation by superimposing them from my planetarium software, theskyx.