Image stabilization, power, and the great universe
My first comment is on the power of binocs you want to use. Generally going much above 8 power is a pain, for one good reason - the shakes. But also you don't really need 15 power. Most professional mariners use the traditional 7 by 50 for very good reason; one, the power is sufficient - but two, more importantly at dusk and dawn, the light gathering abilities of these binocs is very good. A general rule of thumb is if a "birder" (bird watcher) is interested in a particular binoc, you know it has good imaging in low light - when most birds are visible, dawn and dusk. Birders love our marine 7 by 50 binocs.I haven't used image stabilization in binocs but I have a couple of Canon lens for my digital camera that do have IS. IS is only for the shakes, not a boat rolling. A boat rolling will be even more of a pain with 15 power specs because it will magnify the problem.Another general rule of thumb is that if you find most of the professional planet using one particular instrument (7 by 50's in this case), you are best to stick with the crowd; there's usually a good reason for this.Have a Merry Christmas