Sara, you did a great effort !
Photo by projection from eyepiece isn't easy. You used an 6 mm Ploss. I don't know about your telescope, but your image seems to show that it will accept that 6 mm. But Ploss isn't the best for planets. You need orthoscopic one.
You published a 4000 x 3000 px image. Because of limitation from IIS to 200 kbytes, you needed to reduce very much the quality. For this resolution you need to crop a region of interest. Or publish it on another site that haven't file size limitation as
www.astrobin.com
When you use the internal camera zoom you loose a bit of quality. The image with 4000 x 3000 px is very difficult to be seen with normal computer. Therefore you will need to reduce it, by negative zoom, to see the full photo. So, why zoom it if you will un-zoom later ?
If you crop a region of interest and zoom it, by resize image, in any graphic processor it will very much better.
You can use some tools to connect the camera to the telescope. See what and how I used:
http://astronomia-e-astrofotos.10697...tes-td973.html
I did a fast work on your photo in Photoshop. It is very well for projection. You can get good photos with projection. Look some photos that I did with projection:
Moon:
http://jsmastronomy.30143.n7.nabble....oter-td48.html
http://jsmastronomy.30143.n7.nabble....tion-td37.html
Jupiter:
http://jsmastronomy.30143.n7.nabble....-2011-td5.html
http://jsmastronomy.30143.n7.nabble....2014-td17.html