Thanks for the kind words everyone!
Well I've been quite bored for the rest of the night (seeing as I'm currently in my uni break so I have no assignments or study to do) so I decided to throw together an animation of part of the ISS pass (seeing as most other ISS imagers tend to present their images in an animated format). Unfortunately, the only part of the pass I was able to film for long enough to make an animation out of was just before the station entered the Earths shadow where its distance was 542km away from me. So the animation is very shabby!
I also decided to throw the frames from that animation into registax to see what I could pull out. I've attached my results too. They don't really seem any better than just the raw frames I attached earlier.
And I have a question: in the frames just before the ISS disappeared into the Earth's shadow, the station developed a reddish hue (as seen in the images attached to this post). Did this happen for the same reason why the moon turns red during a lunar eclipse?