View allAll Photos Tagged MagicLantern
Here's a striking shot I captured of Messier 8 - The Lagoon Nebula at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA. M8 is found in the constellation Sagittarius and resides at 4,100 light years distant. An active star forming region, the Lagoon spans about 100 light years. It is one of two naked-eye-visible star forming regions in the Northern Hemisphere sky.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
Filter: Baader Semi-APO
667mm
f/6
ISO: 2500
Exposure: 60 seconds * 28 frames + 120 seconds * 19 frames.
This is a median composite and HDR composite. Median to reduce noise, HDR for a wider dynamic range.
-Scott MacNeill
The new 5x7 camera with the magic lantern lens, making a paper negative. Grossly overexposed at twenty seconds - I just guessed. Salvaged an evocative image via Lightroom though.
Bohus used seven cameras to shoot the Eclipse on Monday! Cameras included: Blackmagic Micro Studio 4K + Vivitar 300mm f5.5, Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera + Tamron 70-210mm f3.5-4, Canon EOS M with Magic Lantern + Vivitar 200mm f3, Fuji XT-2 + 500mm Telephoto, GoPro with Ribcage Mod + Sony 12.5-75mm f1.8, Samsung Nx1 + 500mm Telephoto, and a Sony A7R II + 1250mm Telescope. Quite a complex shoot!
Check out our Fotodiox YouTube or Facebook page to see a video featuring the seven camera rigs that Bohus used to capture the Eclipse!
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/
Maison des douaniers
Canon 5d mark 2
Canon 24-105mm
Magic lantern Dualiso
Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA
Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation
On the banks of Phandar Lake i found the last few standing old guys who are waiting for the day to bid farewell this beautiful land.
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Focus stacking technique (140 shots). Using cheap macro gear: reversely mounted MF lens 50mm f2.0 (8$) on top of my telephoto lens (135mm f2.0), using coupler ring from ebay for 5$, plus macro rail from ebay for 10$. Used free software (enfuse) for focus stacking.
The shooting was done in three batches. Each batch consisted of 46 shots taken automatically using Magic Lantern firmware on my Canon 50D camera (covering the whole focusing range of my 135mm f2.0L lens; focusing step = 5). The reversed 50mm lens was set at f/8. Between the batches, the camera was moved by 2mm using the macro rail. As a result, the synthetic depth of field was 2mm x 3 = 6mm.
Slovakia, Nitra: HYDRO #PHOTOFRANO
Photography & FineArt by photofrano
“Exposure is just the beginning” #HDR #BW
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shot using the new Lensbaby
Sweet 50 optic lensbaby.com/optics-sweet50
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
Here's a stunning shot I captured of Capella, the sixth brightest star in the nighttime sky, this past Thursday (October 6, 2016) at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, RI. Found in the constellation Auriga, the Capella system resides at 42.8 light years distant.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
1370mm fl
f/9
ISO: 5000
Exposure: 30 seconds * 31 images.
This is a sigma-clipping composite to reduce noise.
-Scott
After endlessly cloudy or brightly moonlit nights, we finally saw clear skies with no Moon over Southern New England. So I set out to Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, RI.
This is one of the shots I snapped. It is Messier 11 - The Wild Duck Cluster, a rather dense open star cluster that is found in the constellation Scutum and resides at 6,200 light years distant. This is a fabulous target for binoculars and back yard telescopes along the plane of the Milky Way galaxy in the Northern Hemisphere summertime sky. -Enjoy!
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
1370mm
f/9
ISO: 5000
Exposure: 30 seconds * 77 exposures
This is 77 shots median composite to reduce noise.
-Scott MacNeill
The sun was about to make its appearance.
6.28 AM, 21.Aug.2013
7 frames Magic Lantern - Auto
Blending of Photomatix Pro HDR - Details Enhancer & Exposure Fusion
PS CS5 + Topaz Adjust & Denoise + blending
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using the Lensbaby Composer Pro II with Edge 50 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using the Lensbaby Composer Pro II with Edge 50 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby Composer Pro with Edge 80 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
v2.3
It was my 2nd time attempt of capturing lightening at the night sky. And to be precise it's a part of experiment with long exposure. A big shoutout to the magicLantern that made it too easy to get the most out of such an old entry level canon.
Antique ' Magic Lantern ' Glass slide photographed.....over a light box.
.....Bought at antique market.
..........The National Gallery, London was founded in 1824 and houses over 2,300 paintings - one of the greatest collections in Western Europe.
..........( Please note the hansom cab in the picture ! ).....
Here is a shot I snapped of 31 Cygni on Saturday, September 12, 2015 at Frosty Drew Observatory In Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA. 31 Cygni, residing in the constellation Cygnus, is an optical trinary system. Each star, though appearing to be interacting, reside at significantly different distances from Earth. The primary star in the group sports a stunning red and resides at 881 light years distant. The second brightest star in the group is 30 Cygni, which resides at 615 light years distant. The third star and dimmest of the group resides at 1359 light years distant and shows off a striking blue.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
1369mm
f/9
ISO: 1250
Exposure: 30 seconds * 25 shots.
This is a median composite of 25 frames to reduce noise.
-Scott MacNeill
Here's a composite shot I snapped this morning showcasing the radiant point of the annual Quadrantid Meteor Shower at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island. The bright Moon made it difficult to capture many of the meteors, though I counted 92 from 1:00 a.m. - 4:00 a.m. Comet Catalina is visible at the bottom center right of the image. This was also the warmest Quandrantids I have experienced. Temps usually hang in the single digits in New England for this shower, though it was in the mid 20's this year.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
11mm
f/2.8
ISO: 2500
Exposure: 30 second intervals
This is a composite shot of 11 meteors.
-Scott MacNeill
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
Bak Bak Beach is the main beach for the town of Kudat. It is located about 11 km to the north of town.
We are lucky to be here during a very low tide at sunrise. A bit confusing compose your image here since the rock formation are diagonal with the sunrise, may be sunset is better here. This image is shot using Canon 6D with Samyang 14mm, 9 exposure using Magic Lantern. Merged in Photomatix and some adjustment in Photoshop.
Definitely we will be back.
Location: Nationaal Park De Loonse en Drunense Duinen, The Netherlands
Date taken: September 7, 2017
Camera: Canon EOS 650D with Magic Lantern for focus stacking
Lens: SIGMA 105mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM Macro
shot using Lensbaby
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
A zoetrope is a device that produces an illusion of action from a rapid succession of static pictures.
..........It consists of a cylinder with images from a set of sequenced drawings.
.....As the cylinder spins the user looks and sees a rapid succession of images producing an illusion of motion.
..........The earliest projected moving images were displayed by using a 'magic lantern' zoetrope.
.....It was this principle of the ' Persistence of vision ' that was the forerunner to the earliest Television pictures.
This page of instruction for making 12 different shadow images with only your hands and a handkerchief was included in a booklet on sign language.
The booklet is filed and when I find it I will add additional information.
*Done! All the pages have been scanned and posted. There is a link at the end of the comments.
Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/
Canon 5d mark 2
Canon 24-105mm
Magic Lantern dual-iso 100-800
Panorama en 3 photos
Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA
Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation.