View allAll Photos Tagged Rokinon
Cielo:
D810+Rokinon 14 f-2.4 XP ,sobre iOptron Skyguider pro
2X6X60seg a f-2.4
iso-1250
Apilado con Sequator 1.60 para obtener dos iomágenes de cielo
cosido de pano del cielo con PTgui V10.0.7
Suelo
D810+ Samyang 20 f-1.8 ED AS UMC
2X58 seg a f-4.0
iso-800
Cosido de pano terrestre con PTgui V10.0.7
Blending final con Photoshop v.21.0.3
Wow! ... my first image in Explore. Thank you!!!
This is an image of one of the radio antenna dishes at the VLA just West of Socorro. This single dish is about 100 feet in diameter and part of a larger array that includes a total of 27 dishes. The dishes are all on railroad tracks so the array can be spread out to make a larger antenna. On this night, the array was at its widest configuration so only one dish was accessible.
Rokinon 14/2.8 @ 2.8
Imaging telescopes or lenses: Rokinon 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC Telephoto Rokinon 135mm, Borg 125
Imaging camera: QSI 683WSG-8 OAG QSI 683
Mount: Paramount-ME
Guiding telescopes or lenses: Rokinon 135mm f/2.0 ED UMC Telephoto Rokinon 135mm, Borg 125
Guiding camera: QSI 683WSG-8 OAG QSI 683
Software: Pixinsight 1.8
Filters: Astrodon Luminance, Astrodon Blue, Astrodon Red, Astrodon Green
Accessory: Starlight Xpress lodestar 2
Resolution: 3202x2276
Dates: Sept. 25, 2015, Sept. 9, 2016, Sept. 25, 2016
Frames:
Astrodon Blue: 25x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Blue: 8x900" bin 1x1
Astrodon Green: 25x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Green: 8x900" bin 1x1
Astrodon Luminance: 60x30" bin 1x1
Astrodon Luminance: 44x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Luminance: 21x90" bin 1x1
Astrodon Luminance: 20x900" bin 1x1
Astrodon Red: 25x300" bin 1x1
Astrodon Red: 8x900" bin 1x1
Ha 5nm: 12x900" bin 1x1
Locations: FOVO - Field of View Observatory, Home, Worcestershire, United Kingdom; Deep Sky West Remote Observatory (DSW), Rowe, New Mexico, United States
Here we have a look at a hybrid of the wide field view of M31. The wide data is taken on DSW Roki 135mm lens and the detail (which for this i reprocessed from scratch to apply some new techniques learnt since my last visit) was taken at my home obsy
We spent a weekend at the Black Rock Desert in Nevada to attend Balls XXX, the biggest experimental rocket launch event in the world. The camp is in the middle of a dry lakebed, also called playa, the same place where Burning Man takes place. The playa is big, about 200 sq mi (520 km2). The night sky is very clear, you can see the Milky Way and millions of stars with your bare eyes because there is no light pollution. We arrived on Friday night, and I took this shot at around midnight when most people already went to sleep. Look at this shot fullscreen to enjoy.
I processed a balanced HDR photo from a RAW exposure, and carefully adjusted the color balance and curves. I welcome and appreciate constructive comments.
Thank you for visiting - ♡ with gratitude! Fave if you like it, add comments below, like the Facebook page, order beautiful HDR prints at qualityHDR.com.
-- ƒ/2.8, 12 mm, 30 sec, ISO 1600, Sony A7 II, Rokinon 12mm F2.8, HDR, 1 RAW exposure, _DSC0013_hdr1bal1i.jpg
-- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, © Peter Thoeny, Quality HDR Photography
Second attempt at using some blending photoshop techniques. Still kind of a pain to do but weirdly fun to create these impossible "super moments"
Napier Viewing Platform, Napier, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand
We all have dreams, and sometimes those dreams are to break free and sail off into the sunrise.
Fujifilm X-E2. 12mm Rokinon lens, ISO400, 220sec, f8, Lee Big Stopper ND filter
Processed in Lightroom
A lucky capture while shooting the Milky Way. Wednesday night during the 2015 Starfest starparty in Ontario Canada.
Finally had a free moment at home with good lighting from the window and decided to try to test the color fidelity of my Rokinon 12mm lens. I had noticed some odd desaturated reds in some shots - see previous post about red rocks. I was trying to think what I have around the house to test colors with, and I found a set of rainbow colored pens. Obviously this isn't a well composed shot and the wide angle lens is not at all ideal for closeups like this, but just looking at the colors of the pen caps, it seems to be fine. I don't see any issues with the red or orange being desaturated. Do you? So, I don't know what was going on with those red rocks, but it seems to be ok now... any thoughts? Is there some other way I should test this?
One of several ponds in the Dawes Rd. area along the Taylor-Massey creek.
Toronto, Ontario.
Rokinon 14mm F2.8 IF ED UM
Kodak DCS Pro 14nx
My new toy: a Rokinon 12mm lens for my Sony a6000. I decided to come down to the Back Bay to test it out, starting with the architecture of the famous public library - what else should I try? This is the first time I've bought a lens on its own and also my first time using a fully manual lens!
The Pleiades also known as M45 or the Seven Sisters, is the name of an open cluster in the constellation of Taurus. It is among the nearest to the Earth of all open clusters, probably the best known and certainly the most striking to the naked eye and captured near dead centre of the image.
I went to the Custom House Tower last night to see the sunset, and mostly used my manual Rokinon 12mm lens on my Sony a6000. It was a pretty decent sunset, but it wasn't till afterwards that I realized most of my Rokinon 12mm photos weren't quite in sharp focus - I had been using the focus peaking but had made the mistake of assuming it was ok if the buildings were sparkling from the focus peaking, but I had failed to check that they were sparking the MOST they could possibly sparkle. After sunset I took some night photos and then noticed they weren't coming out in focus even though the focus peaking did have the buildings sparkling. So, I played with it more carefully, and was able to get some night shots that were in sharp focus. Overall, a learning experience. This one looks ok at small size but if you zoom in you can tell its not perfect; but next I'll post a night shot that IS in sharp focus.
Also, its nice that you can currently see the sun setting between those two buildings - not sure how long that will last, because the sunset is moving pretty quickly to the right as the seasons change. I'm going to try to make it up here again in the next week or so to try again, but I don't know if the schedule will work out for me to catch another decent sunset up here, because they close it whenever there is rain or snow.
I am not at all well versed in lighting. But this morning, my wife cut a couple of roses from the yard, and I positioned the vase on a window sill. Using a 45-year-old Ricoh/Pentax 50mm 1.7 manual focus lens on a Fuji X-Pro1 and #fotodiox adapter, I took a shot. The window screen made the background look a little different I guess, but the light coming through was OK. #kmount