View allAll Photos Tagged Sequator

Springtime Milky Way in central Estonia with faint hint of purple aurora.

Gear: Skywatcher Star Adventurer, Pentax K-50.

Stacked with Sequator and edited in Photoshop.

It is so dark at night that even a few minutes exposure (16mm f2.8) doesn't give a just so-so foreground shot. Luckily, I took a similar shot at the same place during the blue hour. The milky way was shot at 16mm f2.8 30sec ISO6400. I took seven consecutive shots to reduce noise in post-processing. A free software Sequator (for PC) is highly recommended to get the job done. I learned this software from "Milky Way Mike" on Youtube.

while we dream

in solitude

joined to the night

abandoned by bonds

woven into infinity

The milky way at Paringa, South Australia.

To the right is the banks of Mundic Creek.

Lots of subjects, including the pump shed, are being illuminated by a large orange coloured neon cross high on the Paringa Lutheran church.

There are lots of trucks heading along the Sturt Highway to the left.

The sky is from 8 images all 20mm, 4 seconds and ISO 3200. Stacked in Sequator.

 

It's appearing approximately over the California Agricultural Inspection Station at this point.

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Cameras I Like Or Use:

Nikon D850: amzn.to/2suljyt

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Nikon D750: amzn.to/2GvViHn

Intervalometer: amzn.to/2JQLojn

 

Lenses:

Tamron 15-30 (for Nikon): amzn.to/2KROjJ5

Tamron 15-30 (for Canon): amzn.to/2Z3o24w

Tamron 15-30 (sony): amzn.to/2FAsBZo

Sigma 14mm (for Nikon): amzn.to/31PNC9Y

Sigma 14mm (for Canon): amzn.to/31JElAg

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Tascam DR-05: amzn.to/2sqgoi5

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Mavic 2 Pro : amzn.to/2BR23PU

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Polar Pro Filters: amzn.to/2sc2gZx

 

Tripods:

Main Tripod / Oben: amzn.to/2DakuAT

Tripod Head: amzn.to/2su21JC

Nodal Slider: amzn.to/2SPJVgB

 

Bags:

Altura -The Great Adventurer Bag: amzn.to/2FwrCJz

Ruggard 75: amzn.to/2GsGidi

 

iOptron Sky Tracker Pro: amzn.to/2WZJC9h

Check out the worlds smallest and most portable star tracker!

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Manual: www.ioptron.com/v/Manuals/3322_SkyTrackerPro_Manual.pdf

Phone/iPad app for accurate polar alignment (itunes.apple.com/us/app/ioptron-polar-scope/id564078961?mt=8)  or Android phone polar finder app (play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.techhead.polarf...)

 

Stacking Software

Deep Sky Stacker (PC): deepskystacker.free.fr/english/index.html

Sequator (PC): sites.google.com/site/sequatorglobal/download

Registax (PC): www.astronomie.be/registax/

Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac): itunes.apple.com/us/app/starry-landscape-stacker/id550326...

pixinsight (mac): pixinsight.com/

Nebulosity (mac): www.stark-labs.com/nebulosity.html

 

A cluster of slash pine trees stand tall against the farther parts of the Milky Way at the entrance to the Pine Flatwood Trail at the Merritt Island National Wildlife Preserve. Eighteen 25 second exposures at 10000 ISO were stacked in Sequator to clean up this image.

Taken whit Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 , 10 stacked images whit Sequator and Photoshop

© Graham Daly

 

Connect with me if you like :-)

 

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This image was captured several weeks ago down at Goat Island near Ardmore in County Waterford, Ireland.

 

Was glad to be back out under the stars and the night sky again. Last Milky Way shoot was back on March 29th 2020.

 

Although the Milky Way core was drifting and setting into the light pollution coming from Youghal on the east coast of County Cork, I was still happy with the overall lighting and feel of the image.

 

When you can't avoid light pollution, you simply have to work with it and incorporate it as best as you can.

 

*** EXIF ***

 

11 light frames stacked within Sequator and then processed within Adobe Lightroom CC.

 

Each exposure consisted of the following settings:

 

15MM

ƒ/3.2

15 seconds

ISO 12,800

  

*** GEAR USED ***

 

Canon 5D Mark IV

Sigma ART 14-24mm ƒ/2.8

Benro TMA48CXL Tripod

Manfrotto XPRO Ball Head

3 Legged Thing L Bracket

My initial attempts at capturing the Milky Way.

 

Nine images stacked in Sequator then processed in Camera Raw. Nikon D850 - 14mm Samyang manual focus lens. 13 second exposures. 6400 ISO. f/4. I manually focused the lens on a bright star using live view, actually very easy to do.

I think astrophotographers would chuckle/laugh at my "baby-steps" of self discovery in the night sky. Nonetheless, I was delighted to find my way back to the Andromeda Galaxy at the top of the night sky... This allowed me to take a dozen frames at 300mm, f/5.6, ISO- 1000 using sky wacher star adventurer star tracker with Nikon D500 and 70-300 AF-P, FX lens. The photos were then stacked using (free) Sequator software and the resulting TIFF file was opened in Photoshop where "levels" layer(s) were applied to "stretch" the histogram. Then, I used N. Carboni's Astronomy Tools (photoshop actions at "ProDigitalSoftware.com") to further develop the photo. Finally, I used NIK Define to try to handle "noise" in the photo. So much to learn!

A star trail over an old barn and windmill near Eagle Lake, TX. About 1 hour of the earths rotation. 275 13 second exposures, stacked in Sequator.

From Paris (with a terrible light pollution !)

 

01/19/2017

Sony A7S

Tamron 150-600 at 600mm

Shutter speed 10s

ISO 6400 strongly pushed (3 stops and more)

30 photos stacked with SEQUATOR

Couldnt use more photo because with 10s of shutter speed the succes ratio of my old EQ mount (25 years old) is really low.

 

(M42-10s-6400-MergePix+N+coul+selC+bord+2-3-2048)

I am new at this. Constructive critique is welcome. My astronomy knowledge is very basic. We have dark skies in Montana. Twenty images overlaid in the astro software: Sequator (free) to reduce noise and allow the use of images taken at faster shutter speeds which allows round stars, not stars shaped like dashes. When one is actually looking at the scene in real time there is no way that the human eye can see so many stars or the Milky Way gas clouds except as very dim clouds. The equivalent shutter speed for the overlaid 20 images is 115 seconds, ISO 6400

MIlky way over Somogy county

Test du sigma apsc 18/35 f1.8 en mode plein format à 35mm de focale.

Poses de 8 secondes x7, total 57 secondes de cumul à 6400iso.

Traitement: Sequator (avec dark), lightroom, luminar4

pas de Lune mais léger voile nuageux.

Série par la fenêtre.

 

Railway Bridge over Colorado River on Hwy 90 in Columbus, Texas. 249 star images stacked with Sequator, 10 foreground images for lighting blended in Photoshop

Taken whit Rokinon 14 mm f/2.8 10 stacked images , whit Sequator and PS

The milky way arched over the iconic lighthouse in Portland Bill UK.

 

9 x 2 panorama. Foreground shot at dusk around 11pm and the sky a few hours later. the sky shots are a stack of 5 13sec images @ F2.5 iso 6400. and the foreground is single 60sec images @ ISO 1600 F8. Stackes with sequator. merged and blended in Photoshop.

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Intervalometer: amzn.to/2JQLojn

 

Lenses:

Tamron 15-30 (for Nikon): amzn.to/2KROjJ5

Tamron 15-30 (for Canon): amzn.to/2Z3o24w

Tamron 15-30 (sony): amzn.to/2FAsBZo

Sigma 14mm (for Nikon): amzn.to/31PNC9Y

Sigma 14mm (for Canon): amzn.to/31JElAg

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Sigma 35 1.4 (nikon): amzn.to/2FyVi8Y

 

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Polar Pro Filters: amzn.to/2sc2gZx

 

Tripods:

Main Tripod / Oben: amzn.to/2DakuAT

Tripod Head: amzn.to/2su21JC

Nodal Slider: amzn.to/2SPJVgB

 

Bags:

Altura -The Great Adventurer Bag: amzn.to/2FwrCJz

Ruggard 75: amzn.to/2GsGidi

 

iOptron Sky Tracker Pro: amzn.to/2WZJC9h

Check out the worlds smallest and most portable star tracker!

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Luminar Software: macphun.evyy.net/c/418560/320119/3255

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CRKT Compass Bracelet: amzn.to/2S9vEhv

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Emergency Bivvy SOL: amzn.to/2FNZRgo

 

Manual: www.ioptron.com/v/Manuals/3322_SkyTrackerPro_Manual.pdf

Phone/iPad app for accurate polar alignment (itunes.apple.com/us/app/ioptron-polar-scope/id564078961?mt=8)  or Android phone polar finder app (play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.techhead.polarf...)

 

Stacking Software

Deep Sky Stacker (PC): deepskystacker.free.fr/english/index.html

Sequator (PC): sites.google.com/site/sequatorglobal/download

Registax (PC): www.astronomie.be/registax/

Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac): itunes.apple.com/us/app/starry-landscape-stacker/id550326...

pixinsight (mac): pixinsight.com/

Nebulosity (mac): www.stark-labs.com/nebulosity.html

 

More Info: astrobackyard.com/double-cluster-in-perseus/

 

This image was captured using a Canon EOS 60Da and a Rokinon 135mm F/2 lens on a Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer.

 

15 x 90-seconds @ ISO 800. Stacked in Sequator, processed in Adobe Photoshop!

This was shot late in twilight, when the sky was still blue but dark enough to see stars and the faint outline of the Milky Way in person. The camera, of course, captures far more light than the naked eye, bringing out much more detail in the Milky Way.

 

Nikon Z 7, Mount Adapter FTZ, NIKKOR 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm and f/2.8 for all shots.

Sky: Star stack of 20 exposures at 10 seconds, ISO 3200 using Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac) for pinpoint stars and low noise. You can do this on Windows with Sequator.

Foreground: Focus stack of 3 exposures for depth of field, each at 60 seconds, ISO 6400.

 

Visit my website to learn more about my photos and video tutorials: www.adamwoodworth.com

Estoy turbo feliz y orgullosa de haber logrado esta fotografía de la vía láctea, la cual es un apilado de 12 imágenes de 30" de exposición cada una para lograr un total de 6 minutos de integración.

 

Tomé las imágenes durante la madrugada del Maratón Messier después de "retirarme" con dignidad debido a ciertos problemas técnicos que no me permitió procesar mi imagen participante como hubiera querido.

 

Todavía estaba bastante desanimada por mi resultado en el maratón, hasta que vi este resultado de ocho horas de creatividad y procesado el día de hoy.

 

La mancha enorme y luminosa es el planeta Venus y también se aprecian tres estrellas de color azul, magenta y amarillo (estrella Antares) de la región de formación estelar Rho Ophiuchi en la parte derecha del centro de la galaxia, así como las nubes de gas oscuras que las rodean y dejan una especie de "cola" que conecta con el centro galáctico.

 

Otras regiones de nebulosas y cúmulos, por ejemplo, M8, M7 y M6 se aprecian en toda la franja de la galaxia (quizá haga un mapa más adelante).

 

Realmente considero que es mi mejor astrofotografía hasta ahora, la amo y no puedo dejar de verla. 😍💕🌌

 

Los parámetros:

 

12x30" lights

F3.5

ISO3200

18-55mm

 

Apilado en Sequator y procesado en LR, PS y PS Mobile.

Dans un champ surplombant le Val Tamié, la roulotte est décidée. Elle va passer la nuit sous le ciel étoilé. Il ne fait pas bien chaud malgré le fait qu'Août soit ici, mais la brave roulotte est de sortie et rien ne la fera changer d'avis.

 

Longtemps menaçant ses plans, les nuages sont partis à son grand soulagement. Le ciel s'offre alors dans sa plus belle parure, avec la Voie Lactée l'enveloppant dans un murmure.

 

Voilà la belle roulotte récompensée de sa patience.

 

Merci à Marc et Caroline de nous avoir laissé faire ces photos, d'avoir déplacé la roulotte dans un champ, de nuit, à 23H après une journée de travail, d'être restés jusqu’à 1H du matin alors qu'il faisait froid (surtout en short ;-) ) et tout ça pour deux énergumènes qui font des photos la nuit.

 

- La Roulotte du Masseur www.facebook.com/LaRoulotteDuMasseur

 

- Les photos de Sandra DM seront disponibles là: www.instagram.com/sand_dm/

#suivezlaroulotte

  

Canon 80D. 20 photos pour le ciel et 20 dark pour réduire le bruit, StarNet++ et Sequator. 3 photos pour la roulotte

---Photo details----

Stacks Hα: 37x30 sec

Stack program : Sequator

F stop : F/2.8

ISO : 800

 

---Hardware---

Mount : Skywatcher Star Adventurer

Camera : Sony A7r2

Tube : Sony 85mm F/1.4 GM

 

---Software---

Acquired in camera

Stacked with Sequator

Processed with Lightroom & Topaz DenoiseAI

This is a Milkyway panorama containing 9 images total. I previously posted this, but re-edited it to polish it up more, although I had to reduce the resolution so I could post this on Flickr. I shot this in Bridgetown WA on the 4/1/23 (early in the morning. The location I was in was bortle 2, so I didn't need as much exposure as normal. Each shot is a 3x3 minute exposure stacked in Sequator (apart from the foreground). I also used Topaz denoise ai with this and got great results with it. The equipment I used was the Sky Watcher Star Adventurer 2i pro pack, 18-55mm kit lens, Canon 500d, kiwi lens warmer, Charmast 26500mah battery, tripod and a ballhead. This was a great experience for me as I've never experienced zodiacal light (as seen in the image) or bortle 2 skies before.

This was taken Sunday evening 12th July at midnight. At this time and day the Comet was very close to the horizon. Most of the Sky was clear except the northern horizon where there was light cloud near the horizon. This was I think the reason for the comet being very faint to the naked eye. The final result was much brighter due to the camera settings and the stacking of images.

 

This was taken with a Minolta 75-300 lens at 100mm at F5 10 seconds and 1600 ISO. 10 pictures were taken and stacked together using Sequator software which aligns stars together. The picture was taken close to home at Pagham Harbour Wall looking NNE towards the South Downs 8 miles away but flat until there. This made it ideal for an object close to the horizon

 

After processing in Sequator the image was taken into Photoshop and then processed in Topaz Clarity and Topaz DeNoise.

 

The Comet is visible all of July and getting brighter until closest approach on 23 July. For the next 10 days the Comet gets higher in the sky for any given hour. It will now be visible all night.

 

For my Photography books see My Author Page USA or My Author Page UK

 

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Photography

 

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I tested my 8mm peleng canon 3.5 fisheyes in my garden.

it is a composition of 6 photos calculated by Hugin.

Each photo is a result of 700 moonless photos with the 1300d canon at 3200iso.

I am in mini-planet mode, I have the panoramic version on my page.

The star trail is made by Sequator 1.55.

I don't get as much chance to shoot the Milky Way as I would like. I went up into our local San Diego mountains last night in Mount Laguna to shoot the Milky Way behind the Big Laguna Lake but my plans did not turn out as I liked, so for about an hour or so I drove back and forth across the mountain looking for a spot where the Milky Way would line up with the road.

 

After I found the spot I liked I waited another hour or so until it would line up as well as it could ( I will need to try later in the season when the milky way is more vertical) and then shot for a little while before retiring to the back of my car for a few zzz's before sunrise.

 

7 photos stacked in Sequator to help reduce noise.

Composite image from about 1.5 hours of shooting with an intervalometer. Base image is a 10-photo stack in Sequator. The meteors were added back in Photoshop.

 

Orland, Maine.

Vertical pano of 3 panels, each of 8 stacked images, 15 second exposures. The image shows the Cygnus and Cassiopeia regions of the milky way. The Andromeda galaxy is visible towards the top of frame

40 stacked images x 10 seconds at 8000 ISO

Sony a7s defiltré et Samyang 85mm f1,4

3200 iso, pas de suivi.

6x4 secondes.

Traitements: Sequator, Lightroom, Luminard neo

Pas de photomontages.

6 image stack taken at 50mm with a Hoya Red Intensifier filter on an iOptron SkyTracker mount at Island Point in Western Australia. Stacked using Sequator.

Filmed: Jan 11, 2024

Nikon D750 IR modified, 28mm, f4.0, ISO1600, SS60sec, Polarie U

Sky: 30 frames, Foreground 20 frames, Dark 20 frames

RStacker, Sequator, Starnet++ V2, Photoshop

If you find yourself driving along the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia, be sure to check out the view from the Ravens Roost Overlook (mile post 10.7). If you happen to be passing by on a clear summer night- bring a camera for the Milky Way!

 

Here's a photo from a quick outing last night to take advantage of the clear skies left behind following the passing of the remnants of Hurricane Ida. I hope you enjoy!

 

Specs: 1x non-tracked blue hour photo for landscape blended with a stack of 18x60" sky shots at ISO800. Canon EOS 6D, Rokinon 24mm at F/2.8. Stacked in Sequator, processed and layered in Photoshop and finished in Lightroom.

Milky Way in Beaver Valley, Ontario.

Two position panorama, each shot 5 stacked images in Sequator.

Foreground and sky in same exposure.

D810 with AF-S 18-35mm f/3.5-4.5g wide open at 18mm.

Primera prueba con Sequator, nuevo software para apilamiento de imágenes astronómicas.

 

Primera prueba satisfactoria en la que Sequator ha conseguido apilar fotografías realizadas con un ojo de pez Samyang de 8 mm y sin seguimiento.

Júpiter, muy brillante, abajo a la izquierda.

No he eliminado la contaminacion lumínica de la parte inferior de la fotografía.

No he utilizado darks.

 

Fecha: 06-08-2021, de 01h36m a 02h41m U.T.

Lugar: Las Inviernas, Guadalajara

Temperatura: de +13.0ºC

Cámara: Canon EOS7D sin modificar

Óptica: Samyang 8mm f/3.5, a f/5.6

Montura: Trípode fotográfico

Guiado: Sin guiado

Filtros: Ninguno

Exposiciones: 117 imágenes de 30s cada una, a ISO3200, en total, 58min.

by Matt Gee

Messier 65 (right ) and Messier 66 (left) - Constellation - Leo

 

These are just two of the many galaxies in the constellation of Leo and by no means the farthest distant.

 

Most images are taken using sunlight that reflects off objects and into the camera - the sunlight takes approx 8 minutes to reach us.

The faint light from Pluto takes about 5.5 hours to reach the Earth.

The light from the nearest star takes about 4.2 years to reach us.

 

It is understood that the light from the Messier 65 galaxy set off on its journey some 35 million years ago, to travel across the Universe and into my telescope and finally land on the sensor of my camera last Thursday night !

 

Messier 66 is also about 35 million light year away from us.

 

7 x 25 second images were stacked together in Sequator and post processed in Photoshop.

 

The images were taken using 200mm Schmidt-Cassegrain working at F6.3 though a Focal Reducer, using the un-guided Equatorial telescope drive for tracking.

My daughter (6) and I were able to spend an entire night camped out on top of Blackrock Summit in Shenandoah National Park, VA on July 11th / July 12th, 2020.

 

It was an exceptionally clear night with 360 degree views so I was able to photograph a wide variety of targets from wide-angle Milky Way / Landscapes, starfields, the Andromed Galaxy and even Comet NEOWISE before sunrise.

 

Of all the shots I was able to take, this is by far my favorite. In this composite 135mm photo, you can see my daughter and I in the foreground on our "observation platform" trying to take in the vastness of our galaxy. In front of us is the core of the Milky Way, the area containing Saggitarius A, with other objects such as the Lagoon and Trifid nebulae visible.

 

This image was created by capturing a single 30 second, ISO 1600 F2.8 foreground shot merged with a stack of tracked 14x60" ISO800 F2.8 sky shots using my iOptron Skyguider. The sky shots were stacked in Sequator, gradients wiped in Startools, and finished in Lightroom CC. I hope you enjoy a shot from a night I'll never forget!

  

Only Milky Way shot from 2023, so I had to make it count! Shot from Raven's Roost on the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia, August, 2023.

 

Sky shot is 14x45" ISO800 stacked and calibrated with 10 dark frames. Foreground shot is 1x30 second ISO200 shot from 30 minutes after sunset to capture the blue hour affect. Canon EOS 6D, Rokinon 24mm lens, F/2.8 for both. Processed in Sequator (for stacking), Photoshop (for selection/blending) and Lightroom for final processing. I hope you enjoy!

Messier 45 - Pleiades

Budget equipement was used! :)

 

Picture was made with:

Canon EOS 200D

Canon 55-250mm IS STM

Star Adventurer Pro (NO guiding, only Polar Aligned)

 

Picture is a stack of 30 Lights, 25 Darks and 50 Flats.

Stacked in Sequator, and edited in Photoshop 2020. :)

 

(90s exposures, f/5.6, ISO-800, 250mm)

www.denisrebadj.com

 

Petit essai sur la voie lactée, l'astrophotographie n'est pas mon fort mais j'aime beaucoup :D

Samyang 12 mm f2.8

11x15s iso 800

Vertical Pano

soft : sequator/LR/CS6

White Rock, Surrey, BC, Canada.

 

9 sky images were stacked in Sequator 1.5.5, each was taken with Rokinon 14mm f/2.8, f2.8, 30s, iso-800. And then stacked in Photoshop with the forground image (f4, 20s, iso-400).

 

Copyright © AwesomeFoto Photography. All rights reserved. Please do not use it without my permission.

You are welcome to visit my iStockPhoto or shutterstock. com/g/jameschen (remove space) to buy it.

Photo stack of comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan-ATLAS taken on October 14th 2024 at 17:19 UTC+2 from Donji Miholjac Croatia.

EXIF:

Canon 70d

50mm lens

F/2.2

1.6 sec exp

ISO 1600

50 frames

Stacked in Sequator, post processed in Lightroom.

 

This is my "bonus shot" from the other night when I took my 'Star Tree' image (my previous post here yesterday). When I saw this I chuckled a little as I thought "I wonder if this might have been a 'hold my beer...' situation. We'll probably never know, but it's definitely not everyday that you see a boat in a tree (with a tree in the boat).

 

Shot with my Fuji X-H1 and Samyang 12mm f/2.0; (5) 15 second shots + (2) dark frames @ f/2.0; ISO 3200, 3800K WB. Lighting was from some security lights on power poles at a nearby farm (maybe a half mile away or so).

 

www.instagram.com/jamesclinich/

 

www.facebook.com/jamesclinichphotography/

 

Prints available at : james-clinich.pixels.com/featured/stellar-dry-dock-james-...

 

I've never seen a ghost in a ghost town, but the human-shaped shadow on the left side of this window begs for some explanation.

 

The star over its shoulder, reflecting in the window, puts it in context, implying that it's a reflection as well. So it's either me taking the picture, or another photographer in our group.

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