View allAll Photos Tagged StarryLandscapeStacker
Made from 15 light frames (captured with a NIKON CORPORATION camera) with 5 dark frames by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.4.4.
Stacked with StarryLandscapeStacker 1.8.0. Used 3 Luxli Viola LED lights - 2 outside and 1 inside. Wanted to see how my micro 4/3rds Olympus would do with astrophotography. Some visible noise but considering this is putting this camera in it’s most disadvantaged situation - I am impressed!
Made from 32 light frames (captured with a OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.6.1. Algorithm: Median
Made from 15 light frames (captured with a OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.6.2. Algorithm: Median
33 frames stacked with StarryLandscapeStacker. Some noticeable motion blur provided to you by ice-cold wind gusts. Venus and the Pleiades were there, too.
Made from 5 light frames (captured with a NIKON CORPORATION camera) with 2 dark frames by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.5.1.
Chilmark, MA, July 20, 2018
Illuminated by first quarter moon
Two panel mosaic of a stack of twelve frames per panel with dark subtraction against each frame
Dark subtraction in Photoshop, Alignment and stacking in StarryLandscapeStacker, panorama in Photoshop, mild post processing in Lightroom
Made from 15 light frames (captured with a NIKON CORPORATION camera) with 5 dark frames by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.4.4.
Made from 5 light frames (captured with a NIKON CORPORATION camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.5.1.
My first attempt at landscape astrophotography on our only clear night whilst staying in Dumfries and Galloway.
Composite image of 11 stacked light frames of 15 seconds at ISO 12800, plus a single frame of 265 seconds at ISO 1600 for the foreground. Shot using my trusty 18mm Nikkor MF lens, wide open at F3.5.
RAW processing and final processing using DxO PhotoLab
Star stacking using Starry Landscape Stacker sites.google.com/site/starrylandscapestacker/home
Compositing using Adobe Photoshop CC.
15 image stack with StarryLandscapeStacker. Slight softness at the horizon, but I like how it made the clouds wispy.
23 pictures stacked with Hugin together with some layer mask work, as StarryLandscapeStacker would not make it with such a heavily light-polluted sky. Note to myself: as short as 0.6s exposure time sounds, do acquire dark-current frames next time.
Neowise comet via stacked image using StarryLandScapeStacker. Impressed that micro 4/3rds could pull this off.
Wide angle view of the milky way with M31 above Grossglockner, Hohe Tauern National Park, Austria.
18x 25s ISO1600
9x dark
Samyang AF 14mm F2.8 F @Nikon D7200
Made from 15 light frames (captured with a OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.5.1.
Made from 16 light frames with 10 dark frames by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.8.0. Algorithm: Mean Min Hor Star Dupe
Made from 10 light frames with 10 dark frames by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.8.0. Algorithm: Mean Min Hor Star Dupe
Made from 13 light frames (captured with a OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.6.2. Algorithm: Median. Using ICE LiPo night sky filter.
A relatively quiet KP4 aurora on a beautiful clear night, with the Milky Way above. Stacked from 4 images using StarryLandscapeStacker.
Two bracketed exposures, for six shots total. Star stacking worked pretty well, but at the cost of a slight reduction in sharpness in the building facade.
7 bracketed exposures, 21 shots total. Denoised in Lightroom and then stacked. Slight adjustment to the grass foreground to bring up light and contrast.
My SO was on the Creative Team for Julius Caesar at Oregon Shakespeare Festival (osfashland.org/) and we were able to get into the Elizabethan Theatre on a cloudless night. Unfortunately, the moon was quite bright so my framing options were very limited.
10sec x 20exp-stacked in StarryLandscapeStacker / minor post-processing in ON1 Photo Raw
My SO was on the Creative Team for Julius Caesar at Oregon Shakespeare Festival (osfashland.org/) and we were able to get into the Elizabethan Theatre on a cloudless night. Unfortunately, the moon was quite bright so my framing options were very limited.
10sec x 20exp-stacked in StarryLandscapeStacker / minor post-processing in ON1 Photo Raw