View allAll Photos Tagged sequator
Equipo: Star Adventurer
15 lights de 120s - 25 darks - 32 flats
Procesado: Sequator - Photoshop - Lightroom
Las estrellas no están puntuales por las nubes que aparecieron altas, aún así, me agrada el resultado
A close up of the rising milky way at 2 am. 56 shots stacked plus all the noise shots to go with the shots. 200 shots in total, Still learning. the planet Jupiter is lower left corner.
Stacked in Sequator Using nikon raw files + 50 Darks/Bias/Lights
Nikon 70-200mm F4
Sky watcher Star Adventurer 5kg Tracker
Light room.
Southern Hemisphere
Cameras I Like Or Use:
Nikon D850: amzn.to/2suljyt
Nikon D810: amzn.to/2CoGjv5
D810 L Bracket: amzn.to/2SVSaYo
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
Sigma 14 1.8 (nikon): amzn.to/2MYxL33
Sigma 35 1.4 (nikon): amzn.to/2FyVi8Y
VLOG Gear:
GoPro: amzn.to/2VRX22C
Sony RX10: amzn.to/2M7Rhta
Litra Light: amzn.to/2RGMDb5
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Rode Micro Mic: amzn.to/2sqQAlE
Tascam DR-05: amzn.to/2sqgoi5
Lavalier Mic: amzn.to/2RGMVPd
Mavic 2 Pro : amzn.to/2BR23PU
Mavic 2 Pro Bundle : amzn.to/2BR2DNA
Mavic 2 Zoom : amzn.to/2BYE41s
Mavic 2 Zoom Bundle : amzn.to/2VoxtpP
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!
Luminar Software: macphun.evyy.net/c/418560/320119/3255
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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
Memories of a warm night in August 2018 with the Milky Way rising above the mountains of Valnontey.
I took my first hike in this valley when I was about 20 years old. That day I reached the Money bivouac, a truly exceptional vantage point.
Seeing the glaciers suffering so much after more than forty years is something that really hurts and makes you think of the damage, perhaps irreparable, that we are doing to our planet.
Shot planned with PhotoPills
Canon EOS 5d Mark III
Samyang 14mm
Manfrotto tripod
sky: seven 10 sec shots f/2.8 ISO 5000 stacked in Sequator
Beautiful view from a panorama point on Pelješac peninsula, looking at Lumbarda town on nearby Korčula island. Moon was already rising, so this is just a quick 21x10s exposures stacked in Sequator, processed with BlurX, NoiseX and PS.
Telescope: Astrotech 72mm ED/ Star Adventurer mount
Camera: Sony A7
Settings: F/8.3, ISO 100, 1/125 Sec exposure
Image source: 6 images
Processing: Sequator, Photoshop
Date:7/02/2022
An old tank under the Milky Way. The sky is a stack of 11 shots, 10 seconds each, in Sequator. The foreground is a focus and exposure blend of 4 shots lit by Richard Tatti. Blending in Photoshop, processing in Lightroom, Sigma lens.
This is my first proper attempt at astrophotography. I found out that while on vacation in Morocco there was going to be almost a new moon the night I was supposed to be out in the desert; I checked out on an app the right timeframe to shoot the Milky Way (at about 4am until 5:30am) and studied a little bit the correct settings to use. During the right timeframe I wasted a lot of time with wrong settings and I ended up fixing them the best I could after 5:30am, when the sun was already starting to spread some light.
The picture comes from stacking 12 raw photos and processing them in Sequator. Settings are: 12mm, ISO 3200, f2.8, 15 seconds of exposure.
Orion constellation from bortle class 8. I stacked 20x6" light frame in sequator and for the shining stars i used StarSpikesPro.
Taken at 1am overnight on 12th/13th June 2021 from Oxfordshire UK. It was taken with a Canon 1100D with Canon 10-18mm wide angle lens, ISO-1600 for 20 seconds at f/4.5, This is a stack of 9 images + 30 darks, stacked using Sequator (I froze the foreground to prevent blurring). Stacked image was processed in Lightroom and Fast Stone Image Viewer
16.05.2020
Mosaic from 6 panels (3 background, 3 foreground)
Background exposure (each): 20 x 120s, ISO 1600
Foreground exposure (each): 40 x 15s, ISO 1600
Camera: Canon EOS 6Da (modified)
Lens: Canon EF-L 16-35mm (16mm, f/4)
Mount (background): Skywatcher NEQ5 Synscan
Mount (foreground): Skywatcher Staradvernturer
Autoguider: Lacerta MGEN with 9x50 Skywatcher
Imageprocessing: Pixinsight 1.8, Sequator, Photoshop cc
aufgenommen auf dem Kornbühl bei der Salmendinger Kapelle auf der schwäbischen Alb; Stack auf 33 Aufnahmen à 20 sec, gestackt mit Sequator
Wide image of dark patches of interstellar dust on the border of the constellations of Cepheus and Cygnus, the two largest dark nebulae that dominante the frame and are visible to the naked eye under dark skies are Le Gentil 3 ( left) and the Northern Coalsack (right). Residing among the dust clouds are vast star forming hydrogen emission nebulae, including the Elephant's Trunk (left) and the famous North America Nebula (right). To the bottom right is Herschel's Garnet Star, aka Mu Cephei, a dying red supergiant star poised to go supernova within next few centuries.
Acquisition Details:
Captured late August 28, 2019
12x30" sub exposures
6 minutes total integration
ISO - 1600
f/3.2
Daylight White Balance
Gear Used:
Camera - EOS 350D
Lens - Canon 50mm f/1.8 STM
Mount - NyxTech NyxTracker V2
Software:
Adobe Camera Raw
Sequator
PixInsight 1.8
Adobe Photoshop CS5.1
Notes:
-Image has been mosaicked with my previous Cygnus image to provide better framing.
- My first attempt stacking using Sequator. I like how fast it is! However I don't think it has drizzle capability and I think images come out of it noisier than using Deep Sky Stacker, thought this could be error on my part.
During the early hours of 26th June 2022 there was a red alert for aurora. Despite being really poorly with a respiratory infection, I briefly popped out with my camera to take some photos of the northern horizon to see if I could detect any aurora. I couldn't see anything aurora wise but the Milky Way was looking absolutely stunning so I took 4 x 20 second shots with my Canon 1100D with 18-55mm kit lens. ISO-1600 f/3.5. I also shot 20 darks, then stacked the four images + 20 darks using Sequator, using the free foreground option to prevent blurring of the horizon. The stacked image was processed in Lightroom, Fast Stone Image Viewer and Photoshop CS2.
The Milky Way over a bird hide at Llyn Brenig reservoir in North Wales. 24x 15 second exposures, stacked in Sequator, layered in photoshop with 2 more light-painted exposures for the foreground
A year in the waiting! This was one of my locations that I shot a little over a year ago. I posted a shot very similar to this back then and though I was fairly happy with the way it came out, I felt like there was a "better version" of it to be had (the previous one had a more cloud cover in the sky than what I had hoped for). I planned to return with better conditions and since that didn't happen last year, I knew that I'd have to try again this year. Now since in order to get the shot that I really wanted, I knew that I'd have to do this a little later in the season. I made a couple of other attempts, but due to the smoke from the West Coast wildfires, I wasn't able to get anything good. As it turns out the third time was a charm and I was finally able to get the shot that I had imagined.
EXIF: Fuji X-H1 & Samyang 8mm f/2.8 fisheye; (7) 10 second shots + (1) dark frame @ ISO 6400, 3800K WB; stacked in Sequator with final edits in Photoshop using a few actions and plugins. Interior lit with some small LED candles; ground out side lit with an LED panel on a light stand probably about 80 feet to camera left.
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Fotografía hecha con dos tomas: una para el suelo y otra para el cielo. Esta última son 20 fotos de 60s con tracker para mantener las estrellas puntuales. Para el revelado se ha usado Sequator y PS.
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Cameras I Like Or Use:
Nikon D850: amzn.to/2suljyt
Nikon D810: amzn.to/2CoGjv5
D810 L Bracket: amzn.to/2SVSaYo
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
Sigma 14 1.8 (nikon): amzn.to/2MYxL33
Sigma 35 1.4 (nikon): amzn.to/2FyVi8Y
VLOG Gear:
GoPro: amzn.to/2VRX22C
Sony RX10: amzn.to/2M7Rhta
Litra Light: amzn.to/2RGMDb5
hot shoe holder: amzn.to/2sunlP7
Rode Mic: amzn.to/2VWdD5k
Rode Micro Mic: amzn.to/2sqQAlE
Tascam DR-05: amzn.to/2sqgoi5
Lavalier Mic: amzn.to/2RGMVPd
Mavic 2 Pro : amzn.to/2BR23PU
Mavic 2 Pro Bundle : amzn.to/2BR2DNA
Mavic 2 Zoom : amzn.to/2BYE41s
Mavic 2 Zoom Bundle : amzn.to/2VoxtpP
Polar Pro Filters: amzn.to/2sc2gZx
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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!
Luminar Software: macphun.evyy.net/c/418560/320119/3255
Get Crypto Currency: www.coinbase.com/join/5a2abd59f52b9301695ad5ca
How I keep my face looking fresh: shaved.by/lB2Ql
EDC Gear:
Mini Gaff Tape: amzn.to/2G42H0j
Light My Fire Striker: amzn.to/2SfWsNu
EDC - Maxpedition Fatty: amzn.to/2WolWal
Lumitop Flashlight: amzn.to/2WnkMfq
Compas Pin: amzn.to/2CQkOnf
Rain Poncho: amzn.to/2CQl5GN
Emergency Mylar Blankets: amzn.to/2CMZjn6
Zippo Lighter and fluid: amzn.to/2SeLirY
Paracord: amzn.to/2G1sLJs
Dude Wipes: amzn.to/2WplFEq
CRKT M16-14ZLEK: amzn.to/2FT1Z6u
CRKT Compass Bracelet: amzn.to/2S9vEhv
CRKT Saw Bracelet: amzn.to/2G0eJaZ
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
The Temple of the Sun looms like the bow of an onrushing warship in the remote Cathedral Valley region of Capitol Reef National Park Utah.
I drove for nearly two hours after midnight on the primitive Cathedral Road to get here. Only then did I realize just how large the Temple of the Sun was and what a challenge I faced to get the image I had 'pre-envisioned'.
The Milky Way in this shot consists of ten, 8-second exposures at ISO 3200 combined in Sequator.
The foreground is a series of focus-stacked 400+ second exposures at ISO 800.
I took this shot two years ago (before the ban on light painting at Capitol Reef) and I've been tweaking the post-processing ever since. I think I've finally got it to a point that makes me happy. Hope you enjoy it.
Cheers!
Jeff
PS: If you would like to read an article about the night I took this shot (with more photos), click on the following link: www.firefallphotography.com/utah-photography-expedition-d...
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Featured on EXPLORE! 20 Dec 2023
See more of my Night Skies Portfolio at; www.firefallphotography.com/night-skies-gallery/
Over Mt. Whitney Oct 19. Jeff and I wanted to go out one more time to capture the comet over an iconic location in the moonlight. It was pretty cool. The light at the lower part of the mountain is a hiker coming out in the dark. It was pretty busy up there.
This tobacco shed sits at the edge of town in Coon Valley, WI. After a light fog lifted, I was able to photograph this old building under the Milky Way, Saturn and Jupiter. The two planets are hovering over the front of the barn. Antares is also visible near the right edge of the photo. This orange star is often confused with Mars.
Canon 6D
Samyang 24mm f/1.4
Sky: 24 mm, 15 s, f/2, ISO 3200
9 light frames, 14 dark frames, aligned stacked and processed in Sequator
Ground: 24 mm, 30 s, f/2, ISO 800
plus light painting on the barn
Well finally a clear night and pow! Stars! Two "Chicks that Click" (a local photography group) and I found what we were looking for on a recent road trip. I had scouted this route the day before, saw many historical sites and meet a few interesting people along the way (isn't that what photography is all about...the adventure?). Our adventure started in Mt Carmel, SC and ended up in Parksville, SC where this picture was shot on Thurmond Lake (Clark Hill Lake).
#milkyway, #milkywaychasers, #stars, #astrophotography, #realnightlife, #nightphotography, #longexposure, #parksville, #southcarolina, #clarkhilllake, #lakethrumond, #onlyinsouthcarolina, #discoversouthcarolina, #sciway, #nikon, #tamron, #johnkirkland
EXIF:
18 Shots 10 sec - f3.5 - ISO 2500
Stacked using Sequator for noise
Nikon D7000
While the northern lights were basically a fizzled no-show, I took some time to image Orion while at Fisherman's Island State Park. This was my first attempt at it with the D850 and I am very happy with what I'm seeing. This image is a stack of 85 2.5" exposures. I did not bring my tracker with me, otherwise I would have taken much longer exposures, but as you can see, even with each image at iso 51,200, when you have enough to stack, the results can be quite clean! You do not need a tracker to jump into shooting DSOs. I use a free program called Sequator to do the stacking here too, so as long as you already have a camera, tripod, and a longer lens, you can take pictures like this without buying dedicated hardware. Although, trackers are a big help.
So in this image you can see Orion's belt, the Horsehead Nebula next to the Flame Nebula and of course, Orion's Nebula at the bottom right. This was my view at 200mm with about a 15% crop for 4x5 format. I can't wait to put the D850 on a tracker and do some serious imaging of Orion and Andromeda because this was just an off-the-cuff attempt while waiting for lights to show. I've still got a lot to learn about processing these files though. I cannot seem to process this stuff consistently, but I'll get there.
This is the Carina region taken early in the morning with exposures of 30 seconds (tracked and stacked). The total integration time was 2hr and 15min. I used Sequator to stack my images and Photoshop to edit it. Other plugins used was Topaz denoise ai and rc-astro gradientxterminator. This is a re-edit of my previous post on Instagram and I think I neatened it up nicely.
Another attempt to get the Milky Way setting over the Ouse Valley Viaduct around 4am.
The 6057 Acton - Ardingly aggregate freight service provided a ghostly outline as it passed down along the viaduct.
And a perfectly timed milk delivery to the nearby cottages lit up the arches :-).
Unfortunately the light pollution from Haywards Heath killed the core cloud and almost makes it look like a sunrise.
Sequator v1.7 L30 D30 freeze Enhance strong
This was my first attempt at a tracked panorama of the Milky Way. The location was Reynolds Pond in Alfalfa, a town in Oregon's high desert. Setup and execution all went as planned, and it was a perfectly clear, calm night. And I had the place to myself!
With my filter-modified Canon 6D and Sigma 24mm f/1.4 lens mounted on a Star Adventurer 2i tracking mount, I took 9 vertically oriented frames of the sky, each a stack of three tracked 45s exposures at ISO 1600, f/2.0. Then I turned off the tracking, aimed the camera lower, refocused on the foreground, and took 9 frames of the foreground, each a stack of three 60s exposures at ISO 1600, f/2.0, I did some preliminary processing in Lightroom, then stacked all the 3-image sets in Sequator, before stitching the nine stacked images for the sky and the foreground separately into panoramas using PTGui. Finally, I combined the sky and foreground panoramas in Photoshop and then did some final processing.
This was a 180-degree panorama originally, which I cropped in a bit, so the resulting span is probably closer to 160 degrees. I could tell when reviewing a few of the subexposures as I took them that there was some prominent airglow -- that green and red banding that radiates up from the horizon under the Milky Way arch. And it reflected on the still water nicely.
I definitely got more detail and contrast in the Milky Way with the tracking than I had gotten previously with stacked but non-tracked panoramas. I look forward to doing more tracked Milky Way panos in the future!
I was waiting to uploading a closer approach of the two planets but the weather is not favorable.
Ten star plus 4 noise photos, stacked in Sequator.
EOS 7D and Samyang 14mm lens.
3 x 25 second exposures at f/2.8 and ISO 6400, stacked in Sequator software to reduce digital noise; curves adjusted and additional noise reduction via CyberLink PhotoDirector.
(3) - 150sec exposures stacked for sky, (1) - 210sec exposure for foreground. Tiffs created with RawTherapee, stacked with Sequator, final edits in PS.
My second Sombreiro Galaxy record (M 104). Processing is very laborious, and there is still a lot to improve. This record sums up the frames captured in the record I conducted in 2020 with the frames captured in 2021, totaling 15 hours and 10 minutes of exposure.
"With an apparent magnitude of 8, the Sombrero galaxy is beyond the limit of naked-eye visibility but can be spotted through small telescopes most easily during May. M104 is located 28 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo, and with a mass equal to 800 billion suns, it is one of the most massive objects in the Virgo galaxy cluster". Source: nasa.gov
Sky-Watcher 203mm F/5 EQ5 reflector with Onstep and ZWO EAF electronic focuser, Canon T6 (primary focus) modified, Optolong L-eNhance Filter (in part of the frames). 50mm Guidescope with ASI 290MC. 182 light frames (148x300" ISO 800 + L-eNhance: 34x300" ISO 1600), 80 dark frames. Processing: Sequator, PixInsight, Camera Raw and Fitswork.
@LopesCosmos
The Horsehead Nebula (also known as Barnard 33, B33) is a dark nebula in the constellation Orion. The nebula lies just below Alnitak, the easternst star in Orion's belt.The Flame Nebula is a diffuse nebula in the constellation Orion.
It is located 1 degree from the celestial equator, very close to the brilliant star Alnitak, so much so that it is almost obscured by its brightness. It is part of the large Orion Molecular Nebula ComplexShooting data:canon eos 1100d fullspectrum,canon lens 75/300 to 200mm F 5,iso 1600.33x60s,10 dark,optolong filter l-pro eos clip,use of lx2 minitrack astroseguitor,apt capture,sum with sequator and photoshop proce
ssing
Taken back in October 17th 2023, near the end of milky way season at Moogerah Dam Scenic Rim SE Qld Australia.
11 images stacked in Sequator at ISO 5000, f2.8, 15 sec. NR in post.
Nikon D810, 20mm f1.8G ED lens.
Taken from Durlston Country Park in Dorset by the huge stone sphere in the park. I was doing a bunch of test shots hoping to get a better stab at this during a clearer night, but despite the mist and cloud near the horizon, the Milky Way was visually about the brightest I've ever seen it! The sky was so dark that I had to push my ISO up higher than I usually use. Jupiter and Saturn can be seen to the left of the Milky Way.
Taken with a Canon 1100D with Canon 10-18mm wide angled lens. ISO-3200 for 25 seconds.
27 x lights + 30 darks stacked using Sequator, with the foreground frozen to prevent motion blur.
Minimal processing in Lightroom and denoised in Fast Stone Image Viewer. At home I have to do a lot of processing to be able to bring out detail in the Milky Way but the sky in Dorset is so much darker!
... und ich werde mit meinen Aufnahmen zufrieden :D
Hier gibt es den Ödenturm in Geislingen (Steige) zu sehen mit etwas Milchstraße als Beiwerk ...
Die Aufnahme entstand aus 100 Aufnahmen mit 4 Sekunden Belichtungszeit bei ISO 3200 ... diese Bilder wurden mit LR vorbereitet, mit Sequator gesteckt und danach noch ein wenig in LR gepimpt ...
Ich hoffe, das Bild mag gefallen ...
Links im Bild ist der Lichtsmog von Weiler (o. Helfenstein), rechts von Amstetten (Würtemberg) :(
Muskoka Road 169 is literally right in the heart of Ontario’s cottage country. Connecting Hwy 11 and 69 to the west while meandering through the Canadian Shield and passing by some famous lakes such as L. Joseph and L. Muskoka. Many famous celebrities own cottages and movies have been filmed in this area. For good reason, it’s definitely an incredibly beautiful part of Ontario during all four seasons. Also the night sky views aren’t too shabby either👌✨ .
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Unyeo Beach, located on Anmyeondo Island and facing the Yellow Sea, is characterized by its coastal dune and doksal, walls constructed for trapping fish at low tide, creating picturesque scenery. To the south of the beach, a breakwater adorned with pine trees, transforms into an island-like platform filled with water at high tide, offering stunning views at sunset. The beach welcomes swimmers during the summer season.
Sky : 1h30min (30*3min) @ 16mm f2.8 iso800
Ground : 3min @ 14mm f2.8 iso1600
Tracker : Nomad
PP : Sequator, Siril, Photoshop, Lightroom
Vrani kamen - vidikovac
12x20sec, iso 5000, f/2,8
24mm Tamron + Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Sequator + PS
Thanks for your kind comments & faves
© 2018 Dunja All rights reserved
📍Smoke Lake, Algonquin Park, 🍁
The magical Summer night sky of Algonquin Park. Have you ever experienced it on a clear moonless night ?
Campo largo nel Cigno,dove si vedon le nebulose Pellicano e Nord America,l'anello delle Velo e la regione di Sadr,canon eos 1100d fullspectrum,ob. yashika 50mm f 1/4 iso 800,10x90s,filtro optolong l-pro eos a clip,astroinseguitore minitrack,acquisizione con apt,somma con sequator ed elaborazione con fotoshop
The old Acland coal mine under a spectacular Darling Downs star show. the old mine ruins is just outside the township of Acland, SE Qld Australia.
Last view of the Cygnus region of the Milky Way, Dedham, Maine.
8, 8-sec exposures stacked in Sequator.
Mist rising over Llyn Brenig, Wales, beneath the Milky Way. 8x 20 second exposures, stacked with Sequator
Sadr (also known as Sadir or Sador; γ Cygni/γ Cyg) is the second brightest star in the constellation Cyg, after Deneb (α Cyg). Located at the center of the asterism known as the Northern Cross, it has an apparent magnitude of +2.23. Its name comes from the Arabic صدر şadr, "bust", from which also derives the name of the star Shedir (α Cassiopeiae). It is almost 1800 light-years from the solar system. Data Sheet: Photos of the Sadr region ( Constellation of Cygnus ) 10x120s, canon camera eos 1100d fullspecrutm, canon 75/300 lens at 300mm f 5/6, iso 1600, astrotrack Skywatcher Star Adventurer 2i wifi, acquisition with Apt, sum with Sequator and processing with Gimp
Taken at 02:40 BST 15th April 2021
Taken from a village in North Oxfordshire with a Canon 1100D with Canon 10-18mm lens. I shot four panes for this panoramic image, each pane was 5 x 25 seconds at ISO-1600 stacked with 10 darks using Sequator (the foreground was frozen)
The stacked images were then lens corrected using Lightroom then stitched using Microsoft ICE. It wouldn't accept the final pane at all so this pano is just three panes stitched together. I created four different projections but this one is "spherical" and it's my favourite of the bunch.
Once stitched the image was processed in Lightroom and Fast Stone Image Viewer.
This is the first time I've created stacked images with each pane of a Milky Way panorama, so I just did five exposures for each so I could test my workflow plan for it. I will do more of this as the Milky Way gets higher and brighter