View allAll Photos Tagged sequator

(30) lights + (10) darks 90sec. each, 105mm, f/5.0, ISO 1000,

raw stacked in Sequator, final adjustments in Photoshop

Camera: Canon EOS 6D

Lens: Tamron 150-600mm @ 600mm and f6.3

Filter: None

Tracker: iOptron SkyGuiderPro

Stacked: Deep Sky Stacker

Process: Camera Raw, Photoshop

Capture Time: 3.5 Minutes

 

We finally had a clear night without a moon on a weekend. I've light painted this hay rake on a cloudy night a couple weeks ago and was itching to capture it with the Milky Way core.

 

10 Sky images ISO6400 f/3.2 13 second, stacked in Sequator for noise reduction

10 Foreground images ISO500 f/5/6 13 seconds blended in Photoshop

 

Bonus - We had a pair of Armadillos photo bomb us, I was able to capture one in the shot.

Merge of 10 exposures using Sequator

A cold, clear winter night in February, with the Milky Way over an old fish smokehouse in Down East Maine. The orange light on the smokehouse is from a light bulb across the street.

 

Nikon D850 and NIKKOR 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm, f/2.8. The sky is the result of star stacking 20 exposures at ISO 12,800 for 9 seconds each in Starry Landscape Stacker for pinpoint stars and low noise. Starry Landscape Stacker is available only for Mac, but you can do this in Sequator on Windows, or manually in Photoshop. The foreground is a focus stack of 5 exposures, each at f/2.8 for 4 minutes at ISO 1600 with the focus pulled in between each shot. The focus stacking was done in Photoshop, then I manually blended the focus stacked image with the star stacked sky image to have a final image with everything in focus from the foreground to the stars with low noise.

 

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

Moon Setting over Bangor, Maine from Dedham, Maine. Nine, 6-sec exposures stacked in Sequator, edited in Lightroom and cleaned up with Topaz DeNoise AI.

20) 15 second exposures stacked using Sequator. No guide mount - just a tripod. ISO 4000, Rokinon 14mm f2.8 lens, Nikon D850. Foreground is a stack of 6 different exposures blended with the sky.

Taken with Sony A9 and 16-35 mm lens. 10 stacked images in Sequator

This asterism was named by Eddie Carpenter and is located in Cassiopeia. The double humped shape looks like the track of a roller coaster and it's absolutely gorgeous in binoculars. I was alerted to this asterism by Steve Tonkin and it really is worth seeking out. I used to be obsessed with roller coasters so this one really appealed to me! The asterism is at the centre of this photo.

 

Taken with a Canon 1100D with Canon fixed 50mm lens. This is a stack of 11 x 10 second shots taken at ISO-1600. The 11 images + 5 darks were stacked with Sequator then processed in Lightroom and Fast Stone Image Viewer. I added star spikes just for artistic value using the Star Spikes Pro plugin for Photoshop.

I am so impressed with the Nikon Z6ii. It does so well at night. 3 bracketed shots. AI DeNoise in Lightroom. Stacked in sequator

If you want to learn how, consider signing up for our night photography workshops.

Multi exposure untracked photo, stacked in Sequator, and post edited in Photoshop to integrate sky and foreground with me.

Shot with old manual lens.

Sigma Widemax 28mm f2.8 + Sony A7III

Used CPL filter since it was almost full moon at approx. 90 degrees from Milky Way, It did a great job to polarize MW.

Sky 45x12s @f2.8 ISO 6400

Dark frames 10x12s @f2.8 ISO 6400

Foreground 3x30s @f8 ISO 1250

One of the first shots with new camera.

Orion is a prominent constellation located on the celestial equator and visible throughout the world. It is one of the most conspicuous[1] and recognizable constellations in the night sky.[2] It is named after Orion, a hunter in Greek mythology. Its brightest stars are blue-white Rigel (Beta Orionis) and red Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis). Source - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion

 

Camera: Sony A7 with MC Rokkor-PF 1:17 55mm lens

Settings: F/1.7, ISO 800, 5 Sec exposure

Image source: 40 subs, stacked with Sequator & cropped

Date: 11/17/2020

Location: St Charles, IL

Camera: Canon 6D

Lens: Tamron 150-600mm @ 300mm

Filter: ICE 82mm Light Pollution Reduction Filter

Tracker: iOptron SkyGuiderPro

Stacked: Sequator

Process: Camera Raw, Photoshop, Astronomy Tools in PS

Capture Time: 60 Minutes with Darks and Flat Frames

 

The BIG difference is adding the Flat Frames. Also picked up some better processing tips with levels in Photoshop

 

Hallo zusammen

Am Samstag 28.06.25 war ich wieder mal auf den Vogelberg im Solothurner Jura. Ziel war wiederum die Milchstrasse, respektive den Milchstrassenbogen über dem Mittelland und den Alpen. Leider ist die Lichtverschmutzung über unserem Mittelland recht deftig....

Weiter wollte ich die Aufnahmen eigentlich mit dem 35mm machen, stacken und dann als Panorama zusammensetzten. So hätte man mehr Details. Nun ja, diese Aufnahmen bin ich noch am Entwickeln....

Dieses Panorama ist mit der Nikon D850, dem Sigma 20mm/1.4 und natürlich vom Stativ mit dem Novoflex Slim Nodalpunkt aufgenommen.

Aufnahmedaten ISO 1600, f 1.6, 6sek, insgesamt sind es 7 Hochkantaufnahmen, jede dieser Aufnahmen wurde aus 13 Bilder gestackt.

Entwickelt mit PL 8.7, mit Sequator gestackt und mit PanoramaStudio 4.1 zusammengesetzt....

Ich hoffe das Bild gefällt euch.

Gruss Martin

Sony A1, 70-200mm without tracking, 1.6 sec 3200 iso F2.8, total 299 shots stacked in sequator

My first attempt at photographing the Milky Way. 10 image stack from TIF files using Sequator and the edited in Capture One Pro 20

I took 11 light frames and 3 dark frames on the early morning of April 10, 2018 at Last Chance, Colorado and processed them on April 15, 2018 in Sequator. So the date in metadata in the final picture changed. I post-processed it in Adobe Lightroom CC and Photoshop CC to generate this final picture.

Photo prise dans les Hauts de France à Bantouzelle (59).

 

C'est certainement la dernière voie lactée de la saison pour ma part.

 

Matériel:

Canon EOS 60D sur trépied.

Obectif tokina 11-16mm f2.8

 

Prise de vue :

30 X 20 secondes soit 10 minutes de poses

11mm à 3200 ISO

 

Traitement:

Empilement sous sequator

Esthétique photoshop et lightroom.

Technical card

Imaging telescope or lens: Nikon 300mm f/4 AF-s nikon 300mm AF-S f4

 

Imaging camera: Nikon D5300

 

Mount: Celestron CG5

 

Software: Adobe Lightroom CC, ProDigital Software Astronomy Tools Actions Set, Sequator global Sequator 1.4a, Photoshop CC 2017

PixInsight

 

Resolution: 3512x2810

 

Dates: Nov. 24, 2017

 

Frames: 135x45" ISO6400

 

Integration: 1.7 hours

 

Darks: ~30

 

Flats: ~30

 

Avg. Moon age: 5.38 days

 

Avg. Moon phase: 29.30%

 

Bortle Dark-Sky Scale: 5.00

 

Temperature: -3.00

 

Astrometry.net job: 1844659

 

RA center: 85.282 degrees

 

DEC center: -2.207 degrees

 

Pixel scale: 2.741 arcsec/pixel

 

Orientation: 89.052 degrees

 

Field radius: 1.712 degrees

 

Locations: Home, Limington, maine, United States

Nice crater relief at half-moon

Ten images, processed in Sequator(free software)and finished in PS6

Probably with some faint zodiacal light.

@ Manosque

this evening's sky.....ditto landing, huntsville, alabama....pentax K-r...21LTD....40 frames stacked in sequator

Cuyahoga Valley National Park, OH, Indigo Lake

Pentax K1ii Rok 135mm @f2.8 ISO3200 61 x 1 min. Riding the Benro Polaris. Sequator, PS, Siril, SrarFixer

Between the overwhelming light pollution of LA and Ventura, there are a few miles of the Malibu coastline where it gets dark enough to see the milky way. On the night I took this photo, there was also a bunch of bioluminescent algae - though oddly, it was staying pretty far offshore. You can see it here as the bright blue band underneath the horizon.

 

I took this image using 20x 5s exposures, stacked with Sequator.

 

Leo Carillo State Park

Aspettando i primi raggi solari, osservando la vastità del cielo notturno incastonato di infinite stelle, viene spontaneo domandarsi se siamo veramente soli.

@ Manosque

Beautiful starry skies over the city of Lastovo, on Lastovo island, Croatia, one of the rare places in Europe where you can see dark skies even from the center! Of course, in real life, this looks much darker and the sky much more impressive. You should visit if you have the chance to be near!

 

14x20s exposures stacked in Sequator, processed in PS. City lights are HDR with some shorter exposures

18 photos stacked with Sequator, 6s exposure each

 

It's amazing how much it moves in such a short time.

Milky Way Core, Mars can also be seen in the bottom right corner. Shot from Lake Ninan, Western Australia, a Class 2 Bortle Site.

 

32 light frames and 8 dark frames stacked in Sequator, processing and adjustments made in LR Classic and PS CC.

Sous le ciel profond 🌌, la Voie lactée s’élève comme une rivière de lumière ✨, déployant ses volutes laiteuses au-dessus d’une bâtisse ancienne 🏡 aux murs blanchis par le temps.

L’œil ️ est happé par le contraste entre l’infini scintillant 🌠 et la géométrie simple de cette maison, dont les arêtes nettes semblent ancrer la scène à la terre 🌍.

 

Techniquement, la longue pose révèle les détails de la Galaxie 🌌, avec ses nuages de poussières sombres et ses étoiles innombrables ⭐⭐⭐, tout en équilibrant la lumière artificielle 💡 qui caresse délicatement les murs.

Les volets entrouverts 🚪 et les pierres usées se mêlent à la douceur de l’éclairage nocturne 🌙, donnant à la photo un mélange d’intimité 💫 et d’immensité infinie 🌌.

 

Si vous rêvez de voir votre maison 🏠 dialoguer avec les étoiles ✨ de cette manière, n’hésitez pas à me contacter 📩 pour immortaliser la vôtre sous la voûte céleste 🌠.

 

Canon 80D Sigma 17-50 F2.8. 15 photos de 15 secondes pour le ciel empilées avec sequator et 5 pour l avant plan.

 

Hey everyone,

 

Golden Beach, Qld, Australia.

 

I got a lot of good shots the other night and this is an 11 image stack to reduce noise using a program called Sequator.

All images were shot at Iso-6400 / f2.8 / 15 seconds / 11mm focal length.

Canon 550d and a Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 lens.

I haven't done any noise reduction and stacking images gives you some amazing results.

 

Hope you like this one, Cheers.

The Pleiades, also known as the Seven Sisters and Messier 45, are an open star cluster containing middle-aged, hot B-type stars in the north-west of the constellation Taurus. It is among the star clusters nearest to Earth, it is the nearest Messier object to Earth, and is the cluster most obvious to the naked eye in the night sky. (Source - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades)

 

Constellation: Taurus

Telescope: Astrotech 72mmED

Mount: Skywatcher Star Adventurer

Camera: Sony A7 in prime focus

Settings: F/6, ISO 2000, 5 Sec exposure

Image source: 40 subs, 20 darks stacked with Sequator & cropped

Date: 9/16/2021

Telescope: Astrotech 72mm w/ Star Adventurer tracking mount

Camera: Sony A7 - Prime focus (432mm)

Settings: ISO 2500, 2.5 Sec exposure

Image source: 162 subs, 20 darks, 0 flats, stacked with Sequator & cropped

Date: 10/17/2024

Location: Peck Farm Park Geneva, IL

 

NOTE: Anti-tail is visible in front.

apilado de 12 fotos en Sequator y posprocesado en Photoshop.

 

equipo: canon T6i y lente sigma 70-300 sobre una montura Star Adventurer

 

iso 1600; f/6,3 70mm

Timelapse : youtu.be/sFe1U_R2Tjw

 

Nikon D5100 + Nikkor 18-55 @26mm

350 x 15sec / ISO 800 / F/5.6

 

Sequator + Gimp

 

Backyard, St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Bortel 7ish

 

AstroM1

NGC 2024 and B 33 camera canon eos 1100d fullspectrum, lens canon 75/300 at 300mm, f 5/6 iso 1600, 90x60s, acquisition with APT, sum with Sequator and processing with Photoshop, astrotracker Sky watcher Star Adventurer 2i wifi The Flame Nebula is a diffuse nebula in the constellation Orion.

 

It is located 1 degree from the celestial equator, very close to the bright star Alnitak, so much so that it is almost obscured by its brightness. It is part of the great Orion Molecular Nebula Complex and can be observed with a powerful telescope; In long-exposure or digital photos its extension can reach more than half a degree in diameter. The HorseHead Nebula (also known as Barnard 33, B33) is a dark nebula in the constellation Orion. The nebula lies just below Alnitak, the easternmost star in Orion's belt.

Milky Way taken at Eagle Bluffs Conservation Area, Columbia, MO. Consisted of 10 images stacked in Sequator. I took one of the frames and used it for the foreground.

12 shot stack with Sequator

500mm f/5.6

30 sec

ISO 1000

This is pretty much out of the norm for me, but had to try it last night. Nikon D500, Nikon 55-200 f/5.6, 103 2 Sec. Exposures @ 3200 ISO, Stacked in Sequator w/ 10 noise images and 10 Vignette images. I plan on more experimenting!!

Date/fecha: 20/10/2024

Location/Ubicación: Granollers (Spain)

Nikon D5300

Nikkor 55-200 (125mm)

EXIF: f4.8 ISO200

10x4s (40s)

Stacked/apilado: Sequator

Edited/editado: Lightroom

 

Granollers, Catalunya, España

La Comète C/2020 F3 Neowise de passage au dessus des alignements de Carnac.

 

Canon 1300D stock

Samyang 14mm f/2.8

ISO 800

20*15s

2*30s pour l'avant plan

Omegon Mini Track Lx2

Traitement Sequator Lightroom et Photoshop CC

Another one using A7R4 with 24mmGM. For these photos, I usually use the program, Sequator, to stack them together. The result is always very good although there are some settings you need to do and it might be hard for the first timer.

 

I was planning to stay longer for more photos but I drank too much sake that I felt asleep after... :D

 

Location: Kawaguchiko, Japan

Taken during at Buck Island during a trip on the Rubicon Trail. Used Sequator to stack star images. 30 images of 30 seconds each.

 

Strobist Info: LED Headlamp was used to light paint the trees. Canon EX580II at 1/32 power inside tent triggered via a Pocket Wizard.

Milky Way and Meteor above the summit of Katahdin (Baxter Peak) viewed from Chimney Pond Camp, Baxter State Park, Maine.

 

Base image is 10, 6.9-second exposures stacked in Sequator, processed in Lr and Topaz DeNoise AI. Meteor trace added back in Ps.

I wanted to upload this image much earlier. I took a couple of identical photos of this scene and planned to stack them in Photoshop to remove the noise.

Unfortunately I had to find out that my old version of Photoshop didn't include this feature.

Now some weeks later I finally find a free software that does just the same. The name of the software is Sequator, in case you are also searching for something like this.

I hope you like the result.

This image of the Milky Way was taken on September 13th, 2018 from the Garden of the B&B I was staying in on the Channel Island of Sark, the garden overlooked Jersey. The image was taken on a Nikon D5600 and unfortunately as the camera was new I hadn’t realised the settings had reverted to JPG, normally I would use RAW(NEF). There was a downside, apart from the light pollution, which was the time and location, there are three obvious aircraft in the frame.

The image is comprised of 64 untracked ISO3200 f1.8 2s exposures at 35mm. This is my first attempt at stacking in Sequator, this software is supposed to freeze the foreground, I am not sure as to why this hasn’t happened, possibly it was too dark. I have only tweaked the contrast slightly in Photopshop.

Light Painted abandoned country store SE of Moulton, Texas near the intersection of CR276 and CR275.

 

227 10 second images stacked with Sequator for the trails

24 10 second images using flashlight for light painting

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