View allAll Photos Tagged sequator
Camera EOS M with wide UHC filter
200X8Sec @ ISO 3200
Heritage 130P modded on (bad)EQ2
Homemade Arduino stepper tracking, no guiding
Stacked using Sequator, edited on Android using Lightroom and Snapseed
Colors are mostly incorrect due to to UHC filter
Taken in HST 2017 Dec 14 23:50 to Dec 15 04:00. Umodified Canon 60D, ISO 4000, 45*5 min, Rokinon 16mm f/2 lens stop down to f/5.6. Coadded in Sequator with calibration of dark frames and flat fields. Further processed in Fitswork and Photoshop.
The Orion Nebula seen through my Canon 5DM3 with Tamron 150-600mm @ 600mm f/6.3 ISO 100. 10 frames of 30s stacked in Sequator and 1 dark image, tracked on an iOptron Skytracker Pro. Other post processing using LR CCC, PS CC, Topaz Clarity and Topaz DeNoise 6.
final series of exposure, last one take at 4:30am, by then the sky was getting bright. Stack of (10) 30sec exposures, stacked with Sequator,
A test of the TT Artisan 50mm at f0.95. It does gather light very well, but you can see the off-axis wings. Not really a problem for portraiture, but unfortunately they spoil the wide aperture for astrophotography.
112 0.4s exposures combined using Sequator. (44.8s total)
Close up view of the Comet NEOWISE
The comet C/2020 F3 (NEOWISE) is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity so I decided to rent out the telephoto lens to shoot the close up view of the comet. Saltair is only 20 minutes from Salt Lake City but I'm shooting into the dark sky. First time tracking at long focus length (200mm) but I'm glad that there didn't seem any star trails.
EXIF:
Sky images were stacked in Sequator, edited in PixInsight/Photoshop
📷 Nikon D750
👓 Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8 @ 200mm
☄️ Comet: 3 x ISO 800 f/4 90s using Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer
15 shots stacked in Sequator. Nikon D850, Tamron 15-30mm G2 @ 15mm, f2.8, ISO 8000, 15 second exposures. Bortle 2 sky in Mountain Home, Texas the night before the Total Eclipse.
First attempt at star photography. Stacked 60 photos using Sequator. Orion nebula clearly visible :)
Shot, as an experiment, using 50mm Minolta 1.7
Background:
Canon EOS 600D with 18mm f/3.5 lens, 9 x 17 second exposure at ISO 6400 stacked in Sequator image software.
Foreground:
Canon EOS 600D with 18mm f/3.5 lens, 5 x 30 second exposure at ISO 6400 stacked in Sequator image software.
Images combined in photoshop
The Dark Horse. The central area/core of our Milky Way Galaxy. Taken at a roadside stop on Rt. 60 near the Very Large Array in New Mexico. The bright "star" is the planet Jupiter. 25, 13 second exposures stacked using Sequator.
8-hours of 30-second exposures stacked in Sequator. Taken from my backyard in Duvall, WA on the evening of 4/17 - 4/18, 2021
Nikon Z6 with a Rokinon 14mm Lens at f/2.8 and ISO set to auto.
UPDATE-Went thru the 222 images again and found a 3rd Lyrid that I missed and another 2 ANT meteors.
Scorpius Wide field during the Lyrid Meteor shower, 04/22/2108, taken at the Farash Center in Ionia, NY.
This is a stack of (222) 30sec lights and 48 darks, at f2.2, 35mm Samyang lens, ISO800. RawTherapee used for conversion to 16bit tiffs, lens correction, vignetting correction, and some basic curves work. Images stacked with Sequator, final editing in Photoshop. Meteors from 4 of the stacked images were cut and pasted in the final image.
It's one of the most beautiful regions in the night sky and there are so many large h-alpha nebulae include The North America nebula and nebulae around Sard star. I took this pic in summer under the darkest sky in Czechia, in Šumava National Park in Bortle class 3.
Canon EOS 760D, Canon EF 50mm 1.8, 10x8sec, ISO-6400, f/2.5, Sequator, Photoshop, Šumava National Park, Czechia, 13/07/2021
Captured during the New Moon phase in Rocky Mountain National Park.
20 exposures: 14 s @ f/2.8 ISO 3200
Canon EOS Rp with Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 and Lonely Speck PureNight filter
Stacked with Sequator, then processed in Adobe Photoshop and DeNoise AI
Frame contains portions of constellations Virgo and Crater. Brightest stars in the frame include 16Vir, εCrt, ζCrt, θCrt, χVir, Zaniah (ηVir), Porrima (γVir), Zavijava (βVir), Gienah (γCrv)
Photos are near Znojmo stacked 30xlight + 30x darkframe in sequator + postprocess affinity photo
Bortle 4
Over the village of Saint-Michel de Bellechasse near Quebec City.
3 x 10sec exposure stacked in sequator.
Pentax k1 70-200mm 83mm
This stacked 2-row panorama was taken soon after midnight on August 13, 2021 facing the southwestern sky above Lough Tay and Luggala peak in Wicklow Mountains. This is Class 4 Bortle magnitude sky with light pollution from the surrounding towns and Dublin city so the contrast is rather poor. Two meteors from the Perseids meteor shower can be seen around the Milky Way.
Shot on Sony A6400 with Samyang 12mm F2.0 mounted on Leofoto Ranger LS-284C tripod.
Background sky: 20 x 8s F2.0 ISO6400 for each panorama segment.
Foreground: 7 x 30s F2.0 ISO5000.
Processed in Capture One 21 Express, Sequator, GIMP and Microsoft ICE.
Sum of 120 images of 10 seconds each, and sum with Sequator....16/9, Siril for background extraction
Antares and the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex taken through my Samyang 135mm F/2 on an Omegon LX3 star tracker with an astromodified Canon 6D. Stacked in Sequator and processing carried out in GIMP. 6 x 60s exposures.
The settings for this shot was ISO 400, F1.4 and 30 sec exposures. And the lens I used was a 30mm prime lens. I used sequator to stack my shots and then processed in photoshop where I brought up the hue and saturation in the shot and got rid of some noise as well. In total I got 15mins exposure time with a tracked cannon 1100D In Whitfield.
Camera EOS M with wide UHC filter
20x30Sec @ ISO 3200
Heritage 130P modded on (bad)EQ2
Homemade Arduino stepper tracking, no guiding
Stacked using Sequator, edited on Android using lightroom and snapseed
Colors are mostly incorrect due to to UHC filter
Dates: 19 août 2020
Lieu: Gresse-en-Vercors
Images unitaires: 10x15''
Instruments de prise de vue: objectif 17/40mm f/d4 L
Caméras d'imagerie: canon 70D
Sensibilité: 6400 iso
Montures: trépied photo
Logiciels: Séquator/Gimp
Zagreb, Centrum, 14.07.2020, 3:36 UT+2
Nikon D7500, ISO 2000, exp: 20x7s
MTO-1000 mod (MAK 105/750), iexos-100
Sequator
(48) 90sec lights, (10) darks, ISO 800, f3.2, 105mm stacked with Sequator. RawTherapee used for raw conversion to tiffs before stacking. Edited in Photoshop. Some time into the sequence the lens dew heater stopped working and lens fogged up. This could use some more fog free images for stacking.
Frame contains portions of constellations Virgo and Crater. Brightest stars in the frame include 16Vir, εCrt, ζCrt, θCrt, χVir, Zaniah (ηVir), Porrima (γVir), Zavijava (βVir), Gienah (γCrv)
NGC1499 California Nebula
Canon 700D - Canon 50mm f/1.8 - Ioptron Skytracker Pro
70 x 120s - f/2.5 - ISO1600
Stacked in Sequator - Edited in PS & LR
Une partie de la nébuleuse avec l'Etoile Grenat ou Erakis (constellation de Céphée). Sur Mars, ce serait votre "étoile polaire", puisqu'elle y indique le pôle nord !
Skywatcher 200/1000+ Canon EOS 200D défiltré.. 40x30sec, traitement Sequator + Photoshop
A little nod to the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong first setting foot on the Moon.
This is my first proper attempt at photographing the Milky Way and nightscapes are an area that I'd like to develop further. This image comprises 5 separate shots, stacked using Sequator.
Ashley Chase, Dorset.
"夜深了,我們的步伐仍未停歇,仍在夜裡馳乘~
我們總是追著,找著,探尋著那夜空中,究竟藏了多少訊息。"
目標:夏季銀河
拍攝參數:Nikon D5300/18mm/30s*2/no track/往墾丁的路上/sequator & photoshop
I had a full moon opposing me but I figured I could see more stars here than back home in Chicago. I was definitely right. I only had vague ideas of what I was trying to shoot and a lot of this series was an experiment: one that I think went well.
Nikon Z6, Tamron 24-70 G2
Settings : 15s, f2.8, ISO 6400 (10 images stacked)
Processing: Sequator, Affinity Photo