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Canopus rises above the peaks at Fox Glacier, while the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud watches over Fox Glacier.
Captured from one of our Epic West Coast Workshops back in October 2017.
Canon 6D + Tamron 35mm lens, several images stacked to neutralize noise and enhance details.
Weather was gorgeous, windy but perfect. First try at stacking and the wind didn't help. Desert turning it's beautiful shade of brown and all the wildflowers are too.
Thanks for your comments and lookies
This is the tops of the triple stacks of Narragansett Electric. I've got some crazy glare reflections off my filter... crazy!
(Shot with N6006 with Nikon70-210mmf4@f5.6 for 120" on Kodak Ektachrome 160T)
This 79x5s interval stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Intense fire sky displays can yield the most interesting stacked images. In this equivalent 6.58 minutes elapsed time, the start through the end of the fire sky is depicted.
Notice how the lenticular clouds hardly move during this duration.
Looking northwest.
This 100x5s stacked images was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 8.3 minute exposure, morning commuters are periodically captured (they all had a beautiful view of sunrise).
M42 in Orion showing, on the right, a single frame of the 30 I stacked for the left-hand image result.
This 300x2s stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 10 minute exposure a passing car looks like several cars as a result of these short two second interval,
Frames taken from: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/48964270637/in/datepos... between 14 and 4 minutes before sunrise.
The Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at sunset as a hail shower moves away.
Copyright www.neilbarr.co.uk. Please don't repost, blog or pin without asking first. Thanks
A better angle on the stacks - with the sun bright due south at noon, I walked further down the coast beyond them and looked back up north instead.
Stack mit/with 116 Bildern/Pictures mit/with Helicon Focus
Making of:
www.flickr.com/photos/holgerlosekann/33517341141/in/photo...
Stack Rock Fort.
Dai the Drone was with me while I did some work down in West Wales. Took my lunch at the Sandy Haven Beach car park and Dai took a quick flight out to see the Fort just off the shore.
"Stilt Stack" How many photographs do you think it took to complete this shot? One? Ten? Fifteen? Any guesses?
Truth be told, it took one hundred and ninety five individual images to create this image! Combined, this amounts to about forty five minutes of exposure time. Normally, I would have completed this type of image with significantly less but I needed to capture all of these images for a project I am working on. You'll find out what that is in a few weeks.
Those of you familiar with the Falmouth area might recognize this stilt house along Shore Drive. I've lurked around here in the dark before but this is by far the longest amount of time I have spent there. What makes this spot great is that the best angle of this house (in my opinion) allows me to shoot north where the rotation of the Earth is most obvious in these great curved star trails.
A pair of stacking bottles separated and lit from above as part of a session for the Macro Mondays theme: bottle(s).
Happy shortest day!
The moment of solstice falls tonight, December 21st, but unusually it's not until tomorrow morning that the solstice's closest sunrise will be celebrated at Stonehenge- seen here silhouetted by glow from the lights of Larkhill Camp.
202 frames layered in StarStaX from many hundreds captured; the remaining frames were lost to lens fogging. Exif shown is for a single frame.
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» LongExposures website and blog
Stacked (comet center only), plus a few brush adjustments...came out much better than I initially expected (seeing conditions were pretty poor). Probably would have been better if I did it at 135 mm on Tuesday night, but it's something! DeepSkyStacker: 200 mm, f/2.8, 12800 ISO, 1.6 sec x 48 frames.
South Stack is famous as the location of one of Wales' most spectacular lighthouses, South Stack Lighthouse. It has a height of 41 metres (135 feet). It has a maximum area of 7 acres.
Until 1828 when an iron suspension bridge was built, the only means of crossing the deep water channel on to the island was in a basket which was suspended on a hemp cable. The suspension bridge was replaced in 1964, but by 1983 the bridge had to be closed to the public, due to safety reasons. A new aluminium bridge was built and the lighthouse was reopened for public visits in 1997. Thousands of people flock to the lighthouse every year, thanks to the continued public transport service from Holyhead's town centre.
There are over 390 stone steps down to the footbridge, and 10 metal steps (and not, as local legend suggests, 365), and the descent and ascent provide an opportunity to see some of the 8,000 nesting birds that line the cliffs during the breeding season. The cliffs are part of the RSPB South Stack Cliffs bird reserve, with a visitor centre, and bird hide at Elin's Tower. The tower provides a place to see Choughs, Peregrine falcon, Kestrel and various marine mammals like the Harbour porpoise seen at high tide, Grey seal, Risso's dolphin and Bottlenose dolphin.
As the storm neared it developed this double and then triple stacked shelf cloud. The core was getting mean looking, it was green but had been turned yellow by the reddish setting sun behind the storm. COOL!