View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
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Summernight
NikonD5300
Sigma 17-50mm 2.8
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SingleShot
f/2.8
17.00 mm
ISO 400
442 sec
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This is the second part of the pictures I shot last weekend. They where shot during the night or in the early morning before I was able to repair my bike.
I've made a timelaps movie out of the single shots from this startrails photography which is only 2s long. I will have to try this once again and take more shots.
I also screwed up a little bit on the camera settings.The timer of my D5100 was set to 31s and the exposure time was 30s. I think the 1s wasn't enough which is why it only recorded one shot every minute instead of two. I first recognized my mistake back home, but the next time I won't make the same mistake again.
Has anyone made similar experiences with timer settings, especially for the D5100?
So, Turned out, it's not easy to get a 360 done, while the shortest lunar eclipse of 21'st century is on. By the time i was about to reach the moon, the eclipse was over and the bright parts of the moon was starting to show, even if it was 1% of brightness, it was enough to blow out the moon even at low shutter speeds, although i did manage to get a 360 pano done, but isin't any good, as jonathan suggested i should i left my 24mm inside the bag, so i can use it for the pano, but i used it way before it and it dewed up during the pano. Still working on the pano, but meanwhile here is a short startrail i shot as the moon started to brighten up.
The initial frame is really dark with only stars visible, but eventually it brightened up to lit the foreground like daylight. The low ISO managed to keep the star colour. On left bottom you can see diffused green glow, which is from the airglow.
El cerro Peralillo (2150 msnm), es un cerro ubicado en la localidad del mismo nombre, en el Valle del Elqui, característico de la zona.
La imagen fue compuesta por 124 tomas de 30 segundos de exposición cada una, lo cual equivale a 1 hora de fotografía. En ella se muestra el efecto de rotación de la tierra a través de las estrellas.
-Cámara reflex Canon T6i
-Lente kit Canon 18-55mm.
-ISO 1600
-30s
-f/5
-38mm
Autor: Luis Rojas M.
Strobist: Red gelled flash inside, naked flash outside, around 8 exposures @ 3 minutes each stacked in Startrails.
Went out last night to Thingvellir, wanted to take some starTrail photos, the stars was shining and good weather, but like always some clouds or a mist came also and most of my photos are in the Recycle Bin :(
Here is one that did escape from the bin.
Northern lights was also shown her self, but not so great lights that night.
I will try again later :) hopefully the clouds will stay away from me then :)
Taken from Oxfordshire, UK overnight 30th/31st July with a Canon 1100D with Canon 10-18mm lens, ISO-800 for 30 seconds at f/4.5
Images taken on constant from 22:30 BST until 04:00. All images pre-processed in Lightroom then the images taken between 23:00 and 03:30 were stacked using StarStaX to create a 4 hour 30 minute star trails.
Made in a very clear night on the mountatins.
Next time i take a photo like that i will wait for a day where the air moisture is not that high because my camera was all wet after that 30 minutes shot :)
... I can remember
Thanks in advance for stopping by, your interest and your comments on my photography
(Samatzai - Su Nuraxi) A star trail is a type of photograph that utilizes long-exposure times to capture the apparent motion of stars in the night sky due to the rotation of the Earth. A star trail photograph shows individual stars as streaks across the image, with longer exposures resulting in longer streaks. Typical exposure times for a star trail range from 15 minutes to several hours, requiring a 'bulb' setting on the camera to open the shutter for a longer period than is normal. [Canon 6D + Tamron 15-30 mm @ f3.2. 90 shots 30'']
(Samatzai - Su Nuraxi) Nella tecnica fotografica dello "star trail" vengono utilizzate delle lunghe esposizioni per catturare il moto apparente delle stelle nel cielo notturno. Il risultato sarà quello di ottenere delle stelle "strisciate" sull'immagine: più lunghi saranno i tempi di esposizione, più lunghe risulteranno le strisciate impresse. Normalmente per questa tecnica vengono utilizzati dei tempi compresi tra 15 minuti e alcune ore utilizzando la posa B (bulb) della propria reflex. In questo video è stata inquadrata una zona prossima alla polare, pertanto le stelle sembrano tutte ruotare attorno alla stella dell'orsa minore. [Canon 6D + Tamron 15-30 mm @ f3.2. 90 shots 30'']
assemblage de 8 Clichés de 11mn chacun de pose et fusion des images sous photoshop et retouche sous lightroom.
Taken from Oxfordshire, UK between 00:15 - 02:45 BST 28th September 2019.
Canon 1100D with 18-55mm lens, ISO-800 for 15 seconds. I would usually shoot for 30 seconds for star trails but I was actually pointing North because there was a KP5 aurora alert and I was hoping it spiked to KP6 and I'd pick something up. I didn't get any aurora, but I stacked all the images together in StarStaX. Stacked image was processed in Fast Stone Image Viewer
101 photos de 30 secondes
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حقوق الطبع والنشر لهذه الصوره محفوظه لدى محمد المسلم
Copyright for this image are reserved to Mohammed AL.moslem
A learning curve on Live Composite I was covering the lens when a car would come by. It was working, but with a small gap in the trail. I grabbed my sweater, not my coat and the headlights got me. When I saw my other photo was in explore, I had to post this one to. Practice, timing, and failures will make you want it even more! Keep shooting!
Torpedo Station, Gdynia, Poland.
Fuji GFX 100s II, GF 20-35
50 min exposure
As long as the nights stay warm, it’s worth taking the chance for some night shots. It’s much more pleasant to spend hours by the shore when the temperature doesn’t drop below 15°C The moon, just two days before full, gave off more than enough light, but with the forecast calling for clouds in the following days, I had to take what nature offered.