View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
Composed out of 51 pictures used for a time lapse sequence. Using StarStax. The moving clouds in the moonlight resulted in some funky colors.
Unfortunately I had to pause several seconds between the pictures in order to peek at the histogram for a holy grail time lapse sequence, that's why there are large gaps in the trails.
Now that i know (at least basics) how it´s done, i need to go and find much cooler place where i can use the same tecnique.. Maybe people involved :) Here i used 259 pictures the easiest way, without any fancy ediding.. My first startrail photo.
I met up with my buddy Will last night for our second attempt at shooting star trails. This time I decided to try stacking multiple images in photoshop using "lighten" blending mode. This is a combination of 67 30sec exposures with a 1sec interval shot in small size jpeg.
Torpedolauncher, Gdynia, Poland
Nikon D850, Tamron 15-30
Panorama – lower part 1 frame 240 seconds, sky 10 frames 180 seconds each
174 x 40 second exposure images stacked together to show the stars moving around the sky. Pictures were taken in my garden with a Panasonic G9 fitted with a wide angle lens
Taken from Oxfordshire, UK on the night of the Lyrids meteor shower peak. Taken with a Canon 1100D with 18-55mm kit lens. ISO-1600 for 15 seconds at f/3.5 1,380 images were stacked with StarStaX. The bright streak in the middle of the left side was a very very bright satellite flare which I haven't been able to identify. Just above the top right corner of the right hand tree there is a Lyrid meteor, which is the only meteor I've caught on camera over the past 2 nights. There are also lots of aircraft and satellite trails in the image.
A startrail picture taken this summer on a small island in the St. Laurence River in Quebec. A new picture for my Startrail set. Regards, Tjerk
I was on the crater rim of the island Tenerife. During the night I made hundreds of pictures of one area of the sky. This is a compilation made with Startrails.
This photo is a stack of 130 shots, each taken with 30 s, except of the first one. The first one is shot with more exposure on the foreground, when there was more brightness shortly after sunset. The startrails were shot with a different camera position, heading towards north (viewing direction is east).
Some of you may remember this shot.It was my first startrail i ever did. I never really was content with it, so i reedited it. Still it is far from perfect, because i did it with one long exposure, not in stacking technology as i do now. Anyway i want to keep it. It was an adventure to take it at midnight alone at the ruins of an old ghost castle.
Details:
239 images
Nikon D800
Nikkor 16-35 mm F4 @ 40 mm
20 sec @ f4, ISO 400
StarStax to blend all the images
© Leeninga Photography 2014 - All Rights Reserved - Please do not use without my written permission.
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Interessted in workshops? Visit www.leeningaphotography.com/workshops-landschapsfotografi... for landscape photography workshops.
My first try to capture long Startrails with multiple images.
Canon EOS 100D + 24mm f/2.8 @ f5.6
11 x 600" ISO100
Explore:
Apr 18, 2009 #142
My friend Nathaniel www.flickr.com/photos/0mega/ and I pulled an all nighter last night; shooting sunset at Rowena, Startrails at Stonehenge, and then finally sunrise at Smith Rocks in Redmond. Fun times; this was my first time shooting startrails and I'm really happy with how this one turned out. Will post others later, but this was the best of the bunch.
I took 50 shots with my Nikon D5100 and stacked them to get the startrails. I think using one shot with an exposure time of 45 minutes would have caused too much noise.
There was also one "falling stars" visible on one of the stacked photos. I clone-stamped it out because the line somehow distrubed :P
Yading Nature Reserve ( ཉིན་རྟེན་,亚丁自然保护区), China (中国)
Well, I know its far away from being the perfect startrail picture , however, for my first try, I am quite pleased with the result.
This picture shows Mt. Chenrezig , wich is one of the three holy mountains in the
Yading Nature Reserve, also know as “Nyiden” ཉིན་རྟེན་,
in the Garzê Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture (དཀར་མཛེས་བོད་རིགས་རང་སྐྱོང་ཁུལ་, 甘孜藏族自治州).
@ Carsten Hartmann
This photo took 69 photos with 30 second exposures with 5 seconds between each exposure for a total time of about 40 minutes. This photo was taken with a Canon 17-40mm f4 lens. Please do not use my photos without permission.
Startrail of 800+ frames from twilight to twilight into the 2017 summer solstice. Accompanying timelapse shows the light cloud that drifted through the scene and weakened the stars' prominence, particularly on the left-hand side.
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