View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
As seen from Taormina, Sicily looking NE. Lightning is about 50 miles away over mainland Italy. 258 10 sec exposures at ISO1600 stacked in StarStax and processed in Pixinsight & Faststone. Used 550D with 14mm f2.8 Samyang lens.
Had a go at star trails while at a dark place out of town. Noticed afterwards that I estimated the South to far to the right, anyway, the trails show the earth is still rotating.
175 pictures over some 2 hours, using SX40 CHDK and a fixed TV script (Tv=32 sec).
Combined with freeware StarStax and EXIF data recovered form one of the 175 photos using EXIFGuiTool.
My first succesful startrail.
Combination of 3 photos stacked, plus dodging and burning
Now I know why i want a fisheye...
StarTrail Casa Maleva
Aprovechando mientras se hacia el Asado, puse la cámara y ahí la deje.
Detalles de la Toma
537x10" Iso 800, Nikon D5500, Nikor 18-55 a 18mm DF,
StarTrail, Lightroom
Espero les guste, saludos Playenses!
This cut all-sky photo was taken at Tuesday dawn. Standing at the southern cape of Margaret Island, the grounding of central pillar of Margaret Bridge was an ideal location for photographing cool startrail pictures. In "one hour direction" the building of Hungarian Parliament is visible.
2015.11.17. Budapest, Hungary
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Sigma EF 8/4 156x45 sec, F 7.1, ISO 320
Startrails on a moonlit night at Riisitunturi National Park - the moon was so bright there were clear shows, and in longer exposures it looked like daylight. This is an exposure of nearly 6 minutes.
Read the whole story of our trip, with many pictures, here: blog.hanneketravels.net/2014/01/tykky-at-riisitunturi-nat...
50/365
Work is a pain in the backside at the minute. Long hours and stress to get the project done on time. This led to me being awake at 2.30 and decided to get up at 3am!
So, camera out to take advantage of the clear sky. 150 30secs shots with the lens pointed at Polaris. Photos converted to jpg in LR then processed with the free program - Startrails
Star-trail (traîné d'étoile)photo prise l'été dernier:
Nikon d7000
Facefook: www.facebook.com/benbokeh
Instagram : benrm06
My first successful startrail/timelape photo! A total count of 204 photos using my built in intervalometer.
Shutter speed at 30" with 10 second intervals from 8:15PM - 10:30PM
Nikon D7100 f/4 ISO 400 Shot with 18-200mm at 18mm
169 photos de 30 secondes
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This is my first attempt at a star trails photo. There's plenty of room for improvement, but not too bad for a first try.
I'm currently out west and have limited net access, so I can't reply to your comments for the next few days, but please know that I appreciate it and I will get back to your photo streams as soon as I can. I had to drive 20 kilometres just to get a one bar signal on my mobile internet dongle! Have a great day.
Oh and BTW, that's not our van, but a friends :)
This shot is a combination of 50 separate shots. Each one was at 25 sec exposures at f/3.5 ISO 800. I combined the photos with a little freeware program called Startrails.
Trying out new star stacking and star trail software.
This was done with 200star field pics in Sequator
This is a stack of 164 photos taken during the Perseid meteor event on August 12th. It includes airplane trails running through it. Each photo is 25 seconds. 2m5429
This image, taken by ESO Photo Ambassador Alexandre Santerne, is more than a little disorientating at first glace! Resembling an optical illusion or an abstract painting, the starry circles arc around the south celestial pole, seen overhead at ESO's La Silla Observatory in Chile.
Each circular streak represents an individual star, imaged over a long period of time to capture the motion of the stars across the sky caused by the Earth’s rotation. La Silla is based in the outskirts of Chile’s Atacama Desert at some 2400 metres above sea level, and offers perfect observing conditions for long-exposure shots like this; the site experiences over 300 clear nights a year!
The site is host to many of ESO’s telescopes and to national projects run by the ESO Member States. Some of these telescopes can be seen towards the bottom of the image. The ESO 3.6-metre telescope stands tall on the left peak, now home to the world's foremost extrasolar planet hunter: the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS).
Other telescopes at La Silla include the New Technology Telescope, which partly masks the ESO 3.6-metre telescope, Swiss 1.2-metre Leonhard Euler Telescope, ESO 1-metre Schmidt, the silver-domed MPG/ESO 2.2-metre, Danish 1.54-metre, and ESO 1.52-metre telescopes, which are visible here.
Taking all these facilities together, La Silla is one of the most scientifically productive ground-based facilities in the world after ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) observatory. With almost 300 refereed publications attributable to the work of the observatory per year, La Silla remains at the forefront of astronomy (ann15014).
More information: www.eso.org/public/images/potw1534a/
Credit:
ESO/A.Santerne
Startrails looking west again the humidity made the lights glow in nearby dwellings.
I used my old EOS 350D for this one and took 70 20 second exposures
ISO 800 F/5.6 @ 17mm
~View on Black~
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My Astrophotography Set
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