View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
First attempt at startrails!
Camera: Canon PowerShot SX40 HS
Focal Length: 24mm
Shutter Speed: 40" (many shots, about 2 hours)
Aperture: f/2.7
ISO: 200
Post-production: StarStaX, Photoshop CS 6
Some of you may be familiar with sandflies - the red smudge is a persistent sandfly camping on the lens (I did not know!)
Ein morscher Baum vor Sternenkulisse
10 Aufnahmen a 10 Minuten Belichtungszeit zusammengesetzt zu einem Startrail
Canon EOS 600D + Tamron SP 17-50 VC
Met up with Dave Dummett and Rob Kendall tonight. We ended up at the Wellington Monument in Torrignton for a star trails shoot. This was my first ever attempt at such a thing and I've clearly not sited on the pole star! Nevertheless, I'm reasonably pleased with the result.
Esta imagem visa dar um enfoque no movimento de rotação de nosso planeta. A imagem que você vê é resultado de 60 fotos que foram empilhadas no software gratuito StartTrail.
Cada foto possui um tempo de exposição de 2 minutos em ISO 500 com a lente na abertura F/2.2.
Câmera Canon 7D
Lente Rokinon 24mm F/1.4
Intervalômetro
Star-trails. This is 100- 30 second long exposures combined into one photo. The red in the background is the northern lights. it exaggerated because of the long exposure times. This is my first attempt with startrails.
A selection of Time Lapse shot in California back in 2013, used to good effect with Achim Schaller's 'Startrails' program. Nice app, pleasing outcome.
This is 5 hours and 31 minutes of startrails. It is 270 one minute exposures at F 2.8. Starting at 22:08 pm and ending at 4:39 am. It is limited by the battery charge and it seems that the heat generated by the camera is enough to keep moisture from forming while shooting. By morning it is covered in dew. You can see my set up here.
© Jeannette Meier Kamer 2013 | All Rights Reserved | Please do not use without my permission.
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Gornergrat (Schweiz) mit Startrails.
f2.8
30 sec.
16mm
ISO 800
This sequence of 600 images taking almost 2 hours to shoot shows just how short Summer nights are. By the time the images were captured, the sky was already brightening with pre-dawn light. A little condensation forming on the lens didn't help much though!
Startrails from Stokesley on 3 March 2014. This was the first time I'd centred on Polaris for this type of shot and I'm pretty pleased with the result. Taken with a Canon 600D.
About 3 hrs of 1 min 30 sec exposures stacked in PS3 with Dr.Browns Stack-a-matic. Lense: Sigma 18-50 EX f2,8 DC HSM, Camera: Nikon D300 with Nikon MC-36 remote controller.
I haven´t cropped the image yet but maybe i will. Please feel free to comment!
Eyes 5 v Camera 0
Camped out in the garden for an hour during the Perseid meteor shower and caught a glimpse of a few shooting stars. However not a sausage with the camera.
Rather that put a nights effort to waste I stacked them to produce this startrail. 105 shots at 20 secs each. Pretty happy with the result for Birmingham.
This is the Disreali Monument ten minutes walk from my house (even in the pitch black through a forest :) ) in High Wycombe (bucks), I've done a few startrails here but light pollution is really a problem. (you can probably see why if you look at the geotagged location :) )
243 30 second exposures (and 9 dark frames) (totalling about 2hrs 20mins) taken with a Canon 450D at f/4.5 iso 200 11mm focal legnth. Brightened and converted to JPEG with Digital Photo Proffesional and stacked it Startrails.exe.
The lens started to fog up after about 2 hours so I left.
I had to make two seperate stacks then re-align them because I kicked the tripod half way through.
The light pollution doesn't seem to have affected this one as much as the others I've taken, probably the light of the moon , the fact I used tungsten white balance and going out slightly early in twilight neutralised it a bit.
I've removed all the planes from this image but left in the wiggly orange lines to the right of the obilisk because I was hoping someone could guess at what they are. There are at least five seperate lines of which four appear in two exposures each. The first two happen together then two minutes later another two then the last on a further 1.5 minutes later. My parents say they look like fireworks but I'm not sure they seem a bit boring.
A startrail composite formed of around 2500 images captured on my iphone.
The images were captured using Nightcap with an exposure of 1 second and an interval of 2 seconds. The shoot lasted 1 and a half hours facing a North-Easterly direction.
The images were stacked on a pc, then exported back to my iphone where I done final editing using snapseed.
A weekend away in Lithgow with my friend Chris and some fun star trails at blast furnace park, in Lithgow...
I have plenty of more shots from here.. it was a great spot... except the council has lit the old buildings with flood lights which spoiled many star trail opportunities...
This shot was me hiding behind a big old wall and shooting directly up, in the shadow of the wall the stars became clearer.. you can see some light on the plants on the top of the wall..
I always thought that the diverging curves was a lens distortion, but I have been reliably informed that this the equatorial thingie.. the top is towards the south celestial pole and bottom to the north celestial pole, and in between the stars create a straight line... There probably is a name for this phenomenon.. someone will tell me.... Celestial equator.. thanks ..steph....
Also I read somewhere there is a rule of lens lengths and time of shots to capture the stars with no apparent motion.. does anyone know what this is?.... thanks
ISO 400, 16mm, f/2.8, 30secs x 82 shots stacked using startrails software