View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
The trail of the International Space Station crosses southern startrails. Comet Lovejoy was in the field of view (behind the right tree) also but is washed out by the approaching dawn during the stacking of images.
100 x 30 sec images (50 minutes) stacked in StarStaX software.
Each image was taken with Nikon D7000, Tokina 12-24mm lens at 12mm, f4, ISO 6400.
Taken at Poocher Swamp Game Reserve, near Bordertown SA, 28/12/2011
Big, bright beautiful star trails from the wildlife refuge made from 105 shots (30-second exposure, f/4, ISO 360) 105 minutes. Note the colors in the stars - blue, white, yellow, red/orange. I also made a time lapse movie of the same shots that is nearby in my photostream.
I attended David and Kane's star-trail course on Monday night, and here is my attempt at stacking multiple 30 sec exposures.
40 min worth of startrails plus observing in the foreground. Red lines are LED lights on our heads. x91 20 sec exposures at ISO1600. Stacked in Starstax and tweaked in Faststone. 6D + 14mm f2.8 lens.
About an hour and 15 minutes' worth of startrails at Lake Sabrina, west of Bishop in the High Sierra. Pointing southwest - you can actually see the smear of the Milky Way cloud at the left of the image - see the previous single-shot image I posted earlier, which is just one of the frames for this image stack. I actually like the garish green from the tackle/snack shop light but I decided to replace the foreground with another image taken about 45 minutes before I started the startrail sequence.
Which brings up a point - that most people in the world will not see a Milky Way or a bazillion stars like this because of light pollution. Even here, in the High Sierra, a bastion of dark sky, someone somewhere finds it important to light up the lake which is practically nonexistent because of serious drought condition. Not a soul around except me and my two crazy friends. Pshew, I feel better.
If you click on the map view, you can see I'm set up in front of the island, virtually on the lake bottom because the water level is so low.
Despres d'estar una bona estona intentant fotografiar les llàgrimes de Sant Llorenç (o perseides) i no aconseguir els resultatats desitjats, vaig probar la tècnica Startrails, i això és el que ha quedat...
My first attempt with small EM5mk2 among the bigger sensors.At Sao Din Na Noi, Sri Nan National Park, Nan, Thailand
Taken at the Santa Clara Open Space Starry Nights event at Rancho Canada del Oro. See www.openspaceauthority.org/activities/thingstodo.html for more of their upcoming events.
This is a stack of 46 2 minute exposures taken at 17mm,ISO 200 and f/4. I would have liked a little longer exposure for the foreground, but it was kind of hazy so the sky was too bright hiding the stars.
My wife, the boys and I spent most of the day near Lake Erie on Saturday. We went to an art fair and then my wife and the boys went swimming. I had a couple ideas of some pictures I wanted to take. They did not work out. The Aurora was supposed to be active so I tried a couple of places along the Lake to see if I could pick up any of it... No luck. So I decided to head back over to the Marblehead Light and shoot another startrails shot of the lighthouse. Boats were kind of busy even though the water was a little rough. I got to speak with an officer again... same as last time I shot a startrails here. They are always understanding and don't mind me being there but if you don't have a fishing pole in your hand you aren't supposed to be there after dark
Subject: North Polar Startrails
Date: 2005/04/08 - 2005/04/09
Exposure: 15 x 4min = 1h, ISO 400, f/2.8
Camera: Canon 20D (unmodified)
Lens: Nikon 300mm f/2.8 AIS
Mount: Fixed tripod
Processing: 15 subexposures were directly combined in Photoshop (not aligned beforehand), using Apply image in lighten mode.
Notes: The brightest star in the field is Polaris.
2 hours and 37 minutes of the earth rotating.
314 shots stacked using Startrails.exe
30 seconds each, ISO 6400
Canon T4i
Rokinon 8mm f3.5 lens - 169 degree field of view on the long edge on a crop sensor camera.
If you wrap hand warmers around your lens that will keep the dew away. I use a lens muff with 3 pockets to hold the hand warmers - I only use 2 warmers and the dew stayed off my lens all through the night until morning. I got them from Kevin Adams Photography. Some people just put the hand warmers in a sock.
www.kadamsphoto.com/catalog/digital-after-dark-lensmuff-k...
Filé d'étoiles créé avec 3 photos et 1 dark :.
* 9 minutes de pose.
* ouverture : f/5.
* focale : 10 mm.
* sensibilité : ISO 200.
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L'ensemble a été assemblé avec Startrails.
Startrails in Cornwall, with the ISS.
Composite of 350 images
Sony A-55 SLT 18mm f/8 15s exposures
ISO mistakenly set at 100 so some PS work was required to recover the brightness.
Camera and lens were covered in dew by the end of the shoot but it didn't appear to affect the photography much.
400 photos together into one to create this startrail. In the center of the image you can see Aldebaran and the big lines above are the Pleiades.
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© All rights reserved. Khraibut Art photography Maitham Khraibut .you can contact On Khraibut@msn.com
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