View allAll Photos Tagged startrails.
'Startrail comet style'
Olympus OM-D E-M10II+Zuiko ED 12mm f2.0
100x5' - ISO3200
Photoshop CC 2017 + StarSpikes 4 plugin
Revolcadores, Mayo 2017
El plugin Starspikes permite realizar efectos increibles en las imágenes startrails o en capturas del cielo nocturno.
Starspikes plugin allows to produce incredible effects on startrail images or nightsky snapshots.
This was several 10 minute exposures combined to get quite long trails. Interesting to see the point where the trails change direction I think.
First attempt at Startrails!
The program I used was "Startrails", which was very good, but I haven't try Photoshop yet to see if their is any difference.
The Stars trails look a little "bumpy"!
I took 10-12 photos at 30secs exposure.
View large!
Suggestions welcome:)
451 15sec exposures stacked in to one image. The next video is of the same images played at 14fps. I used the free program startrails.exe to do this. Taken between 8:27pm and 10:36pm.
Startrails between 0030-0100 1 july 2014. Taken 17 images with 1 minute exposure separated by 1 minute and stacked using gimp
Canon EOS 450D + Tokina AT-X 124 AF Pro DX 12-24mm f/4
Otro intento de fotografia nocturna. Esta vez, apuntando a la estrella polar se ha aumentado la exposicion para poder ver los trazos de luz que las estrellas dejan al girar sobre la polar. Sin diferentes tomas, solo una de 10 minutos aproximadamente. Aqui hemos intentado ver algo que no fueran edificios pero la contaminación luminica se hace presente.
Exposición: 622
Aperture: f/5.6
Lente: 12 mm
Velocidad ISO: 200
Me and two buddies went to an abandoned railroad station in Bakersfield CA to shoot this star trail. After finishing this startrail, we found a small hole in the building's wall and crept inside to take a look. It was a bit spooky at first, but not bad. Upon leaving, we heard footsteps and bolted out of there.
The is an hour long exposure. As the Earth turned, the camera turned with it making the fixed stars appear as star trails on the camera's sensor. The centrally located short bright trail belongs to Polaris (North Star) situated near the North Celestial Pole (center of rotation in the photo) in the 9 o'clock position. A polar orbiting satellite crossed the field of view of the camera and is registered on the image as a faint dashed line passing just under the Polaris star trail. The dashes result from the combination of the rotation of the satellite and the sunlight being periodically reflected off the solar panels and antennae.
A Canon XSi with a 50 mm lens attached to a fixed tripod was used to make the image. The image was made in the light polluted Bortle red zone of suburban Washington, DC. AN Astronmik CLS Clip filter was used to help suppress the impact of light pollution on the photo. The image was processed using Startrails software and Photoshop CS5.
Camera Settings:
Aperture: f/5.6
Shutter speed: 30 secs
ISO: 200
Focal length: 18 mm
Quality: Jpeg Fine
Interval timer: 34 secs
Stack of 300 images
Software used: Stariltrail Application
Tips: You can use any combination of above settings to get the right exposure
You need not wait for the perfect time and place, this image was captured within city and that too on a Waxing Gibbous night
Didn't have a tripod so went to the terrace and placed the camera on a chair upside down, you can use any flat surface
Position the camera where you find maximum density of stars and ensure that the moon doesn't come in the frame during till the last the shoot
The early evening planes coming in to land, and taking off are visible in this shot. It is stacked from a number of shots using Startrails.exe to give the trails.
Taken with Pentax K200D and (i think) Pentax SMC M 28mm f2.8 lens.
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About the image :
100 shots @ F4, 30sec, Iso 640, manually stacked.
About the location:
Picture taken in my hometown Diest, Belgium
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Trapped in Spain due to the volcano, the skies came clear and good.
I was pleased to catch an iridium flare up above Jesus' head on Calvary in L'Orxa.
Canon 24mm f/2.8, Canon 20D (modded) and a load (100+) of 30 second subs, stacked using Startrail.de.
Nocturna realizada en Rioseco (Guriezo). Se trata de la iglesia de San Vicente de la Maza, del siglo XVII
Got this shot of star trails at an upstate New York lake. It was a new moon on Christmas Eve and no clouds in the sky. Nikon D700, Nikkor 28mm f/2.8 lens, 60 shots stacked together. Photo by Chuck Miller.
Again did some experimenting on star trails. Photo taken at the dunes of Soest in Holland. Next time will try to find a place with less light pollution.
A composite of almost 200 photos creates this star trail around the South Celestial Pole, located at the upper left side of the Gemini South Telescope, on Cerro Pachón, at the Elqui Valley, Chile.
PENTAX K200D
Kit 18-55 lens.
545 exposures (Each @ 10sec F/3.5 18mm ISO: 800 w/o Noise Reduction)
Images combined using Startrails 1.1 from:
www.startrails.de/html/software.html
^^ Excellent Software ^^
Come join my group!
Electric Light Recordings
Canon EOS 450D + Tokina AT-X 124 AF Pro DX 12-24mm f/4
Tercer intento de fotografia nocturna. Prometo mejorar...
Exposición: 372
Aperture: f/4.0
Lente: 17 mm
Velocidad ISO: 200
My first startrail photo :)
16mm, f/6.3, 30s
More than 400 photos in 3,5 hours of shooting, but its still not enough to make realy good and long startrail.
When I was taking this photo, it was -3°C (about 27°F), so I didn't want to get my camera froze. I must wait for better weather to take an all night photo..
Shot approx northbound, 37x32'' exposures blended in startrails.de app.
Brightest asterism showing: Big Dipper.
Stacked photo of 300+ 30-second images shot from the balcony of our hotel in Maui. I used "Startrails" to merge them, so maybe that's why there's a few bright spots (or maybe it's because of the lingering clouds that made a brief appearance?).
Also, I have no idea why the star trails seem so spotty in parts. Unless it's from the program "Startrails," I don't know. The camera shot one 30-second exposure, then waited 10 seconds and shot another. I can't imagine the stars moving enough to leave a gap in only that short amount of time...