View allAll Photos Tagged startrails
Woohoo!
2nd star trail attempt, this time on a very clear moonless night.
Shooting 5d mkII with 17-35mm f/2.8L at 17mm (ultra wide angle)
57 photos merged on 'startrails' program - 30 second shutter speed each
f/3.5
ISO1600
- www.kevin-palmer.com - This is a stack of nearly 3 hours worth of photos from the High Park Lookout. The Quadrantid meteors mostly got lost in the startrails, although the airplane lights shine through easily.
Hi all... Just got back from a week away in wales staying near Aberaaron and had some great skies .... between the clouds ;-)
Multiple 30 second exposures aligned and stacked with a total exposure of about 2 hours
Will catch up with all your great photostreams soon ... Thanks for looking Steve
Y las nubes empezaron a ocupar el 50% de la escena, asi que la salida nocturna tomo otro planteamiento, a por otra cosa.
Taken from Oxfordshire, UK, with a Canon 1100D with standard lens.
ISO-1600 for 30 seconds, 180 images stacked using StarStax then processed in Adobe Lightroom
Mono Lake in the Eastern Sierra of California is well-known for a number of reasons: the majestic calcium carbonate tufa towers, exposed by many years of zero water conservation efforts, and the battle to save the area so important to wildlife ecosystems.
I was surprised this 55-minute startrail effort worked at all. It was SO windy and I was sure my tripod was blowing just like I was trying to stand still. Foreground light provided by a setting waxing crescent moon and some additional help from my Brinkman torch. Highway 395 in the distance. Another cool thing about this is the various colors in the star streaks - the cooler streaks are actually the hotter stars and the warmer streaks are actually cooler stars. Specs: Canon 5D Mark III, 14mm F/2.8L @ F2.8, 25 sec, ISO 1000 times 127 images stacked with Startrails.exe.
2 hr 40 mins
Canon 6D and Samyang 14mm f2.8 lens
10s ISO4000 exposures at 10s intervals
Some frames removed due to pesky cars
My camera was pointed at the South Celestial Pole. Settings were:
Nikon d5100
100 x 30 second exposures stacked in StarTrails.exe
11mm
ISO 1600
f2.8
This was an interesting night. A meteor passed above me, close enough that I could see the orange glow generated by the friction of entering our atmosphere. I got swooped a few times by either owls or bats. The alarm at the nearby Water Corporation building which services the dam started blaring and not long after a ranger came to inspect the premises, not wanting to be blamed I had to make a quick exit but luckily I had finished by that point.
Star trails as seen from the back of my house. Image composed from 1,200 individual photos blended using StarStax software. Images taken from dust until dawn, 17:39 11/12/17 until 06:46 12/12/17.
Individual images taken using GoPro Hero 5 Black, Night Lapse Photo mode with 30 second shutter, Auto Interval, ISO-100, WB 5500k, GoPro Colour.
The making of is here... instagram.com/p/BcqBfhTlpvQ/
33 frames - 16 min, pointing west, stacked with startrails.de.
The moon (behind the camera) was almost full.
Startrails shot with my Fuji XT1 and the Triggertrap app and dongle. 184 shots of 20 seconds each, overlaid.
Still figuring out the optimum settings for shooting the night sky, but pleased with this attempt. See next picture for video of all frames.
Before hitting the sleeping bag I set the camera to point North with the dying fire in the foreground and let it rip until the battery went out. This is 4 hours and 25 minutes worth of 30 second exposures (467 shots) taken at ISO 3200, 10mm and f/3.5. They were stacked using the freeware program "Startrails". Taken at about 9500 feet up in the Collegiate Peaks Wilderness near Cottonwood Lake in Colorado.
I shot around 120 images of this scene to make a timelapse, but it didn't turn out the way I expected. Instead I stacked the images in Photoshop for this image showing the startrails and the green aurora glow.
The image is taken in "Hjelpdalen" in Stjørdal county, Norway.
The rest of the images from 22 April 2015 when camera on Lyrid watch are stacked here using Starstax in Gap Fill comet mode
Pointing E, 30 minutes of night sky (16/06/2018 @ GMT 22:57 to 23:27) stacked with StarStaX (comet mode).
Mars is breaking into the horizon.
i'll leave the location a secret. this is 70min worth of star trails.
ISO1600/f3.5
i wont recomend doing this but i occasionally leave my camera in(well thought out) locations... unattended to take startrails. never in the same spot twice i'll add! its risky but its worked out ok so far*touch wood*
the above shot was just over 1hr of what was supposed to be nearly 3hrs!! of star trails but unfortunately a low fog rolled in and covered the lens in moisture ruining the other shots..............