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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Day to night timelapse?
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<blockquote data-quote="Moab Man" data-source="post: 808237" data-attributes="member: 11881"><p>I recently joined the mirrorless world with a Z6ii. I am trying to learn to do a day-to-night timelapse movie of the sun setting and the Milkyway moving through. I have watched endless videos on this and have had no luck. </p><p>I tried doing aperture priority with an auto ISO with a ceiling of 800. I set the Interval to 15 seconds. My logic is that at 15 seconds it should stop the shutter from going any longer and then the ISO ceiling would allow the image to go dark because it can't go any higher. Unfortunately, in aperture priority, the camera went right past the 15-second interval. </p><p></p><p>I can't figure out how to stop the shutter from going long. I know it can be done, but none of the videos I've watched share how they are doing it. </p><p>Thanks</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Moab Man, post: 808237, member: 11881"] I recently joined the mirrorless world with a Z6ii. I am trying to learn to do a day-to-night timelapse movie of the sun setting and the Milkyway moving through. I have watched endless videos on this and have had no luck. I tried doing aperture priority with an auto ISO with a ceiling of 800. I set the Interval to 15 seconds. My logic is that at 15 seconds it should stop the shutter from going any longer and then the ISO ceiling would allow the image to go dark because it can't go any higher. Unfortunately, in aperture priority, the camera went right past the 15-second interval. I can't figure out how to stop the shutter from going long. I know it can be done, but none of the videos I've watched share how they are doing it. Thanks [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Day to night timelapse?
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