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Photography Q&A
Longest shutter length for a clean moon photo?
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike150" data-source="post: 48771" data-attributes="member: 2287"><p>Remember that the moon is reflected sunlight. All I've ever done is moon shots alone. Never with a foreground. For solo moon shots, start with ISO of 200 or 400. Try F16 at 1/250. That should get you a fair shot showing details of the moon. Getting the skyline is another problem. You almost have to catch it while there is still some daylight left. Might have to shoot the moon, then longer exposure for skyline and then shop them together.</p><p>I'd sure like to see the end result when you're done.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike150, post: 48771, member: 2287"] Remember that the moon is reflected sunlight. All I've ever done is moon shots alone. Never with a foreground. For solo moon shots, start with ISO of 200 or 400. Try F16 at 1/250. That should get you a fair shot showing details of the moon. Getting the skyline is another problem. You almost have to catch it while there is still some daylight left. Might have to shoot the moon, then longer exposure for skyline and then shop them together. I'd sure like to see the end result when you're done. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
Longest shutter length for a clean moon photo?
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