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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Night Sky/Star/Milky way - f/4 and above
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<blockquote data-quote="WhiteLight" data-source="post: 220887" data-attributes="member: 9556"><p>As its common knowledge that for star photography, the desired aperture would the largest like 1.8 or 2.8</p><p>Just wondering how the results would be hampered if using a f/4 or smaller aperture? </p><p>Perhaps similar results can be seen if the shutter speed is increased but anything over 60 secs would result in trails.. </p><p>And on lower end cameras noise would be a huge factor as well.. </p><p>Thoughts?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WhiteLight, post: 220887, member: 9556"] As its common knowledge that for star photography, the desired aperture would the largest like 1.8 or 2.8 Just wondering how the results would be hampered if using a f/4 or smaller aperture? Perhaps similar results can be seen if the shutter speed is increased but anything over 60 secs would result in trails.. And on lower end cameras noise would be a huge factor as well.. Thoughts? [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Night Sky/Star/Milky way - f/4 and above
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