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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Star shot advice
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<blockquote data-quote="Blade Canyon" data-source="post: 431546" data-attributes="member: 15302"><p>Be sure to shoot in RAW. Your picture looks great.</p><p></p><p>I don't have any tips on producing better star photos, but I did discover that using a camera can help me find galaxies I'm trying to see in a telescope or with binoculars. Just make a long exposure shot of the part of the sky where the galaxy is supposed to be, and sure enough it will show up as a tiny cloud on a long exposure (30 seconds) high-ISO shot. The main problem is that anything over 30 seconds is enough time to see some motion blur, so the pics are not really good for anything else. You can see a little motion blur in the stars in your 25 second exposure.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Blade Canyon, post: 431546, member: 15302"] Be sure to shoot in RAW. Your picture looks great. I don't have any tips on producing better star photos, but I did discover that using a camera can help me find galaxies I'm trying to see in a telescope or with binoculars. Just make a long exposure shot of the part of the sky where the galaxy is supposed to be, and sure enough it will show up as a tiny cloud on a long exposure (30 seconds) high-ISO shot. The main problem is that anything over 30 seconds is enough time to see some motion blur, so the pics are not really good for anything else. You can see a little motion blur in the stars in your 25 second exposure. [/QUOTE]
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Star shot advice
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