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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Star shot advice
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<blockquote data-quote="TonyD315" data-source="post: 431551" data-attributes="member: 19804"><p>This was shot in RAW and edited in Lightroom. Part of the class was learning how long of a shutter speed I could have, given my camera and focal length, before the stars start to trail. We calculated 27 seconds on mine, so I shot at 25 just to be safe. I might have to reduce it a second or two. I want to let the most amount of light in while not blurring the stars. With 25 sec being my max, and my lens stopped down as much as possible, the only other thing I could do was bump the ISO. We practiced setting different ISOs so that I can see what I'm comfortable with noise wise. As I said, unfortunately the clouds didn't stay away long enough, but I got some decent shots in the beginning that I'm looking at now. I chose this one because I liked the dimension that the clouds gave it. I'll get back with some of the others.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TonyD315, post: 431551, member: 19804"] This was shot in RAW and edited in Lightroom. Part of the class was learning how long of a shutter speed I could have, given my camera and focal length, before the stars start to trail. We calculated 27 seconds on mine, so I shot at 25 just to be safe. I might have to reduce it a second or two. I want to let the most amount of light in while not blurring the stars. With 25 sec being my max, and my lens stopped down as much as possible, the only other thing I could do was bump the ISO. We practiced setting different ISOs so that I can see what I'm comfortable with noise wise. As I said, unfortunately the clouds didn't stay away long enough, but I got some decent shots in the beginning that I'm looking at now. I chose this one because I liked the dimension that the clouds gave it. I'll get back with some of the others. [/QUOTE]
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