September 7, 2021, 23:46, asked: Karaka Kamera
Ideally, your aperture would be f/2.8 or wider, although lenses with a maximum aperture of f/4 can work in a pinch. Unfortunately, using your lens's widest aperture comes with a couple issues. Most of all is that your image quality won't be quite as good, especially in the corners of the photo....
September 7, 2021, 22:40, asked: JM Photography ?
Image Processing in Photoshop: Step by Step
September 7, 2021, 21:21, asked: Chen Neeman
Using an ISO setting of 800 is enough to collect a healthy amount of “good” signal to reveal objects in the night sky, yet does not have the negative effects shooting with a much higher ISO has. Take some test shots using anywhere from ISO 400 – to ISO 6400....
September 7, 2021, 12:11, asked: AnnArt_NguyenYenNhi_Nailclass
The most common line filters for astrophotography include: Hydrogen Alpha (656nm). The most commonly used line filter, the H-alpha filter passes red light emitted by ionized hydrogen and brings out the fine, delicate detail in emission nebula and supernova remnants....
September 7, 2021, 11:08, asked: Hannah
Nikon's D810A is the only DSLR camera dedicated to Astrophotography. This product was built to capture galaxies, nebulae, and other deep sky objects. It even has an optimized censor that is 4 times more sensitive to Hydrogen Alpha gas than other DSLR cameras!...
September 7, 2021, 08:08, asked: Wild nature places
Spring In the astrophotography realm, Galaxy Season refers to the period in Spring when the night sky offers up a buffet of incredible galaxies to observe and photograph. From early March until Mid-May, the window of opportunity for night sky enthusiasts is open to those who wish to a wide variety of different galaxies....
September 7, 2021, 01:28, asked: CJ Burnell
Canon EOS 90D It is capable of multi-exposure shooting from 2 to 9 exposures. It saves just the merged images and not the original ones, but it's perfect for astrophotography. You can stabilise your camera and adjust the exposures to make more stars visible in your sky shots....
September 7, 2021, 01:14, asked: Only for nature Fans
Short answer is YES, it is… to an extent. Smartphones have gone a long way since the first model with VGA cameras and can now rival most consumer compact point and shoot cameras, particularly in good light conditions. The Moon hovering over a typical fall landscape. iPhone XR....
September 6, 2021, 16:54, asked: Abdoulie
There is a technique called exposure stacking that is very effective in reducing the digital noise in your photos. You take multiple exposures with the same settings, stack them into layers inside Photoshop, align the stack, then Photoshop will create an image based on the median of all the stacked exposures....
September 6, 2021, 13:03, asked: Bernice | Irish Photo Blogger
What settings do you use for astrophotography?