My First Pics too!

CCD vs Film? Lots of time vs no patience? Alright, this is your place to discuss all the astrophotography what's and what's not. You can discuss about techniques, accessories, cameras, whatever....just make sure you also post some nice photos here too!
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cloud_cover
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Favourite scope: 94.5", f/24 Ritchey-Chretien Reflector
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My First Pics too!

Post by cloud_cover »

Never done Astrophotos before, but the stars in NZ were so gorgeous I just had to try :)

1. Milky Way and Trees
(Gary, this is the one you asked me to post :) )
Taken close to midnight standing in the driveway of our farmstay.
D700 ISO 3200, Tamron lens @ 17mm, f2.8, Exp 62s
Copyrighted due to an agreement I made with the (farm) property owner.

Image

2. Moon
Taken when I got back from NZ from my window
D700, ISO 400, 400mm at f/11, Exp 1/1000s

Image

Qing Duo Duo Zhi Jiao! :)
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Gary
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Post by Gary »

Very nice! Thanks for sharing.
bharat
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Post by bharat »

Wow! Looks nice, especially the moon picture is very clear.
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Chris
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Post by Chris »

Nice pictures! To enhance the moon (bring out craters and stuff), use unsharp mask in photoshop.

The milkyway star trails are visible because your 30sec exposure is too long. You could have taken multiple 20sec exposures and then stacking them using DSS (Deep sky stacker). You can refer to Barry's post on the tutorial on how to use DSS, or visit his site here: www.asignobservatory.com
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mch3898
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Post by mch3898 »

Wow, how nice if we can get this kind of sky in Singapore. Your framing of the milky way with the trees is artistic. Wide-field AP has that special appeal. Well done.
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guangwei
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Post by guangwei »

very nice milky way picture, i love the farm, it reminds me of childhood fairytales :)
superiorstream
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Post by superiorstream »

Hi,cloud-cover
You mention you are in New Zealand?That place sky real nice but now its almost winter there and outside temp. should be 5 degree C or less at night(if south island may even be 0 C).Mount your camera on tripod and just shot--1/2 sec,1 sec,iso 3200,iso 1600 combinations etc.All will come out nice if the sky is clear and cloudless;but do wear glove and remember to protect even your ears.The cold wind freeze everything!!I shot there before at 5 C throughout the night and by morning my hand and ears are almost frozen--but really enjoy it!!!;especially when the photo shows up.
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Clifford60
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Post by Clifford60 »

Very nice
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cloud_cover
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Post by cloud_cover »

Thanks for all the comments and compliments :)
Superiorstream: These were taken in April, just never published or shared, until now :) (Also never decided to learn astronomy properly until a few days ago!)
Chris: You're right, and I wished I knew about stacking when I went to NZ. I'm into photography but not astrophoto (and I don't really like HDR) so the only technique I knew about was long exposure and prayer ;) Figured with a 17mm it would take at least a min before star trails became evident, particularly if I didn't publish at 1:1 resolution
croys: You're right, that's mostly coma aberration and linear distortion although some trailing is visible. Using a Tamron 17-35mm f2.8-4, decent for daytime photos but not a particularly premium lens hence the distortion. Made worse by me using it wide open, in order to balance ISO and exposure time. Also costs 1/8th of the premium nikon lens.......
Unfortunately a few paces to the left was a telephone pole. Sigh! It was an experience in near absolute darkness trying to look through the viewfinder while waving a high powered LED torch around the FOV to see if any telephone wire reflections were present.
DON'T PANIC
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