Date : Yet to announce May-Jun 2013
Where : Bali
What : Nightscape (plus some bonus Landscape if time permit)
How Many : min 7 to start and max 12 people
contact me if you wish to join this @ liewwk76@gmail.com
liewwk Nature Photography Blog
Date : Yet to announce May-Jun 2013
Where : Bali
What : Nightscape (plus some bonus Landscape if time permit)
How Many : min 7 to start and max 12 people
contact me if you wish to join this @ liewwk76@gmail.com
I always telling friends of mine to have bigger aperture to get clearer Milky way shot … and it really give impact with more light fall onto the sensor … but what if we do not have big aperture len .. e.g. we own F4 or F3.5 lenses ?
and I share this before .. How I shoot Milky Way/Star
theoritical , if we can increase the shutter time which allow more light abosrb on the sensor.. we should able to capture beautiful stars sky … but according to the rule 600
…
I had aiming a polarie star tracker but too bad, i had been turn down by the cost and size …
recently, I managed to test the
Vixen Polarie… a square box size small and weight <1kg … and not really difficult to operate …
i may not able to share how do use this .. but it is really simple and let me share the simple test result
both shoot at F4 , exp 151s +- , ISO 400
1. without start tracker – Vixen Polarie
2. witho start tracker – Vixen Polarie
with minimu setup time and minimu knowledge of Astronomy , I am able to create a image without “start trail” effect
**** rule 600 simply basic rule to avoid “star trail” effect while we have too long exposure on our effective focal length.. e.g.
16mm on FULL frame, we should have max exposure of 600/16=37.5s
16mm on canon APS-c , we should have max exposure of 600/16*1.6=23.4
so if we have anything more than the exposure time the the rotation of earth will create “star trai;” effect create blur effect on to our frame.