I know you can set the shutter speed on manual photos for night shots but are you able to use say a 1 second exposure when shooting in sphere, wide angle, 180, and vertical modes? I wanting to do a sphere shot of the milky way. Any help appreciated.
There are 2 major issuesI know you can set the shutter speed on manual photos for night shots but are you able to use say a 1 second exposure when shooting in sphere, wide angle, 180, and vertical modes? I wanting to do a sphere shot of the milky way. Any help appreciated.
Astrophotography with a drone would be impossible in my opinion. I have been doing astrophotography for the past 5 years, and have taken several 3 day workshops on it. The usual technique (aside from dark skies and dark sites) is to use the sturdiest tripod you own, a very fast wide angle lens, and a 15-25 second exposure. Focusing on a star takes up to 5 or ten minutes in the set up time. The single exposure will require at least 15 seconds, and a timelapse will take several hours. I use a Really Right stuff tripod, a Nikon D750 DSLR, and Nikon 14-28mm f/1.8 lens, usually with shutter of 20 seconds and ISO of 1200.I know you can set the shutter speed on manual photos for night shots but are you able to use say a 1 second exposure when shooting in sphere, wide angle, 180, and vertical modes? I wanting to do a sphere shot of the milky way. Any help appreciated.
Doesn't mean you can't have a little fun with it. If you zoom in to this nightscape of Jupiter and Saturn, you can make out the optical double Alpha Capricorni at the upper left.Astrophotography with a drone would be impossible in my opinion...
If you did this you would have to decide on the exposure setting, right? Do you expose for the drone (?5 seconds), or exposure for the stars (15-20 seconds). Can't have it both ways. You could "light paint" it with a flashlight.How about doing a long exposure from the ground with a tripod mounted DSLR, and sending the drone up and getting that in the photo?As well as seeing what you can capture with the drone.
a favorite of mine"light paint" it with a flashlight.
If you did this you would have to decide on the exposure setting, right? Do you expose for the drone (?5 seconds), or exposure for the stars (15-20 seconds). Can't have it both ways. You could "light paint" it with a flashlight.
Many ways to skin the catDo one exposure for the drone, and then the other for the sky, and then blend them in Photoshop, or equivalent.......
f2.8... a Nikon D750 DSLR, and Nikon 14-28mm f/1.8lens, usually with shutter of 20 seconds and ISO of 1200.
I know you can set the shutter speed on manual photos for night shots but are you able to use say a 1 second exposure when shooting in sphere, wide angle, 180, and vertical modes? I wanting to do a sphere shot of the milky way. Any help appreciated.
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