/r/LandscapeAstro
Images, discussion, questions, gear and all things related to Landscape Astrophotography
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/r/LandscapeAstro
It's amazing that even with a 14% moon, Jupiter and her moons would still shine so bright Canon rp RF 16mm 20sec f/2.8 iso 6400 Zabriskie point Death Valley CA
Balanced rock 5 panel pano blend. Shot during my last trip to Moab when conditions were amazing for the few days I was there.
EXIF
Sky 90s x 3 x 5 panels ISO1600 f3.5
Foreground 2s x 5 panels ISO1600 f8
Camera: Canon R6ll
Lens: Sigma Art 14-24mm f2.8
Mount: Sky Watcher Star Adventurer
I kinda assume this is just atmospheric distortion (top left of the sun), but saw this "erupt" for lack of a better term as the sun was setting.
Taken from Lake Michigan, Chicago skyline.
Hi all. I'm looking for tips to light my foreground. Does something like a Lume Cube panel work?
F2.8 / 15 second exposure/ ISO 3200
Open to criticism
Spent a night at the lake today and used the time for a first attempt. I think it turned out quite well. Canon RP 14mm , 2.8, 40sec. Photoshop Express App
Nikon Z6 II
50mm
13s
ISO 800
f2
I took this while setting up my polar alignment. This is tracked but not properly polar aligned, but at this focal length it was "good enough" while I set up.
Anyone notice that Camera Raw denoise .dng save back as Tif creates a slightly smaller image size. It's not a lot but enough to annoy when trying to use a high ISO foreground in a star trail adventure. Thoughts or work arounds.