posted on Jan, 13 2009 @ 03:06 PM
reply to post by Phage
I was about to say the same.
reply to post by goopity
It's quite tricky to film the night sky with digital cameras, and most cameras in general, unless there's manual controls of aperture, exposure and
focus. The autofocus methods employed by most cameras are thrown by exposures of things at a distance in the sky. Try to keep the camera relatively
unzoomed, because as the focal length increases so does the potential for camera shake. If you can manually or semi-manually focus the camera, set
focus to infinity, to its smallest F-number (the widest aperture), set it to the highest ISO setting without major noise problems, and put the camera
in burst mode.
In burst mode most of the shots will be blurred but some will be sharp. If things like aperture can't be set by the camera use video mode with the
focus set to infinity. But burst mode is worth experimenting with. If the camera attempts to overexpose the sky try setting exposure compensation to
-2 or -3.
Some digital compact cameras have "shutter priority mode" which allows you to specify a shutter speed and the camera sets everything else
accordingly. In that case I'd recommend setting a shutter speed of 1/25th or 1/50th of a second, focus at infinity, and burst mode.
It's quite good fun to experiment by trying to photograph aeroplanes at night and not get too bogged down in technical detail, so don't let my
jargon put you off
.
If everyone practised photographing aeroplanes at night I have no doubt the internet would be flooded with reasonable quality UFO photos.
Know thy camera and all that
. Good luck with your next pictures/video!
[edit on 13-1-2009 by jackphotohobby]
[edit on 13-1-2009 by jackphotohobby]