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Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
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As Per requested
Originally posted by depthoffield
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
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As Per requested
those second episode of photos..are clear that you are playing games or take experiments with the camera, having movements/oscilations/shakings during the long exposure.
I see a pattern here.
Which can explain the OP photos: shakings during long exposure, as Noisemedia and myself guessed above. Wind, vibrations through the roof where you stayed, deliberate/inocent shakings etc.
The tripod/camera system MUST stay absolutely and perfect static during exposure, unless you want to obtain blurs, shakings or even "Dorothy Izatt" style photos
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
I might have shook the camera when taking the images but like I said before there was nothing in the clear patch of sky I was shooting at.
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
In the beginning I was trying to get the right exposures and zoom length. Those were just test shots but somebody wanted me to post them.
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
I might have shook the camera when taking the images
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
but like I said before there was nothing in the clear patch of sky I was shooting at. Maybe there was I didn't see it.
Originally posted by ArMaP
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
I might have shook the camera when taking the images but like I said before there was nothing in the clear patch of sky I was shooting at.
When you say that there wasn't anything on that patch of sky do you mean that there weren't any stars visible?
If you want to take photos of stars you should use a low f-number and ISO setting, otherwise you are just getting noise from the sensor.
Originally posted by depthoffield
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
In the beginning I was trying to get the right exposures and zoom length. Those were just test shots but somebody wanted me to post them.
Ok, i realised you've done some testings.
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
I might have shook the camera when taking the images
That is for sure!! i "enhanced" the photos and the shaking is clear...just some more time to finish the material
Originally posted by Rancid-Milk-Man
but like I said before there was nothing in the clear patch of sky I was shooting at. Maybe there was I didn't see it.
I'm not so sure you didn't saw it...the camera is not so sensitive to light lengthwave spectrum beyound human limits, so most of the recorded light came from visible spectrum. At the average setting you used:
Fnumber 20 to 32 (very small aperture so very small amount of light entered through the lens)
Exposure time: 10 to 30 seconds ("normal" long exposure for "normal" night shots")
ISO 1250 (high sensitivity)
You should be seen the light, i guess is easy visible in above settings.
I still bet on Venus (or similar)
[edit on 30/5/10 by depthoffield]
Still can't figure out my problem with the noise