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Stars
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2020


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A sky of star trails

A sky of star trails
On a very rare clear night for me, I have at last a chance to try this in my back garden. Astro photographers will recognise it with ease but for my viewers who are not initiated here is what you are seeing:
This is 83 separate exposures, taken with my 11mm Tokina DX (similar to 16mm on fx or 35mm camera’s), each set at a shutter release time of 40 secs, f4.5 , iso 640, with just a gap of 5 secs between each shot. All the shots were then ‘stacked’ together using a program called StarStax.
I am pointing my lens roughly towards our North star Polaris. Now because of the long exposure and gap between each shot, around 90 minutes had elapsed between the first and last shot. This then showed the movement, not really of the stars but the earth revolving on its polar axis which is lined up with Polaris hence the star here in the centre of the ‘wheel’ is Polaris and all the others have revolved around it some distance. Each white line is a blurred star’s travel over those 90 minutes and 83 exposures. A more complete unbroken series of circles can be obtained with more exposures over a longer time, ideally over three hours and 300 exposures or more. As the wind was gusting, our trees were tossing around and over the 90 minute period a bank of cloud had flown by. Normally my home, being inside the light polluted conurbation of Greater Manchester, is much too bright to capture such things but a new moon (no moon) and a new anti-pollution glass filter has made things better here.

A lot of patience, a sturdy tripod and an electronic camera timer trigger helps here :)

Enjoy full screen on black.

Ps my last attempt at such a thing was in Cyprus just 14 months ago. (PiP)

@ngélique ❤️, Nouchetdu38, , buonacoppi and 24 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (28)
 Herb Riddle
Herb Riddle club has replied
Cheers Peter. I don't think I have seen any meteors Peter but I did capture some very high planes :)
4 years ago.
 Herb Riddle
Herb Riddle club has replied
Hi Haar and welcome to my gallery here. Always nice to have an American come by as I think Ipernity has far too few from your neck-of-the-woods. Very happy that you enjoyed this one.
Haar, I know where you are coming from with the one exposure. Two things come to mind with that one single exposure. 1) - the total light entry would be far too high. My skies are overexposed at 100 iso, f16 after five minutes most. 2) In these days of electronic camera shutters, I doubt very much my shutter would remain open for two hours before the batteries went. I think the bumping of the camera failing would apply equally for both set-ups. This stacking business seems to work the best for me at least, as the software can actually mathematically fill the gaps between each individual star too, giving a clean line between the two. Besides I could use 900+ exposures and the software does not increase the overall exposures, so they still look like a single exposure as far as total light is concerned. I must admit though that your long two hour shot, done with real film and paper.chemical exposure methods gives food for though.

Cheers for the comment and visit, please call again. Keep safe. Herb in the UK.
4 years ago.
 Keith Burton
Keith Burton club
An interesting image Herb..............it looks very impressive. I'm no expert and I've never tried this sort of photography myself, but it seems like you've cracked it..!!

I'd need to get out to the countryside to try this.........there's far too much light pollution where I live :-(
4 years ago. Edited 4 years ago.
 Herb Riddle
Herb Riddle club has replied
Hi Kieth, in theory my description above tells everyone how to take these but I know from experience how hard it is to start down this line. My Ipernity friend Steve Paxton has been invaluable to me in his help and encouragement towards night photography. Remarks like yours here makes it all worth while. As I said to Toz above -just get out in the countryside on a clear warm moonless night and point your wide-angle to the stars (no don't try it with your telephoto) you will be surprised how good it all looks. You will need about 10-15 secs at F3.5 on iso 1600.- Give it a go. getting the moon is also very rewarding but you need to expose that for daylight England.

Keep safe. Herb
4 years ago.
 HaarFager
HaarFager club has replied
Thanks for the explanation! I've always wondered about that kind of software.
4 years ago.

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