I appreciate you taking time to view my work, and I really enjoy reading your comments. Thanks for visiting :-)
Photograph Details 1700m altitude @ the peak of Mt Buffalo, “The Horn” Make sure you like moths and bats if you hike up at night ! :-) Canon 40D w/ EF-S 10-22mm Focal Length: 10mm Shutter Speed: 30 seconds x 111 shots Aperture: f4.0 ISO: 800 Auto White Balance Format: RAW Tripod & remote shutter Drive mode set to Continual Burst Layered together Map link
great shot, Jared! is the high ISO mandatory for getting enough light on the star trails?
thanks mate ! The maximum shutter is 30sec for the continual burst mode without having to press the shutter manually over the hour, so I found that using ISO 800 was a reasonable trade off. I do get noise, but apply noise reduction before layering them. Ideally, it would be great to shoot at a lower ISO and set the shutter longer. You could use a lower ISO, but then you’d have to bump up your exposure during post processing to get the light you want. I’ve also seen some people use ISO 400, but I’m not sure what post work they did.
Comments
Brilliant again Jared!
thanks Raquel !
– Jared Revell
This is fantastic mate, brilliant work!!! wow
thanks mate !!
:-)
– Jared Revell
Another amazing piece of work!
Thanks so much Brooke !
:-)
– Jared Revell
great shot again jared!!
thanks !!
– Jared Revell
Amazing! Thanks for sharing the details with us!
Thanks Dave :-)
no worries mate !
– Jared Revell
Magic
thanks Melanie ! :-)
– Jared Revell
This is a ripper. Shouldn’t you be at work?
thanks mate !
…another few days off :-)
– Jared Revell
Fantastic work Jared!!!
Thanks Patricia ! :-)
– Jared Revell
I’m Awestruck!
cheers mate :-)
– Jared Revell
great shot, Jared! is the high ISO mandatory for getting enough light on the star trails?
thanks mate !
The maximum shutter is 30sec for the continual burst mode without having to press the shutter manually over the hour, so I found that using ISO 800 was a reasonable trade off. I do get noise, but apply noise reduction before layering them.
Ideally, it would be great to shoot at a lower ISO and set the shutter longer.
You could use a lower ISO, but then you’d have to bump up your exposure during post processing to get the light you want.
I’ve also seen some people use ISO 400, but I’m not sure what post work they did.
– Jared Revell