Create a Milky Way Time-Lapse with any Mirrorless Camera - Astrophotography Tutorial

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  • Опубліковано 25 лип 2024
  • Capturing stunning, full-motion landscape videos of the Milky Way Galaxy is easier than ever with today's modern camera systems. With this step-by-step guide to turning your astrophotography shots into a video, you'll be out creating your own starry time-lapse in no time.
    This video was posted by request, so let me know what you think and if there are other tutorials I should add to this channel.
    Follow my Instagram page for star pics and more:
    / amplifyreality
    Cameras in this video:
    Canon EOS R6, Sony a6500, Sony a7R IV
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @amanmehta2303
    @amanmehta2303 6 днів тому +1

    This is very detailed and easy to follow. Thanks.

  • @understorey_life
    @understorey_life 2 місяці тому +1

    Wow, amazing workflow video! Thanks, really insightful! 🎉 Straight to the point 🤌🏻

  • @janoca
    @janoca 3 місяці тому +1

    Thank you so much for this video, it was really helpful!

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  3 місяці тому

      I'm happy to hear that. Thanks for watching!

  • @nnisargpatel
    @nnisargpatel 3 місяці тому +2

    I always prefer lightroom for my workflow but thanks for sharing this information i will try bridge. Appreciate your efforts

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  3 місяці тому

      Lightroom is definitely the more popular program these days. Thanks for watching!

  • @Lux_brumalis_photography
    @Lux_brumalis_photography 6 місяців тому +1

    Nice Video! 👏

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  6 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it 😊

  • @메드포스타MadForStar
    @메드포스타MadForStar 12 днів тому

    Hi, I also love ur tutorial. But my Milky Way photos were also taken in RAW, but in the bridge, it says I can not get them in the RAW file. Should I download adobe camera raw and try it?

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  12 днів тому

      This is the first I've heard of this issue. As long as Adobe Bridge and Adobe Photoshop are both installed, camera raw should be installed also, but double check. If you're using the latest version, it should be able to read any image format. It looks like you shoot with the a7 III, is that correct?

    • @메드포스타MadForStar
      @메드포스타MadForStar 12 днів тому +1

      @DesmondButler I shot with A7RIV A, and I download adobe bridge like 3 days ago, so it means I'm new to Edit in here. I don't have photoshop, so do I need to also download Photoshop to make sure it work?

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  12 днів тому

      @@메드포스타MadForStar I did some research on this, and it appears that Adobe Camera Raw is no longer included with the Adobe Bridge free download. In order for the Camera Raw application to function, you have to have an Adobe Photoshop license. I don't know when this changed, but it looks like Adobe has been doing it this way for a few years. I apologize for causing confusion with that. If you ever do download and install Photoshop, Camera Raw will then work as shown in the video.

  • @Attck.
    @Attck. Місяць тому

    does the interval matter? does it have to be 1 sec?

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  Місяць тому

      It depends on the camera. What you really want is no space at all between shots, but a lot of cameras will already do that if you set it to 1 second, if the exposure time is longer than that.

    • @Attck.
      @Attck. Місяць тому

      @@DesmondButler so for instance I have my exposure set for 10 seconds, if I turn on interval shooting, it’ll just set the interval to 1? I’m shooting on a a73

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  Місяць тому

      @@Attck. You should be able to follow a similar process to what is shown with the a7R IV at 1:45 in this video. Set the seconds low (1 is best) so that the process will go more quickly, and set the number of images as high as you'd like your timelapse length to be.

    • @ecobooster8298
      @ecobooster8298 26 днів тому +1

      Actually, the interval is the exposure time + time to allow the camera to write the image before the next shot. This of course depends on the write speed of your card. For example, if your exposure is a 20 second exposure, I would set the interval to 23 seconds. This accounts for the 20 second shot +3 seconds for rhe camera to write the image to the card.
      Your camera will then take a shot every 23 seconds.
      You're not losing time. You're just allowing the image to be written to the card so your camera is not working so hard. It may over heat. Try it at home, see how long your camera needs to write the image. My nikon has a green light after each shot. Once the light turns off, I know the image has been recorded. But my card is not that fast so again, it really depends on the card. Hope this helps!!

    • @DesmondButler
      @DesmondButler  26 днів тому +1

      @@ecobooster8298 That's only true when the buffer is full. When doing long exposures, that won't happen on a modern camera. My Sony a6500 from 2016 has never waited, it goes right to the next shot immediately for hours on end.