You made me realize about three years ago that it was possible to see deep space objects in such detail from a backyard. Until then I thought a huge observatory was needed to get such images. It's been a very rewarding three years full of ups and downs and not until recently have I produced an image that could actually hang on a wall. Yet the amazing sights to be seen and the fun nights have made it all well worth it. Doing visual first then EEA and then on to astrophotography has been a life changing experience. It has helped me profoundly and given the confidence to accomplish very complex tasks when cold, tired and frustrated. Truely a life-long pursuit of looking up at the heavens and wondering. Thank you very much for letting me know.
@@berniestang2616 If you want to photograph Andromeda galaxy, the cheapest way to do so is DSLR camera with tripod and dark sky. Andromeda galaxy under dark sky is 8 times bigger than full moon. Get pair of binoculars and check yourself for more details.
I’m 14 and just got my first telescope. It’s nothing fancy but it does the job. And holy moly I’m hooked. I’m out there every night looking at random things, even if they just look like white dots. When I get bored of just white dots, I look for other things like planets and well, the moon. Sometimes you just have to get your telescope and go to random stars just to see what they are
I’m 12 and have an Orion 120 st equatorial refractor and of course the sky view German equatorial mount but I don’t have a lap top for the Astro camera (may father lets me use his stuff)😊
i was 15 when i bought my first scope, a tasco 4.5 inch reflector with an eq mount, im 60 now and i still have it and use it, i do have some nicer stuff but all the new tech takes a long time to set up and the old one takes just a minute. its a life long hobby and if you take care of your equipment it will last a long time
This video has been so reaffirming to my struggles I’ve been doing Astro photography for about 2 1/2 years now and I’m still not quite in the place I want to be yet. My main problem is how expensive the hobby is. I’m 14 and don’t have a job so it takes me a long time to gather all the equipment I need from various sources, but this video has inspired me to keep going and I really have seen a lot of progress from when I’ve started, so thank you.
@Ayodeji Oyetosho: Congratulations. I'm an olden dude, age 74 at the moment. Some years back (and I now forget the exact details) one of my first and most appreciated pictures was made with a short fL lens on a DSLR type camera. It was Andromeda shot on a non-tracking tripod, a shutter speed of maybe 1 or 2 seconds and the lens was maybe 100 mm or was it 200 mm (memory fails lol) but I do remember it was a prime lens. I got something like 750 subs. I placed the object at one side of the live view screen and shot until it reached the other side of the camera screen. I'd get 50 or maybe it was 75 subs before moving the camera again for the next several shots. It took quite some time to get the stacking done in my computer. Then, I cropped it like crazy, but still got a highly satisfactory final picture after editing. I could see color, the spiral arms and the dust lanes and the stars were pretty well focused. These days getting focus is more challenging. I'm happy to hear you're beginning the hobby at an age where you can get focus a lot easier than I can now. 😃 Keep going the way you're headed and you'll progress at a steady rate. Don't allow short supply of money discourage you. My main advice is to pick targets that will fit the lens you have (there's likely a lot more of those than you might first think) and shoot those targets every chance you have. Good luck.
Bro I am 16 and don’t have a job at the moment bc of college. I got a celestron astroamaster 130AZ given to me because it was not used. It is definitely expensive, but take your time and use what you got. Right now, I am just using my phone and the telescope and I am getting some nice photos of mars and Jupiter.
I got a 4.5 inch reflector telescope for Christmas, I went out last night and looked at Jupiter and the Orion Nebula, I didn’t get a single image of either before my toes almost froze off in the 10°F weather , but I had the time of my life looking at what I did look at, and figuring everything out, I’m excited for what’s to come in my future of astrophotography , you are a big inspiration for me :).
i did my very 1st imaging with a 4.5 . i did a video of jupiter. it was small but yeah know... i loved every min of it. then i got the bug hard. went to a 12 inch dob. then came the hardcore starting out imaging. eq mount AVX. still use it ... orion 80 edapo the gray workhorse they sold. old canon 350 ir self moded. love every min of it.
Happened to me just 3 years ago when my son gave me a real small simple scope - but seeing Jupiter and Orion through it got me completely hooked…now running a C11 and a C14 and can’t get enough 😂 enjoy!!!!
this advice did help i was capturing the orion nebula and i kept trying i'm really proud of my self it may not be the best but your right i took it I me spend my time learning to do this and you helped
Absolutely agree with all Your points! Even tho my main target is Northern Lights(Aurora Borealis), specially close to heart point was bout weather.... I am obsessed with checking many apps and many times per day... But I love doing it... I will carry on doing it and upgrading my toys for it...
As a newcomer in Astrophotography i can only confirm everything you said. Im doing this hobby now for 2 years and just a few month ago i got to the point where my images are like i wanted them to be. It was a lot of frustration, trial and error to get there but its worth it! Awesome video Trevor Hopefully this will get more people started in this hobby like i did because of you 2 years ago!
I agree as well but also as a newcomer I don't agree that you need an EQ mount to take deep space images. I use an alt az mount because they are cheaper and easier to use. I just connect my DSLR and lens to it, align it and I can take amazing photos that im proud of.
There is no bigger question than 'Who are we, where are we from?' Jodie Foster, Contact and Professor Brian Cox 'We are all made from Star stuff'. You talk of frustration but frustration is what people with questions experience. Passion leads to experimentation, experimentation leads to answers. Too many folks on the astro journey expecting immediate results. As a martial artist then I can tell you the journey is lifelong, so is same for any pursuit of excellence. Being inquisitive and being persistent is the key to astronomy. If you don't have an answer then someone else prolly will. Trevor Jones has that passion and following those that are better is what leads you to becoming better. You don't get to be the chess champion without beating the grandmaster. In other words, a wise man knows he can't know everything. One thing I know as a researcher, if you need an answer, Google it. As Mulder and Scully would say ' The truth is out there'.
I drive a semi for a living and I see so many beautiful places. I’ve been trying for two months and I finally finally got a good landscape with thousands of stars in the sky. I’m just blown away with how much more my camera can see mounted on a tripod with a 20 second exposure. I saw a black hillside and a couple stars.
Good advice. I bought a 127mm Mak for my daughter. She wants to take some solar system photos. I have a DLSR and I got an adaptor ring and eyepiece holder. I also got a USB camera. I'm an engineer in 3 fields and I'll figure it out. Once I go through the learning curve and make a bunch of mistakes, I'll go looking for advice because it will make sense because of context. I'm looking forward to using the Astro Stacking feature of Affinity Photo after all these years. Thanks for saying what needed to be said!
What a great video Trevor, thank you. I'm just starting on my astrophotography journey. My partner & I bought a dobsonian 8" reflector about 10 years ago (I really wish we'd bought an equatorial mount) but hardly ever use it. After seeing another UA-camr's video earlier which took you through capturing the Orion nebula without a tracker (including all the frames required and the processing steps in Photoshop) I'm going to give it a go and if successful, buy a StarAdventurer GTi. It's only 2 hours or so for me to get to a Bortle 3 sky area in Wales, UK. Subscribed and looking forward to going through your back catalogue. My partner already go to our local astronomy club (she calls it space nerds 🙂) I may just tag along. Cheers, Terry.
Hi! I'm a Pre-Newbie. I just started looking up a few months ago. We camped at Cherry Springs and I was STARSTRUCK!! Then came the big disappointment: the 2nd nite it RAINED. I swore I would be back!! Meanwhile I joined the local astro club, bought some binocs & discovered that with a little effort I could still see stars in my suburban area!! Then I learned that you can't see the galaxies & milky way as well with your eyes as with a camera. That's when I started looking into astrophog. My resources: I've used photoshop for making electronic music videos. Camera: a Moto G Android phone. No telescope yet. My hopes: I want to get out and look at the Milky Way forever. May as well have a camera taking a long exposure. This gives me an excuse to go to the most beautiful remote places and be outside looking at stars as long as possible. It's not because I want a bunch of pix on the wall. It's because the stars are a spiritual experience for me. Thanks for your video!
What great tips. I have been in this hobby for the last 2 years, and just now are my photos getting to the point where I can consider enlarging and printing. Point #15 - don't get discourage with your initial images. They will get so much better and it okay to continuously revisit the same target year after year.
Great video Trevor ,love your videos very help full ,been viewing for about 12 years now ,and photographing for the same just with an old 08 model dslr cannon. Your not kidding about the weather Lx200 mount crapped out about 20 months ,decide to take tube off mount and order a EQ6R PRO ,had to wait 11 months to get it ,micro chip shortage lol,picked it up 10 days ,cloudy everday since then:( Going to get i think that Asi air plus and the 533mc camera ,i think ,with guide scope think i can do that for 2grands canadian ,and no lap top lol at least no in the field . Glad i found your channel ,really jonesing to get and have a view ,clear sky's
I give this video one million likes. “Life is too short to spend it on the sidelines, watching and critiquing others. Get out there! Capture. Create. Inspire.” Thank you for the inspiration I needed today.
stating that cloudy nights come whenever something new arrives or you're excited is so true. i had perfectly clear nights for weeks and as soon as my new ad8 came, the next week was full of cloudy and rainy nights
I just started in photography all over the place. But your video totally awesome. You should have your own show. I will start following you for sure. You see awesome. Thanks made me laugh too.
Hey I bought your book and, I’m just blown away at how detailed you made it. It’s like reading a tutorial. I wasn’t expecting 133 pages either. Thanks 😊
The concept of failure, learning, improvement and repetition I've come to appreciate from astrophotography has helped me become more calm and grounded in other aspects of my life. Thank you for introducing me to the hobby and for sharing your insight and knowledge. Clear skies
A few days ago i repaired an old Meade 900mm by 60mm refractor. .965 eyepiece and got my dslr on it. I got it tuned to Jupiter and low and behold the image was grey. I didn't care. I could see some moons. I did everything i think I could and the image was still gray - winter and cirrus clouds probably didn't help, but it didn't matter. I got to see what those who came before us saw when their knowledge of what was out there was barely moving along. It's not as pretty as a space probe or large telescope image, but it gave me chills. Doing it yourself is a totally different experience. You have to take the small victories I agree. It's about the journey, not the end.
Things that seem so obvious that they're not even worth mentioning can really trip up a beginner. For instance, I thought that polar alignment meant centering Polaris in the crosshairs. This actually worked OK when I was using a tracking mount for visual observing, finding objects by star-hopping, and I never gave it a thought. But when I got a go-to mount I found out I had been doing it wrong for years.
I watch many astrophotography videos, but only your videos Trevor capture the excitement and wonder of the hunt for these amazing heavenly objects. Truly inspiring.
At 2:10 - This is exactly what I tell anybody I know getting into astrophotography. Your journey is yours, no one else's. By all means learn from those who create images you aspire to achieve, but always keep everything relative to your own development path and equipment. I have had times where I seemed to get nowhere for long periods of time, but I found you have watershed moments where something will suddenly make sense, or a technique becomes easier through repetition or more research. Take the wins as they come - I still remember the first time I took my rig to a remote site and aligned it perfectly first shot using just the reticle and Synscan hand controller. Sounds small, but I had seasoned astrophotographers with all the fancy plate solving gear coming over and patting me on the back, marveling at my near perfect 3 star alignment 😬 (that night I captured Andromeda for the first time from Southern Australia, so a big night all round). Thanks for Showing your wonderful work Trevor, and keeping it real for the masses.
Thank you AstroBackyard!!!!!!!!! I acquired my fathers Celestron Nexstar Evolution 8 and his DSLR after his passing from contracting covid from a patient 2 years ago. I picked up this hobby to honor and remember him. Unfortunately I was never able to learn any of this from him before his passing. I have been unsatisfied with what images I have taken and ready to just give up. Space was always our passion especially when he landed a dream job of working at Nasa on the medical staff. I am still a total newb and looking for the right direction to start taking somewhat decent tips. If anyone is willing to give me steps in the right direction i would appreciate it. I know you wont see this message AstroBackyard but THANK YOU for this video. You have helped keep my dream alive of honoring my father!!!! Keep it up. Your videos are truly inspiring
Great vid!! I started astrophotography about a year ago and I have not had one night where no mistakes have happened. But every time I go back out there to re-try the next night clear night I don't make that same mistake again, but I find something else wrong which I have to fix next time. This is what makes you to want to keep getting outside and taking pictures of deep in space. I am 15, my mount is only an a-z goto mount, my camera doesnt show live view, my scope is not for deep space and my sky is extremely light polluted.. But even though it is said to be impossible to get deep space I am still trying and getting closer with every night. I recently got my first deep space image of the ring nebula, the feeling of it first popping on my camera was amazing!!! I am saving up for an eq mount, a better scope and a better camera, but in the mean time I am still fighting my way through the toughness of this amazing journey, even though 99% of the time I come in late, cold and with no success. I still keep trying, this is because... of a great astrophotography who lives locally has given me so much of his time to help me and advise me, because... my love for astronomy is extremely high and because... I know one day, that everything will go right and I will get my first deep space image which I can call my own which will be perfect in my own eyes. Clear skies all!!!
Thanks for the great tips Trevor. Im a beginner, and still have no clue what I’m doing, but I’ll take every opportunity to improve and get out there and take some pictures. A few nights ago I saw the Andromeda Galaxy for the first time through my telescope, and it really inspired me. And you’re correct, this is a VERY expensive hobby. Given enough time, I think i’ll be able to save up for some actual gear!
I am a rookie and dont have any interest in the telescope systems. You get great results, but for now I am just happy using a wide angle and zoom for the milky way and the moon. Beyond this is too technical for me. As a rookie, my only advice is when you have a chance at prime milky ways photos, go as often as you can because weather and the short season will limit your success. Also if you are like me in a bortle 4 or 5 area, you will need to invest in travel time to find dark skies. Once you do dark skies, you wont be happy with anything else. If the weather and moon have no effect, go shoot. I missed a lot of opportunities and now the season is over. I just learned stacking, but still need to improve that (sequator). Now I wait for the monthly moons and milky way season to return. Thx for the video.
Super pumped that you were one of the first UA-cam astrophotographers that I discovered when I started thinking about igniting my life-long passion for astronomy in 2020. You constantly give thoughtful advice. #5 - invest in a good mount that can handle larger and heavier rigs in the future. My first purchase was a beefy mount. It took almost a year to subsequently get a telescope! Spent many days just staring at the mount in my home office. It has served me well though (3 telescopes later). Thanks for your dedication to this amazing hobby and your exceptional videos. Merry Christmas to you, Ash and Rudy! Clear skies my friend. Dr B from Manitoba, Canada 🇨🇦
My favorite online advice is "your $1,800 Crestron is not really good for DSOs. Better off buying a different scope". Love that advice. So practical. Just buy new stuff! Why didn't I think of that? BTW, I'm doing just fine with a 6SE and ALT-AZ. Will upgrade mount when I have a few thousand to spend (not likely), or get a wedge (most likely). Also "don't waste time with a wedge". Get a German EQ Mount. Love that advice, too. Sorta like "don't be homeless, buy a house".
i have a manual telescope and managed to get photos of the moon on it, but recently ive started losing interest solely because the equipment is difficult to take care of. it's definitely a patient hobby, but the results are (no pun intended) astronomical!
You are truly inspirational to me, I started this journey because off you, and I'm enjoying the process. I needed this video, thank you. I've had some amazing victories and just as many disappointments; weather, focusing, willingness to go somewhere dark and being afraid, but I'm in it for life.
For me it’s all about the progress I’ve made in 2 years, my first image of Orion maybe a n00b pic, compared to the HDR image I do know but is still one of the most treasured images I’ve done, I was soooo chuffed with it with the cheap 2nd hand gear I used, and I mean less than £150 for everything I love this hobby ❤️
Chuffed with the cheap second hand gear 🤣 nice. Oh how I'd love to have an Astrophysics or a Takahashi triplet but you know the latest scope I just bought was a SW ST80 for £118 and I absolutely love it. Beats those Amazon, made of plastic and promising a zillion times magnification turds that part the oblivious with their winter heating cash 😂 the interest of the astronomer is a PERSONAL journey and while I may salivate over an Officina Stellare fitted with Primaluce Labs Plus mountings on an Avalon tracking mount and a few Teleview eyepieces (which most pensioners giving their life to the hobby may incidentally possess) then to be honest just knowing I have 'A decent scope' makes me grin like a Cheshire 🐱 cat 👍
@@woozii.capalot Even if there are better images out there then nothing feels better than the pictures that you take yourself and the future improvements you see in them.
Wish I had taken number 6 to heart. I went from a rented star tracker with a Samyang 135mm to a Skymax 127 on a Skywatcher SA GTi, and promptly lost all my gained 'expertise'. Still recovering from this, but Damn near killed the hobby.
Extremely valuable advices here, I myself just started and found out how expensive the hobby can be - and trust me I love some expensive hobbies. Very frustrating for a non-photographer to learn the huge amount of detailed techniques. But it's watching professionals motivations like this one that will keep me going! Thanks for sharing!
Man, you nailed everything the way I'm feeling and what I'm going through with this hobby. I've been heavily involving myself with your videos for quite some time, buying some merch and really try to get out. I've got such heavy anxiety and ADD that I've just been all over the emotional spectrum with where and how to start. I really appreciate how well you communicate the enjoyment and remind us, it's a life long enjoyment and to not rush. Thanks for being "the mount" in my hobby and keeping me steady on days when this hobby just rattles me.
Speaking of anxiety. I may have been missed early on with diagnosis for autism or Asperger's so know how you feel. Being rattled is what happens to a lot of those that have achieved great things. Most peeps that don't get instant results just give up. Those that achieve greatness fail then say well that didn't work, what if I try this. They keep going because they are looking for answers and keep going till they find them. Trevor was a baby when he started his journey and although he may be too humble to admit it then he has quickly became a master. It's a lifelong journey so even he has some way to catching up with the old timer grandmasters that are in their 60s 70s and 80s but hey, what's the rush 😁🖖
Absolutely brilliant Trevor! Very inspirational! Just walking into this hobby blind has made me realize taking long strides without baby steps can make you trip and fall. It’s the small rewards seeing your pictures progress is what is the true addiction of the hobby. Thank-you for all your kind words of encouragement. Really enjoy all your presentations! Cheers brother! Dave W
My friends and family see me pursuing this hobby with distane. Because it takes a lot of integration time, more editing time, it's a waste of time (according to them). This makes me lonely, depressed, and bitter. Tonight first clear skies in weeks. I'll be out there in low teen F. Bortle 9 skies. Seems to me like my local astronomy club sees beginners as dumb, and don't seem friendly. Been following you for years now. Big cost of hobby, that you've afforded to overcome, is a house in dark skies. Wish I would have known this 25 years ago. And your statement about always having next season. I'm old far fewer years in front of me . Thanks for putting up with my wining. STILL LOVE IT!
I just started getting into astrophotography a couple months ago and I can point to times where i’ve had the feelings you described in your first 3 steps. Thank you for putting those feelings to words and giving me more determination to keep going!!! This hobby is so cool and tbh i’m interested in taking all types of photos already. I got into the hobby simply because I like astronomy and I want my own pictures of cool stuff lolol
Geez, what a fabulous video. Not only filled with great, relevant information (for beginners and experienced astrophotographers alike), but presented in such a kind, understanding, and engaging way. Trevor, you're a master at teaching this.
Great video Trevor! I started astrophotography after taking a picture of the orion nebula with a smartphone on a dobson telescope and I was hooked. After 2 full years of astrophotography, I can't help but agree with all you mentioned especially the awful cloudy weather all of 2022 has had and that we gotta be patient, next year might be better. These great tips can help to keep us all motivated no matter the time we have been in this hobby. Thanks for inspiring so many to take up this amazing hobby!
I just passed my first full year doing astro photography, and it's been quite a year of learning. But your tips over the months have helped immensely. The obsession with weather is no joke..lol. But astronomy has been a passion of mine since I was a kid, and I'm finally able to explore that passion. There have been some crushing lows between fighting my rig or going two months with bad weather. But you have to be dedicated to this craft, or it'll make you walk away quick. But being under the stars is a kind of therapy for me and it's not something I'm going to be giving up any time soon. Cheers and clear skies, Trevor!
You are a great teacher. I appreciate your passion for astronomy and your willingness to share your knowledge with other beginners. I am from India, and I learnent many things from your videos 😊
Great tips, Trevor! I have doing AP for a total of 4 months now. I have been watching your channel for years. I have a Canon 6D, Star Adventure 2i and Svbony sv503 70ED. Recently, I added an ASIAIR plus and a guide scope. This helps a lot with longer exposure 😊 Keep cranking these videos. I will be watching them. Clear skies!
Trevor this really encourages me man. I’ve just started this year with my simple Celestron 127 Mak and my iPhone on a mount, I lit up when I saw the first long exposure picture of the Orion Nebula I took, blurry and all!! But I just ordered my first camera for a telescope and I couldn’t be more excited. As imperfect as my current rig, and skill set is, I haven’t been this excited for a hobby in years! Thanks for the encouragement and content; it makes me proud to be entering a new community so vibrant and exciting.
After years of watching the stars and enjoying my photography hobby, I have yet to make the jump into Astrophotography. It’s a goal, and one I will commit to one day. While I watch all your videos, this one is perhaps the best food for thought I’ve come upon in a long time that has lit more of a fire under me to at long last perhaps take the leap. Thank you. It’s bookmarked and I’ll watch it again, I’m sure. You will be part of the reason I ultimately get into the hobby.
2:23 I'm a long time musician dabbling in astrophotography- I've struggled with feelings of inadequacy with my music, how little I've released, my small set of fans.... But that part changed the way I think about it. I couldn't have recorded or mixed any of this stuff a few years ago. I couldn't have played guitar like this 10 years. Heck I've even seen my photo and video progress over the last year. Thank you so much for that. I came looking for astro tips and ended up tearing up lmao
Number 13 was a hoot, Trevor! I live on four acres in a semi-rural Bortle 4 zone in the Desert Southwest. Deer wander (and sometimes bound) down the swale in front of where I normally set up in front of my house. On a moonless night they can be ten yards in front or me and be completely invisible. Coyote choirs sometimes congregate 50-100 yards from the house. I keep thinking of getting a game trail camera to see what I'm missing. I'm 68 and have been interested in astronomy since middle school, when I used to get the Edmund Scientific catalogues and price out all the components to build a telescope each time a new issue came in the mail. Forty years ago I went out several times with a friend from work to look through his big Celestron SCT. In 1997 I took pictures of Comet Hale-Bopp with a 35mm camera I attached to my porch post. But I always put off buying a scope with the excuse that it was a lot less expensive to just buy a magazine or coffee table book and look at pictures way better than anything I could possibly take myself. Fifteen years ago a frustrated friend gave us her 6" computerized Newtonian, and I was completely underwhelmed and overwhelmed at the same time. It gathered dust until we passed it on to someone else. But things were changing. I got an astronomy app on my phone and was able to point it at a bright object moving above the trees and tell my granddaughter that it was the Space Station! In 2017 we drove to Nebraska to watch the Total Solar Eclipse. I retired. A couple of years ago I began to notice that the hobby was being transformed by CMOS cameras and laptop computers. I found your channel, and all the other resources proliferating online. My interest re-ignited, I finally took the plunge and put together an entry-level rig (my wife can attest to the truth of Tip #9). I've been having a blast for a year now, and you're a big part of the reason. Sincere thanks, and best wishes in all your endeavors!
Thank you for all your inspiration! I decided to take an observing class in my local community college and I could not believe the number of resources and knowledge I had access to! On top of learning about telescopes and image capturing, the professor also teaches astrophotography in class... decades of experience in image capturing and processing are easily accessible to me. I highly recommend this to anyone if this option is available to them!
As someone who started the journey into astrophotography in July this year with only a cellphone propped on the roof or rear window of a car, I sincerely appreciate your humble attitude and willingness to share helpful advice, especially to those of us just getting started. Out of all these listed, numbers 9 and 10, in my opinion, are by far two of the most important pieces of advice a beginner should take to heart. My wife had a stock Nikon D3200 not being used, so I began trying it out. I plan on purchasing a astro modified Canon, simply to have the experience of using both, and hopefully, grow my equipment list from there. Thank you again for all the great videos and advice, and most of all, for remembering we all have to start somewhere.
Extremely informative video! I agree with always celebrating any amount of progress. I’m just beginning to get into astrophotography, and just last week I was able to capture a small image of the Orion Nebula. Just that feeling got me so pumped! I’m so excited to see what’s in store for my future with astrophotography. But I’ll always remember that it’s never gonna be easy. Even the best of the best make mistakes.
Point 8 helped me... Almost 2 years in row with really bad weather conditions makes me starting to think about giving up and sells eveything. So thank you to keep my motivation :)
Some great personal accomplishments come before the image. Successful polar alignment. Successful 3 plate alignment. Mastering the different interfaces. The hardware, the network, fine focus, back focus, PPEC. I've spent entire nights familiarizing myself with NINA and making it work, only to go the ASIair route. But it was still a satisfying venture. I enjoy your insightful take on this great hobby. Two months in and enjoying every minute of it. Thanks! Congratulations to Ashley. She's the featured guest on SkyWatcher UA-cam What's Up Webcast tomorrow.
Thank you Trevor. I have been at this just a little over one year. What a long strange trip it has been. I still have not made one photo yet that I would even print or post. This has got to be the biggest rabbit hole of a hobby I have ever fallen into. Your videos are always encouraging and keeps me going. Practice makes perfect they say and it sure applies to this hobby. I still enjoy just doing visual astronomy and showing my adult kids the rings of Saturn or even looking at the moon in it's phases showing the craters of it's surface. Even at my age it is still fun to learn new things and this hobby sure fit's the bill. Thanks again for all you are doing.
The fourm part is so true. I was asking once about a light scope to put on both my star adventurer 2i and gti and same answers were "sell your mount" or "you're going to have tracking errors". I learned to ignore these people as you shouldn't try to please strangers on internet (if not selling prints) but yourself
Just starting out and I’m already frustrated by the weather. I’m on the Washington coast and the sky goes from crystal clear to overcast in the time it takes to use the restroom! I really appreciate the information you and others offer. I can’t imagine attempting this pre internet.
Thank you for the fantastic video! I love your focus on tracking your own progress. I'm coming to astrophotography from visual astronomy, and I got into the habit of sketching what I was observing early on. Being able to go back and see the difference in my ability to see was really encouraging. I'm really looking forward to seeing what progress I make as I progress with astrophotography, as well.
Astrophotography is similar in difficulty than almost all other hobbies. It really depends on how far you’re willing to take it. Fishing for example can be a simple case of a handline thrown from the edge of lake or it can be Marlin fishing with expensive gear and tackle and a very expensive boat. In fact I would say that astrophotography is way more easy today than it was prior to computers and advanced software. The learning curve is steep as it is in other highly technical activities. From my point of view the challenge in astrophotography (after you’ve bought the gear) are access to clear nights and dark skies.
Coming from an experienced and talented astrophotographer like you, this adress will be on top of my list of videos that I will recommand for newbies. Many thanks Trevor!
Well picked 14 points and there is honestly not much to add. Very well balanced to not scare "newbies" but make clear that astrophotography is more than throwing a telescope on a tripod into your garden. With having roughly 3 years under my belt in that hobby I can say most of us did most of those mistakes and its Trevor and those "old dogs" helped us to get us out of this spiral. Thx Trevor!
I'm not a beginner and this is solid advice that isn't biased towards one point of view.... I very strongly believe the most important thing is getting enjoyment out of this and doing what you want instead of blindly following others. It's great to have a community, but a community of individuals and where skill level makes no difference, any image is a great image and I love looking at stuff fellow photographers get even if they aren't hubble quality.
Thank you so so so much for this excellent video. I've only been enjoying the hobby for a year and have learnt so much. But been so baffled by various forums and put off by technical nonsense. You rule!!
Hey dude. As someone interested in optics then I can safely say that before making a purchase then the most important key like in war is intelligence. Sure you can go in full steam ahead and make your own mistakes, most of the successful people in life learn that way, but, why make mistakes when intelligence is your main tool. Intelligent people ask questions and who better to learn from than those vloggers that have already done that journey. Let's say I want to buy a telescope. I don't just do minutes or hours or days but sometimes weeks or months or years of research before deciding, yes, I'm going to buy that. Not the best telescope ever made, not even an FPL53 triplet refractor but after many years of looking eventually acquired a Skywatcher ST80 refractor and you know what? For the reasonable price I just Luv it. Being an astro guy is like being a baby. Start small and grow 😁
Oh man, that weather point...and I cannot agree more with social media and printing. I've picked up a nice pro level printer recently and started to print my photos, not only astro images. To hold your own work in hands, large scale, it is just amazing. 100 times better feeling than likes on social medias. Clear skies
Hugely relatable video. The ups and downs. The frustration and joy. Thank you for inspiring us to keep going. After a few nights in the UK around -3 degrees and not much to show from it, other than skills gained and numb fingers.
Oh man I was like yeah that was me, that's me, ha wow me too... etc. Excellent video that I really could have used when I first started! I have had all kinds of gear and finally settled on a iOptron EC mount and a RASA 8 and made it so I can setup in 5 minutes and so portable I can fit everything in the trunk of a car to get to darker skies. You really brought back some memories! Some good and some bad but I realize I have come a long way. The only tip I was not able to take advantage of because there are none near me is tip 14. But people like you and a huge community filled in the gaps. I love this hobby and I feel alive from it! Thank you Trevor!
Some brilliant advice in this video. I started a few months back and only just learned how to nail my Polar Alignment last night to get much better tracking. I have an EQ3 Pro mount and from a lot of forums I read i was consistently told that this mount is useless for astrophotography and I should buy an EQ5 at the very minimum. Well, I made some changes and nailed some techniques and I can now get 3 min exposure with perfect tracking using my EQ3 Pro. Do I want a better mount eventually, yes, but this mount is perfect to allow be to progress at this early stage.
Wise words! Trevor, and a few others, were the insight I needed to, simply, begin, deep sky. It is a fantastic journey and the skies are ripe no matter where you live. I began with the moon. That first holy smokes moment after taking your first image is amazing. Mine's still hanging on the wall. A muddy pic of the Orion Nebula on a used Celestron 8" on the go to mount done with a Canon T7 screwed on to the back.
I'm very excited to start this hobby. My new telescope comes in a few days. Your videos are really helpful. I will definitely purchasing the "astro-processing" guide. Thank you.
Thank you! Been doing this for 1year now and a lot of fails but i love it, i will keep up my work thanks to you! Truly inspired about your work! Im all alone around here with this interest, so its me and your channel!
Such a wise head on such young shoulders. I've been an amateur astronomer for nearly 60 years and it's only fairly recently that I've started taking photos through the telescope. I started with an i-phone attached to the eyepiece and moved to a DSLR. The main objects were the Sun and Moon with the occasional attempt at Saturn and Jupiter. I suppose I've been playing at it, but found it extremely fun and rewarding. Whilst waiting for a bank of clouds to pass in front of Saturn, I decided to have a look at the Orion nebula. I decided to play with the exposure settings and was amazed at how much detail was revealed just by adding a couple of seconds to the length of each following one. I ended up with a series of photos that showed the transition from a light-polluted sky to a sky complete with an array of stars and a beautiful colour image of the great nebula itself. This was the first time I'd seen it myself rather than from the photos of others, which made it more real. Now I'm hooked and as a result, have some cause to thank clouds for allowing me the time to extend my play. Since then I've captured the part of the Moon that reflects Earthshine and have some great photos of it. At 70 years of age, I'm under no illusions that there will be many seasons left for me, but I'm happy in the knowledge that I'm going to see for myself, what I've only seen from the efforts of others. Thank you for providing such a sensible and down-to-Earth conversation in an area that must have turned many would-be astronomers away. If they'd seen your video first, they'd be well under way as the next generation of amateur astronomers getting ready to capture the Universe in all it's spectacular beauty.
Thank you this has been the most straight talking informative video I have watched 🤦♂️ I have taken more from this one video than probably 10 others I have watched. Now feel comfortable that I'm heading down the right track. Keep up the good work many thanks 😊
Trevor, I've got decent equipment but am still learning so much. My camera is just a T6i and I always used a wired shutter button to take exposures but always assumed I'd need a CCD astro camera of some kind to do regular interval timed shots to stack images. I only discovered yesterday what an Intervalometer was by a fellow amateur astronomer and was absolutely blown away! They aren't very expensive and has completely revised my plans for stacked deep sky objects! I also know my setup is in desperate need of a coma corrector. I'm using a Skywatcher Quattro 200p and when at prime focus using the entire 2" focal barrel width the star comas are pretty bad. It's a working progress but always moving ahead!
You hit the nail on the head in this one Trevor! They say as you get older you get wiser well I'm 70 years old and I've been into astrophotography for about three years and its as if everything you have mentioned I could relate to. Great Video!! P.S. As well I thought the bigger the better so I started on a 8se. lol
Superb message buddy, I enjoyed every second of it - right from hitting "Play" to the end screen rolling :-) Keep up the great work, wishing You, Ash and Rudy a great Christmas, and can't wait to see what you share with us in 2023! Oh, and as if I'd forget - CONGRATULATIONS on 400k! :-D
You made me realize about three years ago that it was possible to see deep space objects in such detail from a backyard. Until then I thought a huge observatory was needed to get such images. It's been a very rewarding three years full of ups and downs and not until recently have I produced an image that could actually hang on a wall. Yet the amazing sights to be seen and the fun nights have made it all well worth it. Doing visual first then EEA and then on to astrophotography has been a life changing experience. It has helped me profoundly and given the confidence to accomplish very complex tasks when cold, tired and frustrated. Truely a life-long pursuit of looking up at the heavens and wondering. Thank you very much for letting me know.
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L
Im new . I know trials ahead . Im wanting to photograph Andromeda !
@@berniestang2616 If you want to photograph Andromeda galaxy, the cheapest way to do so is DSLR camera with tripod and dark sky. Andromeda galaxy under dark sky is 8 times bigger than full moon. Get pair of binoculars and check yourself for more details.
I’m 14 and just got my first telescope. It’s nothing fancy but it does the job. And holy moly I’m hooked. I’m out there every night looking at random things, even if they just look like white dots. When I get bored of just white dots, I look for other things like planets and well, the moon. Sometimes you just have to get your telescope and go to random stars just to see what they are
Yoo im 14 too but i have a big ahh scope so its complicated
i am 13 and also got my first used telescope.I got the skywatcher N150/750 Explorer and its a bit complicated bc one leg of the mount is broken.
Damn 14 here too
I’m 12 and have an Orion 120 st equatorial refractor and of course the sky view German equatorial mount but I don’t have a lap top for the Astro camera (may father lets me use his stuff)😊
i was 15 when i bought my first scope, a tasco 4.5 inch reflector with an eq mount, im 60 now and i still have it and use it, i do have some nicer stuff but all the new tech takes a long time to set up and the old one takes just a minute. its a life long hobby and if you take care of your equipment it will last a long time
First UA-camr that doesn't end their videos with like and subscribe. I just love people like that.
This video has been so reaffirming to my struggles
I’ve been doing Astro photography for about 2 1/2 years now and I’m still not quite in the place I want to be yet. My main problem is how expensive the hobby is. I’m 14 and don’t have a job so it takes me a long time to gather all the equipment I need from various sources, but this video has inspired me to keep going and I really have seen a lot of progress from when I’ve started, so thank you.
@Ayodeji Oyetosho: Congratulations. I'm an olden dude, age 74 at the moment. Some years back (and I now forget the exact details) one of my first and most appreciated pictures was made with a short fL lens on a DSLR type camera. It was Andromeda shot on a non-tracking tripod, a shutter speed of maybe 1 or 2 seconds and the lens was maybe 100 mm or was it 200 mm (memory fails lol) but I do remember it was a prime lens.
I got something like 750 subs. I placed the object at one side of the live view screen and shot until it reached the other side of the camera screen. I'd get 50 or maybe it was 75 subs before moving the camera again for the next several shots.
It took quite some time to get the stacking done in my computer. Then, I cropped it like crazy, but still got a highly satisfactory final picture after editing. I could see color, the spiral arms and the dust lanes and the stars were pretty well focused. These days getting focus is more challenging. I'm happy to hear you're beginning the hobby at an age where you can get focus a lot easier than I can now. 😃
Keep going the way you're headed and you'll progress at a steady rate.
Don't allow short supply of money discourage you. My main advice is to pick targets that will fit the lens you have (there's likely a lot more of those than you might first think) and shoot those targets every chance you have.
Good luck.
Bro I am 16 and don’t have a job at the moment bc of college. I got a celestron astroamaster 130AZ given to me because it was not used. It is definitely expensive, but take your time and use what you got. Right now, I am just using my phone and the telescope and I am getting some nice photos of mars and Jupiter.
@@trutris124 ZWO Seestar S500 $500 It will blow your mind. Or a used Canon T6 and a Used Rokinon 135,,F2 lens
@@trutris124bro 16 and in college? Crazy.
@@Amo_Astra now I am 17. Yes, I was dual enrolled
I got a 4.5 inch reflector telescope for Christmas, I went out last night and looked at Jupiter and the Orion Nebula, I didn’t get a single image of either before my toes almost froze off in the 10°F weather , but I had the time of my life looking at what I did look at, and figuring everything out, I’m excited for what’s to come in my future of astrophotography , you are a big inspiration for me :).
All the best👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻😁
i did my very 1st imaging with a 4.5 . i did a video of jupiter. it was small but yeah know... i loved every min of it. then i got the bug hard. went to a 12 inch dob. then came the hardcore starting out imaging. eq mount AVX. still use it ... orion 80 edapo the gray workhorse they sold. old canon 350 ir self moded. love every min of it.
It's an amazing buzz!! truly addictive!!, well done bro!
Happened to me just 3 years ago when my son gave me a real small simple scope - but seeing Jupiter and Orion through it got me completely hooked…now running a C11 and a C14 and can’t get enough 😂 enjoy!!!!
this advice did help i was capturing the orion nebula and i kept trying i'm really proud of my self it may not be the best but your right i took it I me spend my time learning to do this and you helped
Absolutely agree with all Your points!
Even tho my main target is Northern Lights(Aurora Borealis), specially close to heart point was bout weather.... I am obsessed with checking many apps and many times per day... But I love doing it... I will carry on doing it and upgrading my toys for it...
As a newcomer in Astrophotography i can only confirm everything you said. Im doing this hobby now for 2 years and just a few month ago i got to the point where my images are like i wanted them to be. It was a lot of frustration, trial and error to get there but its worth it!
Awesome video Trevor
Hopefully this will get more people started in this hobby like i did because of you 2 years ago!
I agree as well but also as a newcomer I don't agree that you need an EQ mount to take deep space images. I use an alt az mount because they are cheaper and easier to use. I just connect my DSLR and lens to it, align it and I can take amazing photos that im proud of.
What’s your current setup?
@@finnreumers1506 alt az is enough for dso ?
There is no bigger question than 'Who are we, where are we from?' Jodie Foster, Contact and Professor Brian Cox 'We are all made from Star stuff'. You talk of frustration but frustration is what people with questions experience. Passion leads to experimentation, experimentation leads to answers. Too many folks on the astro journey expecting immediate results. As a martial artist then I can tell you the journey is lifelong, so is same for any pursuit of excellence. Being inquisitive and being persistent is the key to astronomy. If you don't have an answer then someone else prolly will. Trevor Jones has that passion and following those that are better is what leads you to becoming better. You don't get to be the chess champion without beating the grandmaster. In other words, a wise man knows he can't know everything. One thing I know as a researcher, if you need an answer, Google it. As Mulder and Scully would say ' The truth is out there'.
@@416pp If you meant me with the question:
Scope: TsOptics 80/480 Apo
Cam: ZWO Asi 294mc pro
Mount: Skywatcher HEQ5 pro
You give the best advice, I’m trying get my rig together and I’m getting close.
I drive a semi for a living and I see so many beautiful places. I’ve been trying for two months and I finally finally got a good landscape with thousands of stars in the sky. I’m just blown away with how much more my camera can see mounted on a tripod with a 20 second exposure. I saw a black hillside and a couple stars.
Good advice. I bought a 127mm Mak for my daughter. She wants to take some solar system photos. I have a DLSR and I got an adaptor ring and eyepiece holder. I also got a USB camera. I'm an engineer in 3 fields and I'll figure it out. Once I go through the learning curve and make a bunch of mistakes, I'll go looking for advice because it will make sense because of context. I'm looking forward to using the Astro Stacking feature of Affinity Photo after all these years. Thanks for saying what needed to be said!
What a great video Trevor, thank you. I'm just starting on my astrophotography journey. My partner & I bought a dobsonian 8" reflector about 10 years ago (I really wish we'd bought an equatorial mount) but hardly ever use it.
After seeing another UA-camr's video earlier which took you through capturing the Orion nebula without a tracker (including all the frames required and the processing steps in Photoshop) I'm going to give it a go and if successful, buy a StarAdventurer GTi. It's only 2 hours or so for me to get to a Bortle 3 sky area in Wales, UK.
Subscribed and looking forward to going through your back catalogue. My partner already go to our local astronomy club (she calls it space nerds 🙂) I may just tag along.
Cheers, Terry.
I love how calm peaceful and positive you guys are
Hi! I'm a Pre-Newbie. I just started looking up a few months ago. We camped at Cherry Springs and I was STARSTRUCK!! Then came the big disappointment: the 2nd nite it RAINED. I swore I would be back!! Meanwhile I joined the local astro club, bought some binocs & discovered that with a little effort I could still see stars in my suburban area!!
Then I learned that you can't see the galaxies & milky way as well with your eyes as with a camera. That's when I started looking into astrophog. My resources: I've used photoshop for making electronic music videos. Camera: a Moto G Android phone. No telescope yet. My hopes: I want to get out and look at the Milky Way forever. May as well have a camera taking a long exposure. This gives me an excuse to go to the most beautiful remote places and be outside looking at stars as long as possible. It's not because I want a bunch of pix on the wall. It's because the stars are a spiritual experience for me.
Thanks for your video!
I haven't seen such an inspiring and motivational video in a long time. Thank you for that.
What great tips. I have been in this hobby for the last 2 years, and just now are my photos getting to the point where I can consider enlarging and printing. Point #15 - don't get discourage with your initial images. They will get so much better and it okay to continuously revisit the same target year after year.
Sus tomas y procesado amigo trevor son fantásticas saludos desde Honduras
Great video Trevor ,love your videos very help full ,been viewing for about 12 years now ,and photographing for the same just with an old 08 model dslr cannon.
Your not kidding about the weather Lx200 mount crapped out about 20 months ,decide to take tube off mount and order a EQ6R PRO ,had to wait 11 months to get it ,micro chip shortage lol,picked it up 10 days ,cloudy everday since then:(
Going to get i think that Asi air plus and the 533mc camera ,i think ,with guide scope think i can do that for 2grands canadian ,and no lap top lol at least no in the field .
Glad i found your channel ,really jonesing to get and have a view ,clear sky's
I give this video one million likes. “Life is too short to spend it on the sidelines, watching and critiquing others. Get out there! Capture. Create. Inspire.” Thank you for the inspiration I needed today.
stating that cloudy nights come whenever something new arrives or you're excited is so true. i had perfectly clear nights for weeks and as soon as my new ad8 came, the next week was full of cloudy and rainy nights
I just started in photography all over the place. But your video totally awesome. You should have your own show. I will start following you for sure. You see awesome. Thanks made me laugh too.
Hey I bought your book and, I’m just blown away at how detailed you made it. It’s like reading a tutorial. I wasn’t expecting 133 pages either. Thanks 😊
"If it were easy everyone would do it". And that's another fact... Jack! You are on a roll son!
Truly inspirational... I'm a young astrophotographer (I'm 15) and this video made me very very very proud of my passion!!! Thank You!!!
The concept of failure, learning, improvement and repetition I've come to appreciate from astrophotography has helped me become more calm and grounded in other aspects of my life. Thank you for introducing me to the hobby and for sharing your insight and knowledge. Clear skies
If you're in a grizzly state wearing headphones is not a good idea.
Very much, I've gotten snuck up on by a bear while reading and only noticed it cause it sneezed
Or mountain lions
@@NatanielsArt 200x more people are killed by dogs than mountain lions
Blasting angry music out of a big speaker work? In mountain lion and wolf country here.
@@nordic5490 very possibly, luckily I haven't encountered a wild dog while shooting in the middle of nowhere
A few days ago i repaired an old Meade 900mm by 60mm refractor. .965 eyepiece and got my dslr on it. I got it tuned to Jupiter and low and behold the image was grey.
I didn't care. I could see some moons. I did everything i think I could and the image was still gray - winter and cirrus clouds probably didn't help, but it didn't matter. I got to see what those who came before us saw when their knowledge of what was out there was barely moving along. It's not as pretty as a space probe or large telescope image, but it gave me chills. Doing it yourself is a totally different experience. You have to take the small victories I agree. It's about the journey, not the end.
Priceless advice!
I love your channel! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and experience with us new folks. Always encouraging and hugely helpful..
Things that seem so obvious that they're not even worth mentioning can really trip up a beginner. For instance, I thought that polar alignment meant centering Polaris in the crosshairs. This actually worked OK when I was using a tracking mount for visual observing, finding objects by star-hopping, and I never gave it a thought. But when I got a go-to mount I found out I had been doing it wrong for years.
Excellent advice. Oh, so true! It has been a joy to follow your journey in AP from the beginning.
I watch many astrophotography videos, but only your videos Trevor capture the excitement and wonder of the hunt for these amazing heavenly objects. Truly inspiring.
At 2:10 - This is exactly what I tell anybody I know getting into astrophotography. Your journey is yours, no one else's. By all means learn from those who create images you aspire to achieve, but always keep everything relative to your own development path and equipment.
I have had times where I seemed to get nowhere for long periods of time, but I found you have watershed moments where something will suddenly make sense, or a technique becomes easier through repetition or more research. Take the wins as they come - I still remember the first time I took my rig to a remote site and aligned it perfectly first shot using just the reticle and Synscan hand controller. Sounds small, but I had seasoned astrophotographers with all the fancy plate solving gear coming over and patting me on the back, marveling at my near perfect 3 star alignment 😬 (that night I captured Andromeda for the first time from Southern Australia, so a big night all round).
Thanks for Showing your wonderful work Trevor, and keeping it real for the masses.
Great video! Thx for the advice
Thank you AstroBackyard!!!!!!!!! I acquired my fathers Celestron Nexstar Evolution 8 and his DSLR after his passing from contracting covid from a patient 2 years ago. I picked up this hobby to honor and remember him. Unfortunately I was never able to learn any of this from him before his passing. I have been unsatisfied with what images I have taken and ready to just give up. Space was always our passion especially when he landed a dream job of working at Nasa on the medical staff. I am still a total newb and looking for the right direction to start taking somewhat decent tips. If anyone is willing to give me steps in the right direction i would appreciate it. I know you wont see this message AstroBackyard but THANK YOU for this video. You have helped keep my dream alive of honoring my father!!!! Keep it up. Your videos are truly inspiring
Great vid!! I started astrophotography about a year ago and I have not had one night where no mistakes have happened. But every time I go back out there to re-try the next night clear night I don't make that same mistake again, but I find something else wrong which I have to fix next time. This is what makes you to want to keep getting outside and taking pictures of deep in space. I am 15, my mount is only an a-z goto mount, my camera doesnt show live view, my scope is not for deep space and my sky is extremely light polluted.. But even though it is said to be impossible to get deep space I am still trying and getting closer with every night. I recently got my first deep space image of the ring nebula, the feeling of it first popping on my camera was amazing!!! I am saving up for an eq mount, a better scope and a better camera, but in the mean time I am still fighting my way through the toughness of this amazing journey, even though 99% of the time I come in late, cold and with no success. I still keep trying, this is because... of a great astrophotography who lives locally has given me so much of his time to help me and advise me, because... my love for astronomy is extremely high and because... I know one day, that everything will go right and I will get my first deep space image which I can call my own which will be perfect in my own eyes. Clear skies all!!!
Thanks for the great tips Trevor. Im a beginner, and still have no clue what I’m doing, but I’ll take every opportunity to improve and get out there and take some pictures. A few nights ago I saw the Andromeda Galaxy for the first time through my telescope, and it really inspired me. And you’re correct, this is a VERY expensive hobby. Given enough time, I think i’ll be able to save up for some actual gear!
I am a rookie and dont have any interest in the telescope systems. You get great results, but for now I am just happy using a wide angle and zoom for the milky way and the moon. Beyond this is too technical for me. As a rookie, my only advice is when you have a chance at prime milky ways photos, go as often as you can because weather and the short season will limit your success. Also if you are like me in a bortle 4 or 5 area, you will need to invest in travel time to find dark skies. Once you do dark skies, you wont be happy with anything else. If the weather and moon have no effect, go shoot. I missed a lot of opportunities and now the season is over. I just learned stacking, but still need to improve that (sequator). Now I wait for the monthly moons and milky way season to return. Thx for the video.
Super pumped that you were one of the first UA-cam astrophotographers that I discovered when I started thinking about igniting my life-long passion for astronomy in 2020. You constantly give thoughtful advice. #5 - invest in a good mount that can handle larger and heavier rigs in the future. My first purchase was a beefy mount. It took almost a year to subsequently get a telescope! Spent many days just staring at the mount in my home office. It has served me well though (3 telescopes later). Thanks for your dedication to this amazing hobby and your exceptional videos. Merry Christmas to you, Ash and Rudy! Clear skies my friend. Dr B from Manitoba, Canada 🇨🇦
My favorite online advice is "your $1,800 Crestron is not really good for DSOs. Better off buying a different scope". Love that advice. So practical. Just buy new stuff! Why didn't I think of that? BTW, I'm doing just fine with a 6SE and ALT-AZ. Will upgrade mount when I have a few thousand to spend (not likely), or get a wedge (most likely). Also "don't waste time with a wedge". Get a German EQ Mount. Love that advice, too. Sorta like "don't be homeless, buy a house".
I tried shooting wide frame sky image with my phone, and I find it give an interesting result. You're absolutely right on that!
i have a manual telescope and managed to get photos of the moon on it, but recently ive started losing interest solely because the equipment is difficult to take care of. it's definitely a patient hobby, but the results are (no pun intended) astronomical!
Excellent content and explanation. As a landscape photographer, you gave me additional insight into astrophotography. Appreciate your insights
Great advice thanks!!
You are truly inspirational to me, I started this journey because off you, and I'm enjoying the process. I needed this video, thank you. I've had some amazing victories and just as many disappointments; weather, focusing, willingness to go somewhere dark and being afraid, but I'm in it for life.
For me it’s all about the progress I’ve made in 2 years, my first image of Orion maybe a n00b pic, compared to the HDR image I do know but is still one of the most treasured images I’ve done, I was soooo chuffed with it with the cheap 2nd hand gear I used, and I mean less than £150 for everything
I love this hobby ❤️
Chuffed with the cheap second hand gear 🤣 nice. Oh how I'd love to have an Astrophysics or a Takahashi triplet but you know the latest scope I just bought was a SW ST80 for £118 and I absolutely love it. Beats those Amazon, made of plastic and promising a zillion times magnification turds that part the oblivious with their winter heating cash 😂 the interest of the astronomer is a PERSONAL journey and while I may salivate over an Officina Stellare fitted with Primaluce Labs Plus mountings on an Avalon tracking mount and a few Teleview eyepieces (which most pensioners giving their life to the hobby may incidentally possess) then to be honest just knowing I have 'A decent scope' makes me grin like a Cheshire 🐱 cat 👍
I just started on Christmas n took a picture of the Orion Nebula with just my phone n a telescope. A couple days later n it’s already way better
@@woozii.capalot Even if there are better images out there then nothing feels better than the pictures that you take yourself and the future improvements you see in them.
Wish I had taken number 6 to heart. I went from a rented star tracker with a Samyang 135mm to a Skymax 127 on a Skywatcher SA GTi, and promptly lost all my gained 'expertise'. Still recovering from this, but Damn near killed the hobby.
Also, its amazing how your early bad images can still impress you and keep you motivated, simply because, you made it.
Extremely valuable advices here, I myself just started and found out how expensive the hobby can be - and trust me I love some expensive hobbies. Very frustrating for a non-photographer to learn the huge amount of detailed techniques. But it's watching professionals motivations like this one that will keep me going! Thanks for sharing!
You ARE the man ... just like regular photography... shoot shoot shoot ... make mistakes and learn ... Thanks for the years of info!
Man, you nailed everything the way I'm feeling and what I'm going through with this hobby. I've been heavily involving myself with your videos for quite some time, buying some merch and really try to get out. I've got such heavy anxiety and ADD that I've just been all over the emotional spectrum with where and how to start. I really appreciate how well you communicate the enjoyment and remind us, it's a life long enjoyment and to not rush. Thanks for being "the mount" in my hobby and keeping me steady on days when this hobby just rattles me.
Speaking of anxiety. I may have been missed early on with diagnosis for autism or Asperger's so know how you feel. Being rattled is what happens to a lot of those that have achieved great things. Most peeps that don't get instant results just give up. Those that achieve greatness fail then say well that didn't work, what if I try this. They keep going because they are looking for answers and keep going till they find them. Trevor was a baby when he started his journey and although he may be too humble to admit it then he has quickly became a master. It's a lifelong journey so even he has some way to catching up with the old timer grandmasters that are in their 60s 70s and 80s but hey, what's the rush 😁🖖
Absolutely brilliant Trevor! Very inspirational! Just walking into this hobby blind has made me realize taking long strides without baby steps can make you trip and fall. It’s the small rewards seeing your pictures progress is what is the true addiction of the hobby.
Thank-you for all your kind words of encouragement. Really enjoy all your presentations! Cheers brother!
Dave W
My friends and family see me pursuing this hobby with distane. Because it takes a lot of integration time, more editing time, it's a waste of time (according to them). This makes me lonely, depressed, and bitter. Tonight first clear skies in weeks. I'll be out there in low teen F. Bortle 9 skies. Seems to me like my local astronomy club sees beginners as dumb, and don't seem friendly. Been following you for years now.
Big cost of hobby, that you've afforded to overcome, is a house in dark skies. Wish I would have known this 25 years ago. And your statement about always having next season. I'm old far fewer years in front of me . Thanks for putting up with my wining. STILL LOVE IT!
I just started getting into astrophotography a couple months ago and I can point to times where i’ve had the feelings you described in your first 3 steps. Thank you for putting those feelings to words and giving me more determination to keep going!!! This hobby is so cool and tbh i’m interested in taking all types of photos already. I got into the hobby simply because I like astronomy and I want my own pictures of cool stuff lolol
I've watched this vid three times now. It's the best pep talk I've ever received. Thanks Trevor. You rock!
Yes, all true! The satisfying feeling of personal progress is priceless, with anything.
Geez, what a fabulous video. Not only filled with great, relevant information (for beginners and experienced astrophotographers alike), but presented in such a kind, understanding, and engaging way. Trevor, you're a master at teaching this.
Great video Trevor! I started astrophotography after taking a picture of the orion nebula with a smartphone on a dobson telescope and I was hooked. After 2 full years of astrophotography, I can't help but agree with all you mentioned especially the awful cloudy weather all of 2022 has had and that we gotta be patient, next year might be better. These great tips can help to keep us all motivated no matter the time we have been in this hobby. Thanks for inspiring so many to take up this amazing hobby!
Hands down my favorite astrophotography channel. This is amazing. Thank you for the inspiration and the passion!
As always you knocked it out of the galaxy, thank you our Astro friend, clear skies and happy holidays to you all
No, Trevor never knocks it outta the galaxy. He knocks it outta the Multiverse. Oh, right, multiverse not been proven yet, my bad 😂
Damn, #8 really hit home. I chose maybe the two worst hobbies to have somewhere with frequent bad weather, motorcycling and astrophotography.
I just passed my first full year doing astro photography, and it's been quite a year of learning. But your tips over the months have helped immensely. The obsession with weather is no joke..lol. But astronomy has been a passion of mine since I was a kid, and I'm finally able to explore that passion. There have been some crushing lows between fighting my rig or going two months with bad weather. But you have to be dedicated to this craft, or it'll make you walk away quick. But being under the stars is a kind of therapy for me and it's not something I'm going to be giving up any time soon. Cheers and clear skies, Trevor!
You are a great teacher. I appreciate your passion for astronomy and your willingness to share your knowledge with other beginners. I am from India, and I learnent many things from your videos 😊
Great tips, Trevor! I have doing AP for a total of 4 months now. I have been watching your channel for years. I have a Canon 6D, Star Adventure 2i and Svbony sv503 70ED. Recently, I added an ASIAIR plus and a guide scope. This helps a lot with longer exposure 😊
Keep cranking these videos. I will be watching them. Clear skies!
Trevor this really encourages me man. I’ve just started this year with my simple Celestron 127 Mak and my iPhone on a mount, I lit up when I saw the first long exposure picture of the Orion Nebula I took, blurry and all!! But I just ordered my first camera for a telescope and I couldn’t be more excited. As imperfect as my current rig, and skill set is, I haven’t been this excited for a hobby in years! Thanks for the encouragement and content; it makes me proud to be entering a new community so vibrant and exciting.
After years of watching the stars and enjoying my photography hobby, I have yet to make the jump into Astrophotography. It’s a goal, and one I will commit to one day. While I watch all your videos, this one is perhaps the best food for thought I’ve come upon in a long time that has lit more of a fire under me to at long last perhaps take the leap. Thank you. It’s bookmarked and I’ll watch it again, I’m sure. You will be part of the reason I ultimately get into the hobby.
2:23 I'm a long time musician dabbling in astrophotography- I've struggled with feelings of inadequacy with my music, how little I've released, my small set of fans.... But that part changed the way I think about it. I couldn't have recorded or mixed any of this stuff a few years ago. I couldn't have played guitar like this 10 years. Heck I've even seen my photo and video progress over the last year. Thank you so much for that. I came looking for astro tips and ended up tearing up lmao
Number 13 was a hoot, Trevor! I live on four acres in a semi-rural Bortle 4 zone in the Desert Southwest. Deer wander (and sometimes bound) down the swale in front of where I normally set up in front of my house. On a moonless night they can be ten yards in front or me and be completely invisible. Coyote choirs sometimes congregate 50-100 yards from the house. I keep thinking of getting a game trail camera to see what I'm missing.
I'm 68 and have been interested in astronomy since middle school, when I used to get the Edmund Scientific catalogues and price out all the components to build a telescope each time a new issue came in the mail. Forty years ago I went out several times with a friend from work to look through his big Celestron SCT. In 1997 I took pictures of Comet Hale-Bopp with a 35mm camera I attached to my porch post. But I always put off buying a scope with the excuse that it was a lot less expensive to just buy a magazine or coffee table book and look at pictures way better than anything I could possibly take myself. Fifteen years ago a frustrated friend gave us her 6" computerized Newtonian, and I was completely underwhelmed and overwhelmed at the same time. It gathered dust until we passed it on to someone else.
But things were changing. I got an astronomy app on my phone and was able to point it at a bright object moving above the trees and tell my granddaughter that it was the Space Station! In 2017 we drove to Nebraska to watch the Total Solar Eclipse. I retired. A couple of years ago I began to notice that the hobby was being transformed by CMOS cameras and laptop computers. I found your channel, and all the other resources proliferating online. My interest re-ignited, I finally took the plunge and put together an entry-level rig (my wife can attest to the truth of Tip #9). I've been having a blast for a year now, and you're a big part of the reason.
Sincere thanks, and best wishes in all your endeavors!
Thank you for all your inspiration! I decided to take an observing class in my local community college and I could not believe the number of resources and knowledge I had access to! On top of learning about telescopes and image capturing, the professor also teaches astrophotography in class... decades of experience in image capturing and processing are easily accessible to me. I highly recommend this to anyone if this option is available to them!
As someone who started the journey into astrophotography in July this year with only a cellphone propped on the roof or rear window of a car, I sincerely appreciate your humble attitude and willingness to share helpful advice, especially to those of us just getting started. Out of all these listed, numbers 9 and 10, in my opinion, are by far two of the most important pieces of advice a beginner should take to heart. My wife had a stock Nikon D3200 not being used, so I began trying it out. I plan on purchasing a astro modified Canon, simply to have the experience of using both, and hopefully, grow my equipment list from there. Thank you again for all the great videos and advice, and most of all, for remembering we all have to start somewhere.
Extremely informative video! I agree with always celebrating any amount of progress. I’m just beginning to get into astrophotography, and just last week I was able to capture a small image of the Orion Nebula. Just that feeling got me so pumped! I’m so excited to see what’s in store for my future with astrophotography. But I’ll always remember that it’s never gonna be easy. Even the best of the best make mistakes.
Tremendous video. Thank you for your candid advise.
Point 8 helped me...
Almost 2 years in row with really bad weather conditions makes me starting to think about giving up and sells eveything.
So thank you to keep my motivation :)
Some great personal accomplishments come before the image. Successful polar alignment. Successful 3 plate alignment. Mastering the different interfaces. The hardware, the network, fine focus, back focus, PPEC. I've spent entire nights familiarizing myself with NINA and making it work, only to go the ASIair route. But it was still a satisfying venture. I enjoy your insightful take on this great hobby. Two months in and enjoying every minute of it. Thanks! Congratulations to Ashley. She's the featured guest on SkyWatcher UA-cam What's Up Webcast tomorrow.
Thank you Trevor. I have been at this just a little over one year. What a long strange trip it has been. I still have not made one photo yet that I would even print or post. This has got to be the biggest rabbit hole of a hobby I have ever fallen into. Your videos are always encouraging and keeps me going. Practice makes perfect they say and it sure applies to this hobby. I still enjoy just doing visual astronomy and showing my adult kids the rings of Saturn or even looking at the moon in it's phases showing the craters of it's surface. Even at my age it is still fun to learn new things and this hobby sure fit's the bill. Thanks again for all you are doing.
The fourm part is so true. I was asking once about a light scope to put on both my star adventurer 2i and gti and same answers were "sell your mount" or "you're going to have tracking errors". I learned to ignore these people as you shouldn't try to please strangers on internet (if not selling prints) but yourself
Just starting out and I’m already frustrated by the weather. I’m on the Washington coast and the sky goes from crystal clear to overcast in the time it takes to use the restroom!
I really appreciate the information you and others offer. I can’t imagine attempting this pre internet.
Thank you for the fantastic video! I love your focus on tracking your own progress. I'm coming to astrophotography from visual astronomy, and I got into the habit of sketching what I was observing early on. Being able to go back and see the difference in my ability to see was really encouraging. I'm really looking forward to seeing what progress I make as I progress with astrophotography, as well.
Great explanation. I trust you. New subscriber.
Astrophotography is similar in difficulty than almost all other hobbies.
It really depends on how far you’re willing to take it.
Fishing for example can be a simple case of a handline thrown from the edge of lake or it can be Marlin fishing with expensive gear and tackle and a very expensive boat.
In fact I would say that astrophotography is way more easy today than it was prior to computers and advanced software. The learning curve is steep as it is in other highly technical activities.
From my point of view the challenge in astrophotography (after you’ve bought the gear) are access to clear nights and dark skies.
Absolutely Fantastic Video Trevor. Thanks for including all of Us. And for all you do for our Astro Community. Rock On! \m/ Bloodstone.
Coming from an experienced and talented astrophotographer like you, this adress will be on top of my list of videos that I will recommand for newbies. Many thanks Trevor!
Well picked 14 points and there is honestly not much to add. Very well balanced to not scare "newbies" but make clear that astrophotography is more than throwing a telescope on a tripod into your garden.
With having roughly 3 years under my belt in that hobby I can say most of us did most of those mistakes and its Trevor and those "old dogs" helped us to get us out of this spiral.
Thx Trevor!
I'm not a beginner and this is solid advice that isn't biased towards one point of view.... I very strongly believe the most important thing is getting enjoyment out of this and doing what you want instead of blindly following others. It's great to have a community, but a community of individuals and where skill level makes no difference, any image is a great image and I love looking at stuff fellow photographers get even if they aren't hubble quality.
Thank you so so so much for this excellent video. I've only been enjoying the hobby for a year and have learnt so much. But been so baffled by various forums and put off by technical nonsense. You rule!!
Hey dude. As someone interested in optics then I can safely say that before making a purchase then the most important key like in war is intelligence. Sure you can go in full steam ahead and make your own mistakes, most of the successful people in life learn that way, but, why make mistakes when intelligence is your main tool. Intelligent people ask questions and who better to learn from than those vloggers that have already done that journey. Let's say I want to buy a telescope. I don't just do minutes or hours or days but sometimes weeks or months or years of research before deciding, yes, I'm going to buy that. Not the best telescope ever made, not even an FPL53 triplet refractor but after many years of looking eventually acquired a Skywatcher ST80 refractor and you know what? For the reasonable price I just Luv it. Being an astro guy is like being a baby. Start small and grow 😁
Oh man, that weather point...and I cannot agree more with social media and printing. I've picked up a nice pro level printer recently and started to print my photos, not only astro images. To hold your own work in hands, large scale, it is just amazing. 100 times better feeling than likes on social medias. Clear skies
Hugely relatable video. The ups and downs. The frustration and joy. Thank you for inspiring us to keep going. After a few nights in the UK around -3 degrees and not much to show from it, other than skills gained and numb fingers.
“What telescope did you use?” is important because people need to know where to start. But I get what your saying👍
Oh man I was like yeah that was me, that's me, ha wow me too... etc. Excellent video that I really could have used when I first started! I have had all kinds of gear and finally settled on a iOptron EC mount and a RASA 8 and made it so I can setup in 5 minutes and so portable I can fit everything in the trunk of a car to get to darker skies. You really brought back some memories! Some good and some bad but I realize I have come a long way. The only tip I was not able to take advantage of because there are none near me is tip 14. But people like you and a huge community filled in the gaps. I love this hobby and I feel alive from it! Thank you Trevor!
Some brilliant advice in this video. I started a few months back and only just learned how to nail my Polar Alignment last night to get much better tracking. I have an EQ3 Pro mount and from a lot of forums I read i was consistently told that this mount is useless for astrophotography and I should buy an EQ5 at the very minimum. Well, I made some changes and nailed some techniques and I can now get 3 min exposure with perfect tracking using my EQ3 Pro. Do I want a better mount eventually, yes, but this mount is perfect to allow be to progress at this early stage.
Brilliant video Trevor one of your best, asking the community for their views was a masterstroke. Keep up the good work.
Wise words! Trevor, and a few others, were the insight I needed to, simply, begin, deep sky. It is a fantastic journey and the skies are ripe no matter where you live. I began with the moon. That first holy smokes moment after taking your first image is amazing. Mine's still hanging on the wall. A muddy pic of the Orion Nebula on a used Celestron 8" on the go to mount done with a Canon T7 screwed on to the back.
I'm very excited to start this hobby. My new telescope comes in a few days. Your videos are really helpful. I will definitely purchasing the "astro-processing" guide. Thank you.
Thank you! Been doing this for 1year now and a lot of fails but i love it, i will keep up my work thanks to you! Truly inspired about your work! Im all alone around here with this interest, so its me and your channel!
Such a wise head on such young shoulders.
I've been an amateur astronomer for nearly 60 years and it's only fairly recently that I've started taking photos through the telescope. I started with an i-phone attached to the eyepiece and moved to a DSLR. The main objects were the Sun and Moon with the occasional attempt at Saturn and Jupiter.
I suppose I've been playing at it, but found it extremely fun and rewarding.
Whilst waiting for a bank of clouds to pass in front of Saturn, I decided to have a look at the Orion nebula. I decided to play with the exposure settings and was amazed at how much detail was revealed just by adding a couple of seconds to the length of each following one. I ended up with a series of photos that showed the transition from a light-polluted sky to a sky complete with an array of stars and a beautiful colour image of the great nebula itself.
This was the first time I'd seen it myself rather than from the photos of others, which made it more real. Now I'm hooked and as a result, have some cause to thank clouds for allowing me the time to extend my play. Since then I've captured the part of the Moon that reflects Earthshine and have some great photos of it.
At 70 years of age, I'm under no illusions that there will be many seasons left for me, but I'm happy in the knowledge that I'm going to see for myself, what I've only seen from the efforts of others.
Thank you for providing such a sensible and down-to-Earth conversation in an area that must have turned many would-be astronomers away. If they'd seen your video first, they'd be well under way as the next generation of amateur astronomers getting ready to capture the Universe in all it's spectacular beauty.
Thank you this has been the most straight talking informative video I have watched 🤦♂️ I have taken more from this one video than probably 10 others I have watched. Now feel comfortable that I'm heading down the right track. Keep up the good work many thanks 😊
Trevor, I've got decent equipment but am still learning so much. My camera is just a T6i and I always used a wired shutter button to take exposures but always assumed I'd need a CCD astro camera of some kind to do regular interval timed shots to stack images. I only discovered yesterday what an Intervalometer was by a fellow amateur astronomer and was absolutely blown away! They aren't very expensive and has completely revised my plans for stacked deep sky objects! I also know my setup is in desperate need of a coma corrector. I'm using a Skywatcher Quattro 200p and when at prime focus using the entire 2" focal barrel width the star comas are pretty bad. It's a working progress but always moving ahead!
Awesome video and tips as always Trevor. Thank you also for including your fellow astronomers.
You hit the nail on the head in this one Trevor! They say as you get older you get wiser well I'm 70 years old and
I've been into astrophotography for about three years and its as if everything you have mentioned I could relate to. Great Video!! P.S. As well I thought the bigger the better so I started on a 8se. lol
Superb message buddy, I enjoyed every second of it - right from hitting "Play" to the end screen rolling :-)
Keep up the great work, wishing You, Ash and Rudy a great Christmas, and can't wait to see what you share with us in 2023!
Oh, and as if I'd forget - CONGRATULATIONS on 400k! :-D
Thank you Luke! Keep up the great work, brother. All the best in '23!