Im very sad you are the channel that have helped me the most in photograph and you are the best explaining everything and you dont have more than 100 million subscribers!!!, please keep it up your content is great! 😂😀
Your videos are great, but if you do this kind of videos for other areas of photography will be great. Like portrait or landscape, also teach the basics like focal length in more details. The animations are sick btw
Great videos as always. I have a question that might be tricky: how would you go about using afocal photography to capture the moon? I own a LX-100, which is fantastic at 99% of the things I require it to excel at, but it has no interchangeable lense, and only a 4x optical zoom, so things that are at a distance are not one of them. I've been told it's very hard to do, but I would like to know what your thoughts are on it. Thanks in advance!!
I had never heard of afocal photography, so I did a quick search and it seems that all it involves is attaching a camera to the eyepiece of another imaging system like a microscope, or in this case, a telescope. I don't see why mounting your LX-100 to some kind of telescope would be a problem. You would just have to find a telescope and an adapter to mount the camera to the eyepiece. However, since your camera does not have an interchangeable lens mount, it might be a challenge trying to find a telescope eyepiece adapter.
Hi! The video was pretty well made to cover the basics. I was wondering if you could give some advice regarding image stacking to get better detail. Is a tracker always necessary for multiple moon pics? Thanks!
Thanks for the comment. The images I took for the video were all made by stacking many exposures of the moon. Stacking exposures drastically reduces noise and slightly increases detail. You can do many programs like Photoshop or PixInsight. I believe Tony & Chelsea Northrup have a video showing how to do this. I am planning on making a separate video showing my own technique along with compositing the moon into landscapes. Regarding your question, I did not use a tracker for my moon photos. Since the exposures are relatively short (for the second quarter moon I was shooting, they were around 1/60th), you don't need to worry about the moon blurring. I would recommend a tracker if you wanted to take video of the moon with it staying stationary in the image frame. For example, if you wanted to get a timelapse of a solar or lunar eclipse without having to manually track the moon, a tracker would help.
Cheers for the tutorial, unfortunately the link for the cheat sheet is not working/disallowed by google. Other then that, keep it up. Looking forward to more tuts XD
Didn't see a best photography learning channel like this till now.
Thanks!
Im very sad you are the channel that have helped me the most in photograph and you are the best explaining everything and you dont have more than 100 million subscribers!!!, please keep it up your content is great! 😂😀
Your videos are great, but if you do this kind of videos for other areas of photography will be great. Like portrait or landscape, also teach the basics like focal length in more details.
The animations are sick btw
I liked the presentation. Quite scientific and practical. Keep it up.
very much usefull info. great tutorial.
Nice sir 🙂
Excellent, but I tried to download the cheat sheet with the link that you posted, apparently is not working
I'm on it.
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Thanks for the useful information appreciated
Thank you u are so much
ok google, moon png HD :P
Thanks for providing a So We'll describe information!! 👌👌👌👌💪📸🍻
This is a really great video.... subscribed!
I downloaded your cheat sheet. It worked just fine.
Now all I need to do is find a "zuperzoom" lens...
Your videos are awesome. I like your quick yet very informative format, it's great for beginners! Keep up the good work!
Pls make an video on how to shoot group photography of approx 150 people
Great videos as always. I have a question that might be tricky: how would you go about using afocal photography to capture the moon? I own a LX-100, which is fantastic at 99% of the things I require it to excel at, but it has no interchangeable lense, and only a 4x optical zoom, so things that are at a distance are not one of them. I've been told it's very hard to do, but I would like to know what your thoughts are on it.
Thanks in advance!!
I had never heard of afocal photography, so I did a quick search and it seems that all it involves is attaching a camera to the eyepiece of another imaging system like a microscope, or in this case, a telescope. I don't see why mounting your LX-100 to some kind of telescope would be a problem. You would just have to find a telescope and an adapter to mount the camera to the eyepiece. However, since your camera does not have an interchangeable lens mount, it might be a challenge trying to find a telescope eyepiece adapter.
Thank you for the reply! I will look into the adapter. Might be cheaper than a DSLR hehehe.
I learned something new and useful today. I'm proud of myself.
I've learned more from these videos than my photography class.
Short and sweet, right to the point with details, annddd KISS - Keep It Simple Stupid is just what we needed. Keep it up, thank you yayay
Hai thanks for the great video. I am not able to download the cheat sheet.
just subscribed and great videos keep it
please make a video on wildlife photography
Another great video, keep them coming!!
Fantastic, more videos please
Cool tip. In the Cheat Sheet you might have meant "SUPERZOOM" not "ZUPERZOOM" :)
Lol, I'll fix that.
great tips and videos as always . love it
Hi! The video was pretty well made to cover the basics. I was wondering if you could give some advice regarding image stacking to get better detail. Is a tracker always necessary for multiple moon pics? Thanks!
Thanks for the comment. The images I took for the video were all made by stacking many exposures of the moon. Stacking exposures drastically reduces noise and slightly increases detail. You can do many programs like Photoshop or PixInsight. I believe Tony & Chelsea Northrup have a video showing how to do this. I am planning on making a separate video showing my own technique along with compositing the moon into landscapes. Regarding your question, I did not use a tracker for my moon photos. Since the exposures are relatively short (for the second quarter moon I was shooting, they were around 1/60th), you don't need to worry about the moon blurring. I would recommend a tracker if you wanted to take video of the moon with it staying stationary in the image frame. For example, if you wanted to get a timelapse of a solar or lunar eclipse without having to manually track the moon, a tracker would help.
Great content
Excellent
Googd
Cheers for the tutorial, unfortunately the link for the cheat sheet is not working/disallowed by google. Other then that, keep it up. Looking forward to more tuts XD
Check it now. I fixed the link.
Cheers! very much appreciated.
yay