Perfectly focus on the Milky Way Every time

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024
  • Unlock the Secrets to Perfect Star Focus: Essential Tips for Astrophotography Enthusiasts" Join me on a small adventure into the South Australian International Dark Sky Reserve were we will go through the process together.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @earlteigrob9211
    @earlteigrob9211 13 годин тому

    Om1 with stary sky focus is the best way to focus:😊

  • @nightscapejournals
    @nightscapejournals 20 днів тому +1

    Nice one, Matt. Super clear and simple. Looking forward to more of your videos, especially with skies that dark!!

  • @fairweathercards
    @fairweathercards 23 дні тому +1

    Great video. Thank you

  • @EvenTheDogAgrees
    @EvenTheDogAgrees 22 дні тому +2

    You're not using a Bahtinov mask? I found that manually focusing gets me in the ballpark, but sometimes I still got slightly out of focus stars.

  • @tomprzytula
    @tomprzytula 10 днів тому

    Nice video. I'm a beginner in astrophotography. I'd like to know why you chose iso6400 and 15sec.
    Wouldn't you be able to stretch to say 20-25sec while lowering the iso?
    Does higher iso bring out more stars/detail in astrophotography?

    • @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke
      @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke  10 днів тому

      @@tomprzytula Hi, thank you for your question! I chose iso 6400 and 15 seconds that night because I was using a lens with a wide aperture of f1.8. I was also using low level lighting under the tree to I help with the scene for video purposes. If I held my shutter open longer that night the tree would have been blown out. If I didn’t have low level lighting I would have used between 20-25 seconds as a shutter speed.
      To answer your question higher iso increases the sensitivity of the sensor it will see more light from the start. The downside of iso on some cameras is noise in the images. It’s trial and error with settings. The video should get you in the ball park though.
      What set up do you have? Camera,lens etc? Matt

    • @EVLitterPicker
      @EVLitterPicker 10 днів тому

      Also depends on the focal length of your lens, but the longer you leave your shutter open, the greater chance of seeing star trails as the earth rotates - unless, of course you are using a star tracking system.
      You can work out focal length and shutter duration, taking into account your exact camera model by using apps that calculate it for you, such as PhotoPills.

    • @tomprzytula
      @tomprzytula 10 днів тому

      @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke thanks Matt. I have a nikon d7500 with Tokina 11-16 f/2.8. According to the table I saw I should be OK with a shutter of up to 25sec at 11mm.
      Shutting milky way with my son (Matt too) yesterday I set 3200 @ 20sec. Came out not bad.
      If there are no star streaks at 25sec, is it better to shut at iso 1600 @ 25sec or iso 3200 at 13sec from the perspective of overall quality and visibility of milky way?
      Also, should I expose for a brighter image or darker one?
      I'll be denoising in Topaz Denoise AI, and developing in Luminar Neo.
      Thanks again!

    • @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke
      @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke  10 днів тому +1

      @@tomprzytula Perfect camera and lens! don’t be afraid to bump up the iso. These days with tools like topaz you can’t go wrong. As far as exposure goes I recommend using your histogram. You basically want the peak to just move off the left side of the chart. If it is all the way left it’s under exposed. Try taking test shots and fine tune your settings. Different conditions / locations require slightly different settings. Great your son is going out with you!
      Regards Matt

    • @EVLitterPicker
      @EVLitterPicker 10 днів тому +1

      @@tomprzytula Be wary of tools like Topaz, it might remove fainter stars or distort your night photos with ghosting.
      I use it all the time for day photos, but night stuff I'm not sure its that helpful :(

  • @NJM1948
    @NJM1948 16 днів тому +1

    Not sure I understand your reasoning for finding shutter speed. I have a 70-300mm APSC (450mm eq FF) Divide 450 by 500 and that is less than 1 second. You must have a gigantic lens if you divide your focal length by 500 and get 15 seconds!!!!

    • @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke
      @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke  15 днів тому

      Hi the 500 rule works well for lenses up to 200mm. Best regards Matt

    • @paultutton9443
      @paultutton9443 11 днів тому

      Hi - you divide your focal length into 500, so for example with a 50mm lens 500/50=10sec

    • @NJM1948
      @NJM1948 11 днів тому

      @@paultutton9443 That makes more sense!!! In the video (4:14) you say "you have to divide that number by 500" which is the opposite.

    • @paultutton9443
      @paultutton9443 11 днів тому

      @@NJM1948 Glad we cleared that up - not my video though! There is some confusion @4:14 but the example given @4:18 does make it a bit clearer.

    • @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke
      @nightscapeodyssey.mattclarke  10 днів тому

      @@paultutton9443 looking back at the video I did actually say it backwards but my text I added with the calculations is correct. Didn’t pick up on that during editing apologies for the confusion! Matt