Your Best Photography

A couple from the desert

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Despite the humidity and light pollution I still got a shot I'm happy with of the comet that's visible.

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**This post was edited on Jul 19th 2020 at 1:00:32pm
 
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Went backpacking in the Wind Rivers for our honeymoon. Sucked packing in my heavy DSLR stuff, but totally worth it for the photos.
 
14160641:jblaski said:
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Went backpacking in the Wind Rivers for our honeymoon. Sucked packing in my heavy DSLR stuff, but totally worth it for the photos.

backpacking with gear isn't fun on the back. for the past two years or so i've gravitated towards shooting only with a 50mm. it's a fun challenge and it keeps the kit relatively light when packing.
 
14160659:toast said:
backpacking with gear isn't fun on the back. for the past two years or so i've gravitated towards shooting only with a 50mm. it's a fun challenge and it keeps the kit relatively light when packing.

That's exactly what I do, A7ii with a 20, 50, or 100. 90% of the time I bring the 50.
 
14059822:swisssteeze said:
I have been doing astro for some years now and finally had the time to shoot in dark skies during a 6 day hike in the Dolomites.

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Tre Cime! What a beautiful hike. I did it 3 years ago. Catching the milky way over it is amazing. What's the red from?

My point and shoot camera shot that's framed on my wall

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14171943:Stuuuuuuuuuu said:
Just moved to Kelowna and there’s a ton of deer in the woods behind my place

nice stuff, you should think about your compositions; notice how each photo the deer's head is the dead center of the frame and there is a bunch of negative space above and to the side.

similar advice when framing photos, not a requirement for every shot, of course, but in general - always think about exactly the information/the story you want to capture with a picture and shoot only as much of those elements as you need to explain the image but nothing too much more that will turn it into dead/negative space. organize those elements in whatever way you can that the image is visually balanced.
 
I continue to have no idea what I'm doing when it comes to landscapes. Would welcome any critique / feedback on this one. I like it for the most part when it's fully blown up, but don't find it all that inspiring shrunk down. Was also debating whether the flare helped, in terms of kinda mirroring the shadow line, or just looks distracting.

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14171976:patagonialuke said:
I continue to have no idea what I'm doing when it comes to landscapes. Would welcome any critique / feedback on this one. I like it for the most part when it's fully blown up, but don't find it all that inspiring shrunk down. Was also debating whether the flare helped, in terms of kinda mirroring the shadow line, or just looks distracting.

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Did you add the flair in post? I think it's a little much and a bit distracting, but could work if it was more subtle.

I like the shot. Don't often to see landscape shot in a 1:1 ratio
 
14171992:corona said:
Did you add the flair in post? I think it's a little much and a bit distracting, but could work if it was more subtle.

I like the shot. Don't often to see landscape shot in a 1:1 ratio

sweet, thanks. And no, that flare was natural (shot a few w/ and w/o a hood, but didn't like the composition of the ones w/ the hood and w/o the flare). Might try to dial it back a bit in post. Really appreciate the feedback.
 
14171965:gravel said:
nice stuff, you should think about your compositions; notice how each photo the deer's head is the dead center of the frame and there is a bunch of negative space above and to the side.

similar advice when framing photos, not a requirement for every shot, of course, but in general - always think about exactly the information/the story you want to capture with a picture and shoot only as much of those elements as you need to explain the image but nothing too much more that will turn it into dead/negative space. organize those elements in whatever way you can that the image is visually balanced.

Thanks for the tips
 
14171976:patagonialuke said:
I continue to have no idea what I'm doing when it comes to landscapes. Would welcome any critique / feedback on this one. I like it for the most part when it's fully blown up, but don't find it all that inspiring shrunk down. Was also debating whether the flare helped, in terms of kinda mirroring the shadow line, or just looks distracting.

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for big landscapes like this, think about balance and movement, which have a lot of overlap.

balance, is it composed in a way that the elements of the image complement each other spacially? are you including exactly the elements you want to describe the scene but not too much that it loses its focus? is there negative space that unbalances the photo? or maybe for some photos you want to intentionally unbalance the photo to emphasize one part.

movement, where is the viewer's eye going to snap first? what is the path that the eye might travel after they first look at it? can you work with different shapes and lines in your scene to create a "flow" to the image, giving it some movement, bringing it to life?

for this photo, maybe too much focus on the washed out sun glare part of the valley. the brightness of the roof in the foreground is a little distracting to the eye. there is good movement with the line of the shadow, but that movement doesn't really lead anywhere.

good stuff though. keep getting after it.
 
14176917:gravel said:
for big landscapes like this, think about balance and movement, which have a lot of overlap.

balance, is it composed in a way that the elements of the image complement each other spacially? are you including exactly the elements you want to describe the scene but not too much that it loses its focus? is there negative space that unbalances the photo? or maybe for some photos you want to intentionally unbalance the photo to emphasize one part.

movement, where is the viewer's eye going to snap first? what is the path that the eye might travel after they first look at it? can you work with different shapes and lines in your scene to create a "flow" to the image, giving it some movement, bringing it to life?

for this photo, maybe too much focus on the washed out sun glare part of the valley. the brightness of the roof in the foreground is a little distracting to the eye. there is good movement with the line of the shadow, but that movement doesn't really lead anywhere.

good stuff though. keep getting after it.

Thanks so much, really appreciate it.
 
here are some of my fav from the last year

17-13+The+Shoulder.jpg


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023+Toyota+Trip.jpg


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19-20+Afternoon+Mirage.jpg


18-13+Chinle+Ladder.jpg


19-10+Cracked+Clay+Detail.jpg


17-35+Descent+Vignette.jpg


17-26+Lookout+Sunset+Valley+Light+Hood.jpg


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definitely been thinking about how being a filmer influences my photos - clearly i am not good at taking vertically oriented images.
 
14176924:gravel said:
here are some of my fav from the last year

17-13+The+Shoulder.jpg


13-36.jpg


capreef023.jpg


023+Toyota+Trip.jpg


011+Toyota+Trip.jpg


19-20+Afternoon+Mirage.jpg


18-13+Chinle+Ladder.jpg


19-10+Cracked+Clay+Detail.jpg


17-35+Descent+Vignette.jpg


17-26+Lookout+Sunset+Valley+Light+Hood.jpg


17-28+Dutch+Illumination.jpg


definitely been thinking about how being a filmer influences my photos - clearly i am not good at taking vertically oriented images.

super awesome!
 
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A couple from this summer. Tough to get the Milky Way as clear as I want without a start tracker, just not worth the $ for the infrequent star photos
 
14168519:ThaLorax said:
Tre Cime! What a beautiful hike. I did it 3 years ago. Catching the milky way over it is amazing. What's the red from?

My point and shoot camera shot that's framed on my wall

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It sure is! A place i want to visit again for sure. The red is from light pollution (most likely from

cortina d'ampezzo). Though i must admit, that image was my first try working with an astro specific software and i might have overdone it a tad.

I slept in my tent right below that hut, that is precisely were the shot was taken.
 
Took a starsniff in 2017, i have a chronic addiction now.

People have been getting more critical of this cind of photography as it is easy to fake perfect compositions.

The position of the milky way in my images is not just combined in PS in a pleasing way. In all my astro images i take multiple sky and ground shots for stacking and combine them correctly using a reference frame i take at the start of my sessions.

Our galaxys core and rho ophiuchis jewels are my absolute favourite area in the night sky.

Details on the first image:

Tracked 50mm full frame

light frames: 75x 5min f4 iso400

dark frames: 50x 5min f4 iso400

flat frames : 50x

bias frames: 50x

Stacking in DSS

Removal of light pollution, star reduction and stretching in Pixinsight

Removal of chromatic abberation in Photoshop

Noise reduction with Topaz denoise AI

Total time spent on this one piece of work wise has most likely broken the day mark. Enjoy peeps

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14189475:swisssteeze said:
Took a starsniff in 2017, i have a chronic addiction now.

People have been getting more critical of this cind of photography as it is easy to fake perfect compositions.

The position of the milky way in my images is not just combined in PS in a pleasing way. In all my astro images i take multiple sky and ground shots for stacking and combine them correctly using a reference frame i take at the start of my sessions.

Our galaxys core and rho ophiuchis jewels are my absolute favourite area in the night sky.

Details on the first image:

Tracked 50mm full frame

light frames: 75x 5min f4 iso400

dark frames: 50x 5min f4 iso400

flat frames : 50x

bias frames: 50x

Stacking in DSS

Removal of light pollution, star reduction and stretching in Pixinsight

Removal of chromatic abberation in Photoshop

Noise reduction with Topaz denoise AI

Total time spent on this one piece of work wise has most likely broken the day mark. Enjoy peeps

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Fantastic stuff. What lens/body/mount/exposure time did you use for the M31 photo?
 
14190031:corona said:
Fantastic stuff. What lens/body/mount/exposure time did you use for the M31 photo?

Thanks a lot!

The M31 image is actually my first try with a new lens and tracker i just got:

Body: Nikon d850

lens: Tamron 150-600mm g2 (@600mm f6.3)

Tracker: iOptron skyguider pro, with an extended counterweight bar and 2 weights on there.

All of that on my flimsy old tripod, really need a new one.

Exposure time was 1min each with a total of 30 exposure. You want to go to the point where the core of stars are just about to be overexposed but are not quite yet. Starcolour is what gives deepspace images that extra touch.

If you happen to own or are going to buy a startracker get the longest exposures times you can. No amount of stacked images can beat exposure lenght. Many nebulas and details just get lost in the noise, which they also did in this M31 shot.

Most videos and forums will tell you to "SHOOT WIDE OPEN". That does get you more light but also uses the most outer edges of the glass elements in your lens. In all cases (some very expensive exeptions) that will lead to chromatic aberration (purple/blue halos around stars) and your stars getting angel wings. To keep things looking even and realisitc stopping down you lens by one or two stops usually does the trick. At longer focal lenghts ( around 200mm above) those problems become less noticable. But at something like 14mm, lawd jesus those stars put their halloween costumes on.
 
Well executed! Nice stuff man.

14189475:swisssteeze said:
Took a starsniff in 2017, i have a chronic addiction now.

People have been getting more critical of this cind of photography as it is easy to fake perfect compositions.

The position of the milky way in my images is not just combined in PS in a pleasing way. In all my astro images i take multiple sky and ground shots for stacking and combine them correctly using a reference frame i take at the start of my sessions.

Our galaxys core and rho ophiuchis jewels are my absolute favourite area in the night sky.

Details on the first image:

Tracked 50mm full frame

light frames: 75x 5min f4 iso400

dark frames: 50x 5min f4 iso400

flat frames : 50x

bias frames: 50x

Stacking in DSS

Removal of light pollution, star reduction and stretching in Pixinsight

Removal of chromatic abberation in Photoshop

Noise reduction with Topaz denoise AI

Total time spent on this one piece of work wise has most likely broken the day mark. Enjoy peeps

View attachment 977561

View attachment 977562

View attachment 977563

View attachment 977564
 
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The northern hemisphere sadly only sees the milky way core for a few months during summer. That is why i decided to modify a camera to capture more of the h-alpha emission nebula this winter. This is Cygns (top), Sadr Region (butterfly looking thingy) and the veil nebula (hiding in a cloud mid left). Ima freeze my ass off this winter
 
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