Dale, I love how crisp these pictures look. They have that Zeiss look, to my untrained eye. Here are a couple from yesterday shot with the 100-400 GM. No fully moon to see here today, raining
The 5 x 25 experiment.
5 exposures for each shot. 5 rows of 5 shots for 125 images.
Each 5 exposures stacked for noise then 25 images stitched.
All exposures on Ioptron tracker.
Forgot to mention, I'd placed a Astronomic clip-in light pollution filter into the body of the a9.
Quite literally a lot to like in this thread, as always.
Robert, Joshua: Great astro shots.
Werner: Very idyllic landscape with those rolling hills and the warm sky above.
Philip: Beautiful sunstar landscape shot.
Robert: Beautiful macro on the previous page. I like the natural colors.
Helena: Beautiful countryside shots. I really like how that old barn seems to pop out of the landscape.
Ronny: How many thousands of potentially award winning shots have you already taken in Island ?
Bob: Great shots from Island. I really wish I could visit that place at some point.
I have one astro shot to share as well. This one was taken with the Samyang 14 2.4
MedicineMan404 wrote:
Great Milky Way Chris and LOVE the industrial shot!
Many thanks, Robert. I took what felt like an eternity to finally get a decent milkyway shot. I had tried more than a dozen times in various parts of the country, so I was really happy to finally get one picture that I was somewhat happy with.
Too much processing? The lens flare is real, I tried to avoid that, however the rest if flash from the Phottix Indra 500 TTL HSS. I’m still learning the Sony system (coming from Nikon) and so far, it’s good. I think I prefer Nikon better, maybe that’s because I was so used to it.
Another view of the Black Church of Budir, Iceland. The clouds had no contrast when I arrived but after sticking around for a bit, it got more interesting.
rji2goleez wrote:
Another view of the Black Church of Budir, Iceland. The clouds had no contrast when I arrived but after sticking around for a bit, it got more interesting.