MikePapple
Well-known member
- Post score: 7
- #1
I just retired on Friday, so the rest of my life is a long weekend.
Anyway, Wednesday night I photographed the super blue moon.
9:30 drove to a spot away from street lights. Set up camera on tripod.
10:50 Gave up, walked back to car. Too many clouds.
11:00 Some gaps in the clouds! Set up camera again. Took pics.
11:15 Went home.
Sony (A1, 200-600mm G)
600mm, 1/1000s, f/6.3, ISO 500, AF-S
Gitzo tripod (very sturdy)
interval shooting: 5s delay, 7s interval
The A1 is a dual gain sensor, so I used the 2nd base ISO of 500 to get low noise.
The A1 had no difficulty auto-focussing on the moon.
I first selected 15 pics without clouds, brought them into Photoshop, aligned them and took their mean/median, but the result was very soft. I then just selected 1 pic and sharpened it in Topaz Photo AI.
There is some artifacts on the top and bottom edge of the moon which I don’t understand, but I am pleased with the result.
Anyway, Wednesday night I photographed the super blue moon.
9:30 drove to a spot away from street lights. Set up camera on tripod.
10:50 Gave up, walked back to car. Too many clouds.
11:00 Some gaps in the clouds! Set up camera again. Took pics.
11:15 Went home.
Sony (A1, 200-600mm G)
600mm, 1/1000s, f/6.3, ISO 500, AF-S
Gitzo tripod (very sturdy)
interval shooting: 5s delay, 7s interval
The A1 is a dual gain sensor, so I used the 2nd base ISO of 500 to get low noise.
The A1 had no difficulty auto-focussing on the moon.
I first selected 15 pics without clouds, brought them into Photoshop, aligned them and took their mean/median, but the result was very soft. I then just selected 1 pic and sharpened it in Topaz Photo AI.
There is some artifacts on the top and bottom edge of the moon which I don’t understand, but I am pleased with the result.
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