MoonriseModerators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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MoonriseShot at a vineyard that I'm staying at in north-east Victoria. 10mm lens. 15 second exposure, and about six dumps of the flash as I ran around like a madman in the dark lighting up the tree and the vines... White balance was set to Fluoro to bring out the blue in the sky. Spot the Southern Cross...
Re: Moonrise
I hear ya, gotta be careful of that to avoid gettign laughed at I like the image, a bit of cleanign up of the stray lights and some distortion control would be the trick. If you have the opportunity to do this again, trying taking 3 images bracketed for merging to try and capture the detail of the moon, which in this case should be the primary focus? There is also quite a bit of noise..is this evident in the full res?
top left? gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: Moonrise
Nah. I reckon just above the tree framed nicely by the clouds. I am bothered by two things in this photo. 1. The two light sources. one behind the clouds & the other flaring low to the left. 2. The light doesn't come from either of the light sources. This bothers me even in paintings. 3. (who said I could count!) the light sources are blown way too far. Also the bright lights at far right could have been cloned out (or dodged) to good effect Also the stray light streaks low down & the two phantom legs (yours?) bottom centre right Still nice attempt. I'll come and keep your glass warm if you want to try again. but you'll need to pick a vineyard in Orange or Mudgee. Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
Re: MoonriseSouthern Cross is in the middle right of the top of the frame, that is Corvus top left...
Canon
Re: MoonriseI agree with Gerry and Greg.
You do need to use a slightly less ISO than 6400 for this sort of shot. Even on a 7D. I would definitely bracket one for the moon, one for clouds to show movement, one for the tree (make the light more subtle with a torch)
Re: MoonriseI love what you're aiming for here, it's the type of shot I'm trying to learn more about right now and hopefully achieve, so seeing you trying this too and reading everyone's comments is so useful. As much as I try to 'get it right first time' in the camera rather than on the computer and avoid what feels (to this learner) like camera trickery, the inevitable need to bracket for different areas is certainly the conclusion I've come to now as I guess there's just too much to achieve and account for in just one shot and exposure.
For all the points raised though I think it's still a really interesting and neat shot - I rather like the distortion as it is; coupled with the two celestial light sources it adds to the rather otherworldly feel! And, I must ask - are those ghostly little bouncing lights I see you running around with your torch? Have: Nikon D90.. Nikkor AF-S 18-200mm VRII, Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.4G, Nikkor 10.5mm f/2.8 Fisheye, Tokina AT-X 116 11-16mm f/2.8, Tokina AT-X M100 100mm f/2.8 Macro.. Manfrotto 732CY & 484RC2, SB-600, Think Tank gear..
Next: Nikkor AF 35mm f/1.8G, Sigma EM-140 DG Ring Flash..
Re: MoonriseThanks for the comments folks. Most appreciated.
I only had a short time to take this, so I wasn't as methodical as I should have been. I had started taking a few shots of the moon, (and failed dismally), but then put the wide on and had a go. I was surprised to see how much it looked like a sunrise shot, so I wasn't really concerned about blowing out the detail in the moon from that point. As it turns out, I (think I) should have posted this pic instead: Taken 20 mins earlier, at a far more sensible ISO of 1600, 20 secs at f4. A much better pic overall, I think. No ghost legs, more even light, and no misdirected flashes in the bottom left. Well spotted Greg! I blame the wine. I can't recall why I cranked up the ISO in later pics, but I upped the aperture to match too... I blame the wine. Again!
Yep. That would be the (red) pilot light on the flash.
You know your stars well. Is Corvus the False Cross?
Re: MoonriseNo, corvus is the crow, the false cross would be well above the southern cross in this picture...
Canon
Re: MoonriseI like the second photo much better
I still think the lights bottom right need to be removed or toned down.
Hey that's what I said Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
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