My first milky way effort

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maceemiller
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My first milky way effort

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Post by maceemiller »


Hi all.

Heres my first effort at the milky way with my new (second hand) Canon 100d with the 18mm stock lens.
As an added bonus Andromeda is there too!
FB_IMG_1600500220732.jpg
I took 28 pictures on my DIY barn door trap at ISO3200 and 30 second exposures.

Still not very good at processing yet i think I'm getting better.
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Graeme1858 Great Britain
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by Graeme1858 »


Good effort!

Regards

Graeme
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by maceemiller »


Graeme1858 wrote: Sat Sep 19, 2020 8:35 am Good effort!

Regards

Graeme
Thankyou. Its far from perfect yet im not trying to kid myself ill ever get images like i see others do.

I believe its my best image yet and I'm happy with it :)
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Greenman Great Britain
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by Greenman »


Nice shot, we are all in the process of getting better And thankfully this is a good place to do it.
Cheers,

Tony.

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Makuser United States of America
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by Makuser »


Hi Carl. Very nice work on your first Milky Way image effort. Excellent sparkly stars in your photo. And, although I am not certain, it looks like you caught M31 too. Thanks for sharing this capture with us Carl, and keep looking up.
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by JayTee »


HI Carl,

This is a very good first start. If you don't mind a critique, your focus is a bit soft. I have always found that DSLR wide-field images are by far the hardest to get the focus perfect. A trick that will help you get there, don't shoot with your lens wide open. Stop it down one stop. Also, your stars appear to be round so that is indicative that your tracking was pretty good. Keep going.

Cheers,
JT
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Re: My first milky way effort

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Post by maceemiller »


JayTee wrote: Sun Sep 20, 2020 2:22 am HI Carl,

This is a very good first start. If you don't mind a critique, your focus is a bit soft. I have always found that DSLR wide-field images are by far the hardest to get the focus perfect. A trick that will help you get there, don't shoot with your lens wide open. Stop it down one stop. Also, your stars appear to be round so that is indicative that your tracking was pretty good. Keep going.

Cheers,
JT
Thankyou. My apature was fully open yet, even though I know that stopping down 1 or 2 clicks will improve sharpness I thought that as much light in as possible is the way to go?

And as for crititism I love it! Yours is constructive which can only help in the long run :)
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Re: My first milky way effort

#8

Post by Hankmeister3 »


Very nice! Really cool with M31 floating off the south-eastern edge of the spiral arm.
Telescopes: Meade LX90 10-inch f/10 UHC Coma-free SCT; Explore Scientific 127mm f/7.5 APO ED triplet refractor; Explore Scientific 102mm f/7 APO ED triplet refractor; Explore Scientific 80mm f/6 APO ED triplet refractor; Skywatcher 72mm f/6 ED Schott doublet refractor; Meade 70mm f/5 APO quadruplet astrograph refractor; Skywatcher Quattro 8-inch f/4 Newtonian astrograph; Orion 6-inch f/4 Newtonian astrograph; Skywatcher SkyMax 180mm f/15 Maksutov; iOptron 150mm f/12 Maksutov; Orion f/9 Ritchey-Chretien RC astrograph
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