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---------------------------------------------------------------  Blog Listings ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Members:  Please feel free to add your own post to this section to share with the general membership.

  • 07/15/2024 7:18 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here are the links to the meeting's videos Sony slow and quick   www.youtube.com/watch?v=VK0OoN0JM94

     and long exposures  www.youtube.com/watch?v=DD0ej48JZW8  and  www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpxEkO9Rf6s

  • 07/10/2024 8:52 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here are the links to the videos I shared last week  Friday July 5th

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=BndGeqc9Ol4  and

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWS_4IQPXlk

  • 06/24/2024 5:30 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here is a link to the fireworks how to article

    www.adorama.com/alc/how-to-photograph-fireworks-displays-like-joe-mcnally/?utm_medium=email&emailprice=T&utm_source=Bluecore-063023-08AM-July-4th-Sale&utm_content=063023-08AM-July-4th-Sale&utm_campaign=063023-08AM-July-4th-Sale-P-P-NA-PDP&obem=wP2sVcnYBv1EJUMlT0zlGCJ0JRuKOEpJfZA0tZpXQuE%3D&bc_lcid=t6010190496555008lw6341952577757184li0&utm_source=Bluecore-063023-08AM-July-4th-Sale

  • 06/14/2024 3:35 PM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here are the helpful hints I have gathered over the years to photograph the Milky Way.

    Night Sky Photography

    Basic Milky way equipment

    1. Camera, tripod and wide angle lens maybe a remote control or use self timer on camera

    Basic settings on your camera

    1. Turn off image stabilization and noise reduction (lightroom does just fine in post)

    2. Go to manual exposure

    set a wide open aperture on the lens F2.8 or wider ISO 1600 or 3200 for 10 to 20 seconds

    3. Go to manual focus > Stars should be small points of light zoom in to verify on monitor

    Take a test shot to check focus and exposure. Turn down the brightness of the back screen monitor for

    night sky. It will look much brighter than the photograph really is. Check histogram

    4. Shoot in Raw and have a White Balance set to custom 3800K or 4000K You can take off the UV filter

    on the lens

    Composition

    Pick an interesting foreground Light painting from the side is possible to bring out details

    There are apps for the night sky photography

    Photo Pills and Photographers Ephemeris are two. These show you the sunset times, moon phases,

    Milky Way position, when the sky is truly dark all for your exact location and date and time.

    What else to bring

    Chair, water, warm clothes, snacks, small flashlight with red filter if you have it and a ground cover

    What else to do to prepare

    Format memory card, charge batteries and clean lens

    What else to do to get next level images

    1. Try a set of panorama shots to get the whole Milky Way arc

    Tripod must be level, start first image before the MW starts and end the last image after the MW ends

    overlap each about 50% for stitching in post-processing, so you may have 6 to 10 shots altogether across.

    Shoot the pano in portrait mode to get the whole arc in the frames. You want the forground visible

    and the highest point of the arc also. Double check this before you start.

    2. As the year progresses the MW will appear more vertical (summer) and less horizontal (spring in the East)

    then in the Fall it is more horizontal (in the West) again.

    3. When light painting the forground from the side always shine the light from the direction where the

    core of the Galaxy is

    4. Can take separate photos with different settings for sky and foreground and put together in a composite.

    The foreground may have a different focus point and a longer exposure to be lit up.

    5. Take a 2 row pano to capture the sky and foreground better and stitch togther separately

    6. You can use a small phase of the moon to light up the ground and then when the moon sets take the sky photo

    and stitch together.

    7. Use a longer lens to do the pano to capture even more detail in the MW

    8. Put a person in the foreground to add interest

    9. Make a star trails photo. Take in jpeg mode a series of 30 second exposures 1 second apart for an hour or 2.

    then merge together in Lightroom or Starstax app.

    Post processing

    For the white balance adjustment the natural color of the sky is R35 G35 B35 you can see how you like it

    Select the bright parts of the MW and adjust the highlights, clarity, structure, darks, vibrance and maybe dehaze

    Try a linear gradiant to adjust the ground exposure.

    For the pano shots be sure to apply your adjustments to all images in the sequence equally and stitch together.

    even more processing can be done after the merging is done.

    In lightroom use the masking tools to adjust the foreground and sky separately for exposure, saturation, clarity and other details.


  • 06/10/2024 6:23 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here are the links to the videos I showed at Friday's meeting

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=v915RnaV60c   and 

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1a00HcVEAQ

    these are about shooting landscapes - choices, vision, composition, and  staying patient.

  • 06/02/2024 3:27 PM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    All members; There is an art wall project on Ridgeview Blvd in the works by the HOA.  Anyone willing to submit 2 images of the Southwest USA for consideration to be made into a mural send them in an email to Mark (mwgpoc1@rap.midco.net) by June 15th.  There will be a meeting of the committee on the 24th to look at the choices.  We can send 20 or so of our best.  Then in July the HOA board will make the final decisions.  The size of the mural may be 5 feet by 10 feet.  Don't worry about your file size for now.  Sometime after the 15th our board will choose the images we can send in.  Thanks 

  • 05/25/2024 8:21 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here is the video we showed at the May 24th meeting on how to tell a story with your photographs by Ian Plant  

    www.photomasters.com/free-webinar-replay?utm_campaign=3bb2922f-bb85-4d91-b04d-b5e9301fc7f0&utm_source=so&utm_medium=mail&utm_content=d09ed49f-45c6-4b6c-b7d9-6081c10cf3ed&configurationId=6050fae6-8ca8-499d-a6e0-04155994634a&actionId=b8219247-45bf-e64b-4c47-fd0cb6402f68&cid=05287e56-ab49-4fa5-b64d-ac269b22b060

  • 05/13/2024 1:17 PM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    For story telling and photo essay video use https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjWw1SBg-qY

     and for the Sony exposure compensation video use  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i24ci64b73U

  • 04/29/2024 2:30 PM | Janis Stone

    I currently have a Canon G15 and I want to upgrade to a camera that I can use at least one lens to get better photos of our travels.  We are going to the Antartica and I want to get better photos than I got on our last trip.  The Zoom is not good enough.  Any suggestions would be appreciated.

  • 04/22/2024 11:56 AM | Mark Guinn (Administrator)

    Here are the videos from the Friday meeting on the 19th of April     www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAexy836ff8  and

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmX13ycSzP4&t=9s and

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=PetOdulc45A they are about settings, composition and cropping.

SaddleBrooke Photography Club

SaddleBrooke, AZ

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