I had the opportunity to head out and catch the re entry of one of the SpaceX rockets, I was excited at the chance, then I found out it was a bit too late to move on the shot, get to a clear patch of sky in time. I still went out with my camera and pointed it into the sky with a little hope. Go time came and went, I frowned for a moment, just a moment. Rather than get down on myself for missing a shot, I improvised. I wasn’t setup for it, but at the same time, I was excited at the prospect. I had my camera set on interval shooting, and so I let it run longer than I originally intended, and shot a very short star trail, ending when a car came by and flooded the lens blowing everything out. While it’s not my most technical piece, it’s still one I’m satisfied with.
Aperture: f2.8
ISO: 1600
SS: 18mins 30secs
Focal: 16mm
Fujinon 16-55mm
Read More At:
https://www.blackthornephoto.com
Aperture: f2.8
ISO: 1600
SS: 18mins 30secs
Focal: 16mm
Fujinon 16-55mm
Read More At:
https://www.blackthornephoto.com
Category Photography / Still Life
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 1280px
File Size 432.5 kB
Yeah, there is no escaping the moisture here. The Appalachian Mountains in NC are a temperate rainforest, unless its ultra cold there will always ben moisture... but its the moisture that creates the blue haze over the mountains so many people find so magical :D
Shooting star trails is actually something I am very new too, but I have always enjoyed trying things like this, and I absolutely agree, the trails should of been longer, but I only spent 18 minutes shooting [I was critically under dressed for what I was doing lol]
Shooting star trails is actually something I am very new too, but I have always enjoyed trying things like this, and I absolutely agree, the trails should of been longer, but I only spent 18 minutes shooting [I was critically under dressed for what I was doing lol]
FA+

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