I started another photo thread so that I didn't interrupt other people's discussions.
I'm looking for some help (I know I need plenty). I'm trying to take some pictures of the moon and I haven't figured out what it is I need for a decent picture. Below are a couple examples of what I was able to get after 20 minutes of playing around (none of which are worth writing home about).
I used a tripod for all my shots (and I fully realize the moon is moving). I tried all different F-stop ranges, but my results were very similar. I even tried my HOYA U/V filter on a few of them to see if it would reduce some of the solar glare (wishful thinking). The sky was very clear with no clouds to be seen by the naked eye.
The first one has a weird streak in it because an airplane flew by during my long exposure. I'm only posting it for fun. The second one I tried to take a picture to show some detail on the moon, but I only get a blob.
Here are the stats on the first image:
Shutter: 10 sec.
F/5.6
focal 33mm
ISO-400
evaluative metering
RAW
WB: auto
Custom function 2: long exposure noise reduction
Mounted on tripod and used 10 sec delay for shutter release to stabilize camera
Shutter: 1 sec
F/5.6
ISO-400
focal 85mm
evaluative metering
WB: auto
RAW
mounted on tripod and used 10 sec delay for shutter release to stabilize camera
What practices should I follow for taking a better picture of the moon? Should I be using lower ISO values? I realize I need a much larger zoom for more detail (and possibly a better lens). Am I missing any other fundamental aspect of this? Should I wait until the moon is only at 10% visible? Closer to the horizon?
I'm looking for some help (I know I need plenty). I'm trying to take some pictures of the moon and I haven't figured out what it is I need for a decent picture. Below are a couple examples of what I was able to get after 20 minutes of playing around (none of which are worth writing home about).
I used a tripod for all my shots (and I fully realize the moon is moving). I tried all different F-stop ranges, but my results were very similar. I even tried my HOYA U/V filter on a few of them to see if it would reduce some of the solar glare (wishful thinking). The sky was very clear with no clouds to be seen by the naked eye.
The first one has a weird streak in it because an airplane flew by during my long exposure. I'm only posting it for fun. The second one I tried to take a picture to show some detail on the moon, but I only get a blob.
Here are the stats on the first image:
Shutter: 10 sec.
F/5.6
focal 33mm
ISO-400
evaluative metering
RAW
WB: auto
Custom function 2: long exposure noise reduction
Mounted on tripod and used 10 sec delay for shutter release to stabilize camera
Shutter: 1 sec
F/5.6
ISO-400
focal 85mm
evaluative metering
WB: auto
RAW
mounted on tripod and used 10 sec delay for shutter release to stabilize camera
What practices should I follow for taking a better picture of the moon? Should I be using lower ISO values? I realize I need a much larger zoom for more detail (and possibly a better lens). Am I missing any other fundamental aspect of this? Should I wait until the moon is only at 10% visible? Closer to the horizon?