DoodleKisses.com

Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum

 

 

This will be an on going discussion in photographing the moon.   Full Moons, Half Moons, New Moons, Man on the Moon, and some cheese.  Whatever you have, post it here.  

In November, Linda, Weber, and Seda (my inspiration)  and others, posted pictures and tutorials about techniques to photographing the moon. I've added those below.

And from Donna and Quincy, she left this wonderful video for us all to enjoy and be inspired by.  Thanks so much, Donna.

To get you started here are the  instructions:

From: Linda, Webber and Seda

 

  • Camera Mode: Set your camera mode to full Manual Mode.
  • ISO: Set your ISO to 100 if you have a Canon DSLR and to 200 if you have a Nikon DSLR (basically, whatever base ISO you have in your camera). For most other brands, the base ISO is also 100. If you have a point and shoot camera, see if you can find a menu setting to set your ISO to 100. Make sure “Auto ISO” is turned Off.
  • Aperture: Set your aperture to f/11.
  • Shutter Speed: Set your shutter speed to 1/125 on cameras with base ISO 100, and to 1/250 on Nikon DSLRs with base ISO 200.
  • Lens Focus: Set your lens to manual focus (either through a switch on the lens or on the camera) and set your focus to infinity. Be careful while setting the focus to infinity, as some lenses allow focusing beyond infinity. On more advanced DSLRs such as Nikon D300, there is a handy feature called “live-view with contrast detect”, which can accurately acquire focus on distant objects. I have used it many times for my moon photography and it works great! If you do not have such a feature in your camera, then try setting your lens to the center of the infinity sign, then take a picture and see if it came out sharp by zooming in the rear LCD of the camera.

Here is another good article. http://www.tzplanet.com/words/how-to-photograph-the-moon/50

 

Linda found this very cool link

The moon exposure calculator is a tool for photographers feeling like taking pictures of the moon, it will give you the estimated shutter speed required based on your ISO, aperture, moon location, weather condition and moon phase.

http://www.adidap.com/2006/12/06/moon-exposure-calculator/

 

 

Views: 7377

Replies to This Discussion

Very, very cool!

Very nice.

Doodle-in-the-moon? Taken at 6PM EST.  ISO 160, f11, 1/125  450mm  (300mm with 1.5 crop factor)

I see a doodle now that you mention it. 

Curly coated, with a fluffy top :-)

Looks like Webber!

I see him too.

Here is a close up. 160. f11, 1/125

Incredible!

Tonight from Ohio.  6:25 pm EST

Joanne, we have the same angle on this moon!!  You are doing very well  :-)  Increase your ISO and leave everything else the same and see what happens.

I have a Nikon, and the ISO is set at 200 ( the lowest setting).  For some reason, my camera won't take the shot unless I use the flash.   Should I try to get it without the flash?  Increase ISO--go to 400?

RSS

 

 Support Doodle Kisses 


 

DK - Amazon Search Widget

© 2025   Created by Adina P.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service