Stargazing

Discussion in 'Non Disney Photos / Mobile Phone Photos' started by hulagirl, Mar 19, 2010.

  1. hulagirl

    hulagirl Member

    Tonight we were out with the telescope, looking up at the stars and enjoying the beautiful air. ; My husband asked me to try taking a shot of the moon through the eyepiece of the telescope, with the 50mm wide open. ; I figured..well, what the heck. :) ; It's so beautiful hanging up there quietly in sliver mode...

    It's not the sharpest or best photograph of the moon. ; But it will be a lovely record of a really nice evening. :star: ; 'Night all...

    [​IMG]
     
  2. Dan

    Dan Member

    That's fairly solid. ; I've seen some occasionally decent shots taken by pointing a point and shoot into a telescope, and there's a whole type of astro-photography that involves attaching a webcam to a telescope and recording video or a whole bunch of still images and combining them together using specialist software that can combine a whole bunch of average shots into one really good one.

    But I don't believe I've seen much in the way of holding a DSLR up to an eyepiece. ; I'd never even tried it, it seemed like too difficult a job to get it lined up properly manually. ; I've got an adapter that lets me plug my camera right into a telescope, but so far my attempts at using it have been a failure. ; I'm going to work with my local astronomy club this year to try to improve on my results.

    So.. well done.
     
  3. zackiedawg

    zackiedawg Member Staff Member

    That's actually surprisingly well done! ; I can get good results with a tripod and my 500mm lens, but didn't think you could get anything that clear holding a DSLR up to an eyepiece of a telescope!

    Nice 'yellow moon' vibe too - making me think of Neville Brothers and my Tulane days cruising the levee on Saturday evening by Old Muddy.
     
  4. mSummers

    mSummers Member

    Nice work. ; I didn't know you could do that with a dslr and get anything usable...
     
  5. ddindy

    ddindy Member Staff Member

    Well done, Roni. ; It pays to try anything, no matter how ridiculous it seems.

    I have an adapter that replaces the lens on my camera and slips right into the eyepiece holder of my telescope. ; This is known as "prime focus" astrophotography. ; However, to get the image to focus, I'd have to physically move the mirror closer to the camera. ; As a result, I've never had the nerve to try it. ; (My telescope is a 4 1/4 inch reflector bought from Edmund Scientific in 1967.)
     
  6. goofmick

    goofmick Member

    Nice job Rone!!
     

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