Now I'm starting to get to the more complicated things from last week... star trails, timelapse videos...

Now I'm starting to get to the more complicated things from last week... star trails, timelapse videos...
Blog post: Creating Star Trail Images:
http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/05/creating-star-trail-images.html
Saturday Night Light theme, curated by Dirk Heindoerfer. #SaturdayNightLight #StarryNights #PlusPhotoExtract
https://picasaweb.google.com/107459220492917008623/NightPhotos#5668831594511955970
Great job! I like it!
ReplyDeleteVery nice! Would love learning this technique, don't hesitate if you've a link
ReplyDeletewah, a great picture, i love it
ReplyDeleteOutstanding result Jeffrey Sullivan . Stacked or single exposure? If you don't mind giving away your secrets!!
ReplyDeleteThat is awesome. Fantastic image (:
ReplyDeletewow! it' s awesome!! where did you take it?
ReplyDeleteCool abstract of Nature Jeffrey Sullivan
ReplyDeletelook like a heavy rain light shower amazing shot Jeffrey Sullivan
ReplyDeletetruth takes time--nice
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone for the kind comments and shares! Isabelle Lepez Here's my blog post on Creating Star Trail Images: http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/05/creating-star-trail-images.html Giuseppe Basile I can't imagine why anyone would risk the time or the result on a single long exposure. You have far more control over short images, and you can handle noise and dead pixels better (and light pollution from cars and flashlights), so anything else strikes me as pointless (or simply a limitation of film, not exactly something to celebrate). Lester Barrows No ND filter; I just adjusted the exposures in Lightroom to get the brightness & contrast I wanted. JungMin Seo This is the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest in California, I'll have a book which will lead you there, hopefully out in the first half of 2012. It'll be in the series of U.S. photo travel books by Laurent Martres. (www.PhotoTripUSA.com)
ReplyDeletebeautiful night image. love it.
ReplyDelete