How to Create a Star Trails Timelapse with StarStaX and Premiere Pro

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 25 มิ.ย. 2024
  • This video is just two additional steps from the last one! Once you have files that can be fed into StarStaX, you can output them and import into Adpbe Premiere Pro or any video editing software for easy timelapses!
    Download StarStaX here: markus-enzweiler.de/software/...
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    Chapters:
    0:00 Prerequisites
    1:02 Reprocess in StarStaX
    5:21 In Adobe Premiere pro
    12:00 Final thoughts and look at our timelapse
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ความคิดเห็น • 5

  • @jimcarter2092
    @jimcarter2092 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Wow, thats great this is the best i found do far, awesome job! And still another one of my goals to capture like this.
    And i will be watching the full tutorial.

  • @ryanmentzer4266
    @ryanmentzer4266 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    First off. Great tutorial, was very easy to follow for this beginner. Is there any way to make the video the entire photo or do you have to keep it the smaller image?

    • @Naztronomy
      @Naztronomy  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you!
      You can use the original photo resolution for the video. It's a good way to get a much higher resolution video.
      I use smaller size images because it's just easier and faster to process, especially for a tutorial 😊
      Let me know if you have any other questions. Good luck!

  • @Amanlikeme
    @Amanlikeme 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I see you don't interact in the comments much but I'm hoping you might here. I'm not much of a photographer but I'm curious, you've taken many star trails I'm sure, but I'm wondering, are there any differences in characteristics in photos between a stable camera and a slowly panned camera in either direction a foot or two, one left to right, and another right to left, moving stars into and out of frame? Yes, it would be a shorter photo than a time lapse, but at the right angle, in a dark enough area, you could shoot 360 degrees. If you have a common background everything will be blurred but if you're shooting the sky at night at the stars, other than the stars trails appearing straight as oppose to circular, are there any other characteristic differences between the stationary and moving camera that would be prevalent to be able to distinguish the difference between the two methods? Would you be able to tell if the night sky is blurring or if the star trails are printing differently in some way?

    • @Naztronomy
      @Naztronomy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I usually respond to every question and respond to maybe 90% of other comments or interact with them in other ways, so feel free to reach out if you have other questions.
      As for answering your question here about slow panning, that's an interesting idea. You'll pick up both the earth's rotation as well as the the stars moving left or right (depending on the direction you're panning). So I don't think you'll get star trails that appear straight because the earth is still rotating and the stars are still moving around in the sky. You'd be able to get straight star trails if you pan faster so that you only move in the X-axis and you don't give the star a chance to move much in the Y-Axis.
      If I'm not understand what you're trying to do, let me know.