Mate! What a great video! I’m in Aus too in Byron Bay - just got an R6 Mk2 and some basic gear and keen to learn and this was perfect. I’ll be watching all of your videos now :)❤
@@GlennMartinPhotography Nust ordered the cleaning kit for my Canon aps-c sensor too from your links on that video. Thx for posting and hopefully you get something outta that for your efforts
Ohhh my god , Glenn - Thank You! You wouldn't believe how tough I've found it to just get the basics starting points for my DSLR / Lens set up. Got Canon 650D and a 70D and just now getting a Ef-S 50-250mm EOS lens. I'm now actually pretty damned motivated to get out of Melbourne's lights and get shooting!
G'day, Richard, glad you found it useful. Just note that a 50mm lens requires a much shorter exposure time than the "start at 15 seconds" I mention in the video if you want to avoid obvious star trails. If you've got the kit 18-55mm lens and zoom out to 18mm the 15sec will work much better.
Great video. I have a trip to NZ coming up & am planning to shoot the stars in one of the Dark Sky Project areas, so this is very useful. PS. I transplanted from the UK to the US in the early 1990s, and have never been able to bring myself to omit the "i" from aluminium.
I have my first class for Astrophotography tomorrow night so I have made notes of your suggested setting and tips. Good video for beginners like myself. 👍
You probably got the kit 18-55mm kit lens with your camera and you can give it a whirl with that. It's only f/3.5 at 18mm but it will give you a taste and you can use 15-20sec exposures. If the bug bites you can look at better quality lenses with a wider aperture. The Samyang/Rokinon 14mm is f/2.8 and gets pretty decent results.
Great video. I would like asking your opinion about lens. I am wondering what is the best lens for astrolanscape in my fuji camara 40mp XT5 the rokinon 12 mm F2.0 or the fuji 8mmF3.5 the price in betwrrn is not so huge. I really would appreciate your comments about. Thanks in advance. Alberto
Hi, Alberto, I'm not overly familiar with the Fuji ecosystem, so purely on spec it's honestly a line ball. The 8mm will allow you to expose slightly longer than the 12mm before obvious star trailing, but you don't have the same aperture so would need to increase the ISO which in a crop sensor camera is not ideal. The Rockinon/Samyang can sometimes be known for not being the sharpest in the corners, but the Fuji at 8mm you might start getting some fisheye distortion. I'd probably lean to the Rockinon for the wider aperture (although f/2.8 is probably better than f/2 due to chromatic aberation) but would be googling reviews for each lens specifically for astrophotography.
G'day Glenn, thanks for the video, great content. My question to you is around a recommendation for a camera which can do astrophotography but is small and compact enough to carry on a motorbike. I am trying to connect both of these passions. I travel regularly to far flung places and to date have relied on my Olympus TG-7 to get the job done. Its sturdy, waterproof and doesn't take too bad of a photo. Unfortunately, I do not think it will cut it with astrophotography. What do you recommend I look at the replace the TG-7, and is small and compact enough to carry in my tank bag - a full frame DSLR is just way too big. Let me know your thoughts mate!
G'day, Andrew, I'm glad you found the video useful. There's a few _it depends_ in my answer but basically you will need a dose of pragmatism and compromise in the mix. Typically the smaller the camera gets, the smaller its sensor is ie: full frame, to APS-C to Micro 4/3. The smaller your sensor the shorter your exposure time at equivelent focal lengths compared to the larger sensors, which means higher ISO for equivelent exposure, and the rub is smaller sensors don't handle high ISO as good as the bigger ones. With those caveats, Have a look at the Canon R8 which gets you that full frame sensor but not a properly big DSLR body. The full frame both great for astro and travel landscape. If that's still too big, consider something like the Canon M6 which is an APS-C sensor. You get the smaller form factor but still an ok outcome. Going down from there you get into Micro 4/3 cameras which while they can do astro, the larger sensors do it better - depends on your expectations. BTW when I used to ride motorbikes I never like my camera gear (other than the tripod) attached to the bike, I was always concerned about vibrations passing through the frame, so I would suggest considering some kind of small but accessible sling bag or similar.
Without tracking you’re really restricted in how long you can shot for before obvious star trails. 10sec or less with a full frame camera and around 5sec on a crop sensor.
Hi mate can I send you a photo I took the other night? I’m unsure what it is but it moves across the sky when I was taking photos of Jupiter it moves opposite to the earths rotation past Jupiter. It’s definitely not lense flair as I had a shutter remote and didn’t move the camera at all
@@GlennMartinPhotography I thought that but being in nsw it says best time to see it would be early morning just before sunrise these photos were taken around 11pm to midnight
Mate! What a great video! I’m in Aus too in Byron Bay - just got an R6 Mk2 and some basic gear and keen to learn and this was perfect. I’ll be watching all of your videos now :)❤
Glad it helped 🙂
Great vid for beginners 👍🏻📷
Glad you think so!
@@GlennMartinPhotography Nust ordered the cleaning kit for my Canon aps-c sensor too from your links on that video. Thx for posting and hopefully you get something outta that for your efforts
I really appreciate you doing that, thank you so much! The effort will be a grind, but will hopefully get there.
Great video!👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Good information 👍🏻
Thanks :)
Thanks a lot
Good stuff, Glenn. Looking forward to more astro content
Thanks, mate, hoping to get more stuff up soon!
Nicely done. Thank you.
Hope you found it useful 😊
Wow so many useful tips in a very concise video, thank you!
Glad you found it useful 😃
Thank you for sharing your knowledge…sub’ed 👌🏾
Thanks for the sub!
awesome video. thank you.
Thanks for letting me know :)
Ohhh my god , Glenn - Thank You! You wouldn't believe how tough I've found it to just get the basics starting points for my DSLR / Lens set up. Got Canon 650D and a 70D and just now getting a Ef-S 50-250mm EOS lens. I'm now actually pretty damned motivated to get out of Melbourne's lights and get shooting!
G'day, Richard, glad you found it useful. Just note that a 50mm lens requires a much shorter exposure time than the "start at 15 seconds" I mention in the video if you want to avoid obvious star trails. If you've got the kit 18-55mm lens and zoom out to 18mm the 15sec will work much better.
Probably one of the best videos i have watched ! Thank you !
Glad you liked it!
Great video! Thorough, useful, concise. New subscriber!
Awesome, thank you!
Really great and relevant info. Thank you 😊 🌌
Glad it was helpful! 😊
Hi Glenn, great video! Were you still going to be making a video about the 5 different ways to get a good focus for night shooting? Thanks!!!
Hi, Rich, I still intend to make it, life has just gotten in the way latley
Great video I’m old and trying to learn new things for my retirement. Thanks for your help. New subscriber
So glad you liked it and found it useful 🙂
Great beginner video!
Thanks 🙂
Fantastic video!! Thank you sir!
Glad you liked it!
Great video. I have a trip to NZ coming up & am planning to shoot the stars in one of the Dark Sky Project areas, so this is very useful.
PS. I transplanted from the UK to the US in the early 1990s, and have never been able to bring myself to omit the "i" from aluminium.
NZ is so on the list for me, just across the puddle.
I have my first class for Astrophotography tomorrow night so I have made notes of your suggested setting and tips. Good video for beginners like myself. 👍
Good luck and have fun!!
Awesome!!! I am a very very beginner so can you please suggest/advise camera lens for canon t3i which meets your suggested criteria of
You probably got the kit 18-55mm kit lens with your camera and you can give it a whirl with that. It's only f/3.5 at 18mm but it will give you a taste and you can use 15-20sec exposures. If the bug bites you can look at better quality lenses with a wider aperture. The Samyang/Rokinon 14mm is f/2.8 and gets pretty decent results.
Thankyou sooooo much!!!!
Great video. I would like asking your opinion about lens. I am wondering what is the best lens for astrolanscape in my fuji camara 40mp XT5 the rokinon 12 mm F2.0 or the fuji 8mmF3.5 the price in betwrrn is not so huge. I really would appreciate your comments about. Thanks in advance. Alberto
Hi, Alberto, I'm not overly familiar with the Fuji ecosystem, so purely on spec it's honestly a line ball. The 8mm will allow you to expose slightly longer than the 12mm before obvious star trailing, but you don't have the same aperture so would need to increase the ISO which in a crop sensor camera is not ideal. The Rockinon/Samyang can sometimes be known for not being the sharpest in the corners, but the Fuji at 8mm you might start getting some fisheye distortion. I'd probably lean to the Rockinon for the wider aperture (although f/2.8 is probably better than f/2 due to chromatic aberation) but would be googling reviews for each lens specifically for astrophotography.
I would love to see some Milky way using a ZWOASI camera and a regular camera lens on your AM5.
Yep, am defnitly hoping to frankenrig something up for this year's astro season!
G'day Glenn, thanks for the video, great content. My question to you is around a recommendation for a camera which can do astrophotography but is small and compact enough to carry on a motorbike. I am trying to connect both of these passions. I travel regularly to far flung places and to date have relied on my Olympus TG-7 to get the job done. Its sturdy, waterproof and doesn't take too bad of a photo. Unfortunately, I do not think it will cut it with astrophotography. What do you recommend I look at the replace the TG-7, and is small and compact enough to carry in my tank bag - a full frame DSLR is just way too big. Let me know your thoughts mate!
G'day, Andrew, I'm glad you found the video useful. There's a few _it depends_ in my answer but basically you will need a dose of pragmatism and compromise in the mix. Typically the smaller the camera gets, the smaller its sensor is ie: full frame, to APS-C to Micro 4/3. The smaller your sensor the shorter your exposure time at equivelent focal lengths compared to the larger sensors, which means higher ISO for equivelent exposure, and the rub is smaller sensors don't handle high ISO as good as the bigger ones. With those caveats, Have a look at the Canon R8 which gets you that full frame sensor but not a properly big DSLR body. The full frame both great for astro and travel landscape. If that's still too big, consider something like the Canon M6 which is an APS-C sensor. You get the smaller form factor but still an ok outcome. Going down from there you get into Micro 4/3 cameras which while they can do astro, the larger sensors do it better - depends on your expectations. BTW when I used to ride motorbikes I never like my camera gear (other than the tripod) attached to the bike, I was always concerned about vibrations passing through the frame, so I would suggest considering some kind of small but accessible sling bag or similar.
Thanks Glenn for this awesome and educational response.
Can I use a nifty fifty lens
Without tracking you’re really restricted in how long you can shot for before obvious star trails. 10sec or less with a full frame camera and around 5sec on a crop sensor.
Hi mate can I send you a photo I took the other night? I’m unsure what it is but it moves across the sky when I was taking photos of Jupiter it moves opposite to the earths rotation past Jupiter. It’s definitely not lense flair as I had a shutter remote and didn’t move the camera at all
I have about 3 to 5 images where it’s moving. It’s a bluish green. A couple images aren’t great but about 3 are clearer
@@JiMEp it's possible you may have captured the new Nishimura comet, long tail with a bright head?
@@GlennMartinPhotography I thought that but being in nsw it says best time to see it would be early morning just before sunrise these photos were taken around 11pm to midnight
@@GlennMartinPhotography it’s hard to describe without seeing if that makes sense
Sure, shoot it through and I'll have a peek