Durbs
Suspended / Banned
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- 837
- Name
- Paul
- Edit My Images
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So I'm planning on getting (or at least trying to get) some shots of the meteors tonight. I'm in Epsom, so was going to head up to the downs for the show.
There's a spectacular view here across to the London skyline; Wembley Arch, The Shard, London Eye etc. but obviously London is quite bright.
For star trail shots, either stacked or long-exposure*, is it possible to use an ND grad to darken the city lights whilst keeping the skies dark?
Any reason not too?
Normally I'd just use trial-and-error but I'm not going to get up there before 22:30 so don't want to spend 20 minutes taking a photo which it turns out would never work...
*I usually do 20-min exposures, is there a real risk of sensor over-heating? Surely no more than using a camera in video mode?
There's a spectacular view here across to the London skyline; Wembley Arch, The Shard, London Eye etc. but obviously London is quite bright.
For star trail shots, either stacked or long-exposure*, is it possible to use an ND grad to darken the city lights whilst keeping the skies dark?
Any reason not too?
Normally I'd just use trial-and-error but I'm not going to get up there before 22:30 so don't want to spend 20 minutes taking a photo which it turns out would never work...
*I usually do 20-min exposures, is there a real risk of sensor over-heating? Surely no more than using a camera in video mode?