Shot on Sony a7iii, quickly edited in Affinity Photo

  • @[email protected]
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    87 months ago

    Was it very visible to your naked eye here? Away from light pollution a bit?

    Not trying to reveal specifics, just curious!

    • Cosmo
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      117 months ago

      I didn’t see this one, but when I saw it in Iceland (in a dark place with limited light pollution) , it was taking up basically the entire sky and was glorious. I actually thought it was MORE stunning than any photos I’d ever seen, especially because it’s a way different experience when it’s in motion and everywhere. It was actually the event that convinced me to get a nice camera, since my phone “long-exposure” shots were so shitty haha.

        • Cosmo
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          37 months ago

          I wasn’t even in a super remote place or anything; just right on the outskirts of Reykjavík: 64.162710, -22.014917

          Probably could have been even more insane if I had gone a bit more remote. But if you ever plan to travel to Iceland, I’d recommend to go during a time you can see it, and give it a shot! (I went in early October, seemed like a pretty good time for photography, since it seemed like it was golden hour lasted like half the day)

    • warm
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      7 months ago

      Unless you are in an area with low light pollution, it doesn’t look like it does in photos. You can’t exactly increase the exposure time of your eyeballs :D

      You see like purple/orange streaks in the sky, still beautiful, but the cameras exaggerate it.

        • warm
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          27 months ago

          I dont have a pixel, but if there’s like a “pro” mode in the camera app, you can play around with the shutter speed and expose for longer. After the event the sky looked normal, but I could still get the purple green with my phone camera!

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago

              On the Pixel I’d recommend the astrophotography mode which exposes for 4 to 5 minutes, it works very well.

              You need to use the night mode in the camera and then put the phone on a tripod or lean it against something so it won’t move, after a few seconds the shutter button will turn into a stars symbol. Then press the shutter button and it will tell you how long you should leave the phone there.

    • @dormedasOP
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      27 months ago

      Driving 40 minutes east of Bend brought us down to zero light pollution.