Will, I was using a tripod and was playing
around with exposures...a variety of manual
settings. I really should note the settings
when I do that...just in case I want to
repeat. I cropped the picture. The moon was
very bright that night and my best guess is
that I had the camera set on an exposure of
at least 1 second. This is one of my favorite pictures I ever
took of the moon...thanks for the compliment.
HI, your images contain EXIF data in which
you should be able to see which setting you
used.. i cant access those (you would be able
to do so when checking my pictures (see at
additional information and more properties)
with your pictures cause you have shielded
that information from anyone to see.. (no
problem.. was quite curious how you did
this..)(you should be able to access the Exif
Data on a picture through your camera for one
and very likely through the imageviewer that
you have installed on your computer through
the software that was given together with the
camera!..
Actually, this picture was taken with a film
camera (not my rebel xt) and the image was
scanned and cropped...unfortunately, no data
available. But may be there is a photographer
who can give some insight as to what they
think the setting was. When I took lessons a
few years back, my instructor pretty much
knew my settings by looking at the photo.
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Comments and faves
Daniel_L added this photo to his favorites. (66 months ago)
Wil Zoetekouw (66 months ago | reply)
like a piece of art.. curious how you made this..
--
Seen next to a fellow photo of Tamron 28-300 mm. (?)
Full-Moon-Goddess (66 months ago | reply)
Will, I was using a tripod and was playing around with exposures...a variety of manual settings. I really should note the settings when I do that...just in case I want to repeat. I cropped the picture. The moon was very bright that night and my best guess is that I had the camera set on an exposure of at least 1 second.
This is one of my favorite pictures I ever took of the moon...thanks for the compliment.
Wil Zoetekouw (66 months ago | reply)
HI, your images contain EXIF data in which you should be able to see which setting you used.. i cant access those (you would be able to do so when checking my pictures (see at additional information and more properties) with your pictures cause you have shielded that information from anyone to see.. (no problem.. was quite curious how you did this..)(you should be able to access the Exif Data on a picture through your camera for one and very likely through the imageviewer that you have installed on your computer through the software that was given together with the camera!..
Full-Moon-Goddess (66 months ago | reply)
Actually, this picture was taken with a film camera (not my rebel xt) and the image was scanned and cropped...unfortunately, no data available. But may be there is a photographer who can give some insight as to what they think the setting was. When I took lessons a few years back, my instructor pretty much knew my settings by looking at the photo.
iam4ranny (61 months ago | reply)
Thanks for posting in the FlickR Firsts THREAD!
Please add your Beautiful Photo to:
Beauty is in the *Eye* of the Beholder!
Jan Herbert (58 months ago | reply)
Very interesting perspective-- what a great result for your experiment! Simply beautiful!
Beauty is in the *Eye* of the Beholder!
Jan Herbert and Jan's Cat added this photo to their favorites.
proexcalibur (57 months ago | reply)
EYE Second That Your Photo Is Beautiful!
Beauty is in the *Eye* of the Beholder!