What do you recommend? I've used lexar, sandisk, and Sony. Never had a failure.
Until a few months ago my main card was a 64GB Transcend CF card. Never had any issues with it after several years of use. I replaced it with a 128GB Lexar for more storage and faster speeds. So far so good with it. I also have a couple of Transcend and Sandisk 64 and 32GB SD cards for another camera and second/backup slot in the one with the CF card. I don't recall having any issues with a card, knock on wood!Sweet Kitten Feet said:
What do you recommend? I've used lexar, sandisk, and Sony. Never had a failure.
https://www.direstudio.com/shuttercount/tk for tu juan said:
What program was used to get the shutter count?
Based upon my experience, it might be difficult to really catch the full effect from a heavily light polluted area. Living in Houston, if the eclipsed moon becomes dark enough, it might even become difficult to find in the sky. It will be pretty high in the sky for us, since it occurs shortly before midnight. Therefore, it would take a little creativity to get any foreground objects/views in the same field as the moon. Maybe a tall building looking up. I would suggest driving out a bit to get away from the majority of the lights.reddog90 said:
https://photographylife.com/news/super-wolf-blood-moon-eclipse?utm_source=Photography+Life+Newsletter&utm_campaign=aa59940fee-newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_74d1711c3d-aa59940fee-183997429#utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=super-wolf-blood-moon-eclipse
I live in Houston. Will there be too much light pollution in town or a short drive away to photograph the super wolf blood moon this month?
coastsrs said:
So i feel completely lost with long exposure shots. Ive read multiple articles and fiddled on my camera at lengths.
How do i get long exposure shots on my camera? Nikon D3400. Is it possible? Talking anything from 2 seconds to 15.
I have a tripod and filter. Do i need something more? I cant figure it out and feel kinda dumb..
I do it that way too!Quote:
Put it in shutter priority, set the shutter to whatever length of time you want. Have auto iso and it will control aperture for you. Make sure it is secure on a tripod
Another thing you could do is just figure out your exposure at a shorter shutter, 1/2 second, 1 second etc, and then use an app like Exposure Calculator to calculate it all. I've done that before. Figure it out one second and then use the app for equivalency at a longer time. You can use that for hyperfocal distance settings as well.coastsrs said:
Thanks ill figure it out this evening i suppose
What kind of scenes are you looking to shoot with long exposures? Night scenes? Daylight, like maybe waterfalls, since you mentioned a filter?coastsrs said:
So i feel completely lost with long exposure shots. Ive read multiple articles and fiddled on my camera at lengths.
How do i get long exposure shots on my camera? Nikon D3400. Is it possible? Talking anything from 2 seconds to 15.
I have a tripod and filter. Do i need something more? I cant figure it out and feel kinda dumb..
labmansid said:What kind of scenes are you looking to shoot with long exposures? Night scenes? Daylight, like maybe waterfalls, since you mentioned a filter?coastsrs said:
So i feel completely lost with long exposure shots. Ive read multiple articles and fiddled on my camera at lengths.
How do i get long exposure shots on my camera? Nikon D3400. Is it possible? Talking anything from 2 seconds to 15.
I have a tripod and filter. Do i need something more? I cant figure it out and feel kinda dumb..
As mentioned, you should be able to do that with shutter priority. According to the specs, you should be able to set it to shoot as long as 30 seconds. Manual mode should work as well. A cable or remote release of some kind would probably be helpful as well to reduce camera shake when pressing the shutter button at long shutter speeds. Using the self timer for this might work as well.
reddog90 said:
Thanks for the tips on the eclipse guys. I only have a 17-55 f2.8 and 70-200 f2.8 vrii. Do you guys think I should focus on taking telephoto shots with the bigger lens, or wider shots with the smaller lens?
I figured since this is my first time shooting an eclipse, it might be less stressful to stick with one lens and one style of shot and try to get it right. Maybe not.TexasAggie_02 said:reddog90 said:
Thanks for the tips on the eclipse guys. I only have a 17-55 f2.8 and 70-200 f2.8 vrii. Do you guys think I should focus on taking telephoto shots with the bigger lens, or wider shots with the smaller lens?
Totality lasts an hour, the whole thing will go from 9:30-1:30. You'll have to plenty of time for both.
I was going to post that as well.Gigem314 said:
I noticed that Luxe Academy is doing a heavy discount rate right now on their tutorial videos and Lr/Ps presets through January 27th.
Has anyone utilized them before, and is it worth it?
My brother uses presets for 90%+ of his pictures -- he says it saves him time. Applies a preset, makes a minor adjustment and goesreddog90 said:I was going to post that as well.Gigem314 said:
I noticed that Luxe Academy is doing a heavy discount rate right now on their tutorial videos and Lr/Ps presets through January 27th.
Has anyone utilized them before, and is it worth it?
First, do they run sales like this frequently? The discounts are tempting.
Second, I'd be interested in tutorials, but does anyone actually pay for presets? Kinda seems like cheating. I would rather have a fundamental understanding of how to use LR and make my own presets as I want to.