I'm after fixed stars. My assignment is to get motion blur. I though a shot of the stars would be great for motion blur. I need to use a B&W film, which will be souped in 1:1 Kodak D-76.
Also, why would I use a fast film when my goal is to get motion blur?
Okay, you guys now have me in trouble. It's 2:00 AM EST on Saturday morning (Nov. 4. 2006). I just set the F3 w/Kodak 400TCN up in the freezing backyard on "T" setting. It's been about 4 minutes and counting.
I'm sitting inside (the good part of this kind of shooting) and counting down the minutes (or hours!)
I sure as heck hope I get something other than a bright haze since we seem to have a nearly full moon tonight! :confused:
If you are willing to stand and watch for the entire exposure, you can use the "hat trick" used for long shutter speeds in the early days, covering the lens with a black cup or putting a paddle covered with black felt or velvet in front of the lens whenever a plane comes through your field of view. (I know Helen knows this, but I thought it might be a useful idea to mention for beginners.)The finer star trails are lost on the web reproduction, as is the flashing of the plane's lights just above the tree line on the left (though the continuous red line of its port nav light is just visible).
It's not my normal thing, but sometimes I just can't resist it...
Dead Link Removed a shot taken in Sullivan County, New York last Christmas. The distant glow is from a neighbor's house. To the best of my memory it was around twenty-five or thirty minutes at f/5.6 on Fuji Pro 160S with a 105 mm Nikkor-W lens on 4x5. The finer star trails are lost on the web reproduction, as is the flashing of the plane's lights just above the tree line on the left (though the continuous red line of its port nav light is just visible). The 105 doesn't cover 4x5 very well at f/5.6, but it was the widest I had with me.
Best,
Helen
PS You probably know this, but you must focus on infinity to the best of your ability. Because a star is a point source, any spreading of the light, even by a small amount, is a bad thing.
You said you had an F-3? I know when I was shooting sunrise at Mt Ranier, without the motor drive to provide power, the camera shut itself down due to cold. Temp goes down current draw goes up, camera will shutdown to protect circut. If it does you will be given only default shutter speed ( 1/90 ?)
I want to get a shot showing stars streaking across the sky. I would like to do this on Delta 100. Problem is that the reciprocity failure chart only goes to 150 seconds, and I think I would need an exposure longer than this. How would I get the exposure for a shot like this?
Also, might I need a neutral density filter for this?
Not really possible here. To the south the sky has a nice red glow. Light pollution for Chicago.Don't worry about reciprocity failure. As the image of the star moves, it exposes the film for a small fraction of a second. Reciprocity failure actually helps darken the background sky. Star trails are best done away from urban lights on a moonless night. Otherwise, exposure is limited by the brightness of the sky. Here in a rural area with dark skies I got several hour star trails on Kodak Tech Pan film exposed beteween f/5.6 and f/8 and developed in Dektol for a few minutes.
Seems like a good idea. Especially since my ELAN 7 uses power to keep the shutter open on a bulb exposure.Considering the current prices of older high quality all mechanical cameras, buying one just for cold weather photography and long night-time exposures seems reasonable.
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