Added: 3 years ago
From: koyagul
Views: 11,396
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  • awesome.. for astrophotography do we need any telephoto lens or zoom lens???

  • @MrYuvan nope! not more than a wide angle lens

  • AMAZING !  Thanks for sharing.

  • Great combination of national monuments, music and an amazing starry night sky !

  • Oh my...why am I speechless? Great Video!

  • Wow, beautiful.

    

  • can you teach me how to take photos like these??

  • Beautiful pictures. Very inspirational. Great choice for the music too.

  • amazing work!

  • And for long exposures and Astro photography with any camera, you can use ASTRUS wireless remote, check it out here! : astrus.bymac.org

  • are these HDR?

  • @803brando single shot! a flash light used to lighten the foreground

  • @SmileDudeMusic thank you :{D

  • @SmileDudeMusic nothing deserves your tears ;)

  • This is one of the best videos on youtube!

  • @drummerzachb888 Thank you drummer, you are d best!

  • omg this comment may sound stupid, i may be stupid, but pls answer, were these stars really visible frm eyes? or u gotta use big aperture scopes to click these?

  • @nextblain your comment is not stupid at all! no telescopes were used in this work, just a camera with a lens and a fixed tripod :{D

  • @koyagul woow must be such a delight to take these pics, amaaaazing work sir!!

  • @nextblain LOCATION, right lens and exposure are the main keys :-)

  • Amazing video

  • 1 person got hit by a meteor.

  • So Nice , Thank you

  • soooooooo amazing!!

  • My Uncle Wally... He's got some niche there!

  • Great photography, I also will be using a 28mm wide angle prime lens, but I was wondering if you take several exposures of 20-30secs. etc and stack images? The colours your achieving seem unreal for a single exposure

  • @Speekerful : believe it or not, I believe in single exposures! with an exception for star trail photographing where I usually take tens or hundreds of photos then compile them to one single photo, photoshop has been used to increase the contrast and obtaining higher range photographs. best wishes FRIEND

  • @koyagul I see. I'm very jealous. You american's have a miniature world in your country, less light pollution, and weather extremes which make for great photography. Come to england if you want to photograph rain january through december.

  • @Speekerful: guess what! I live in Iraq, you come and see the whether here ! :P why don't you try something around Stonehenge? imagine milky way above it

  • @koyagul haha true. I could, its a long way away, and its guarded 24/7. No one is allowed near stone henge itself except witches and druids on winter solstice. Quick question. You mention taking a image of the milky way. Do you meticulously plan where your going to point your camera, and make sure your spot on to a nebulae or a star or something, or do you just point in a random direction and see what happens?

  • @Speekerful actually everything is pre-planned, you must determine time and place, timming is important so you can get seasonal bright stars into your photos, place is more important,the darker place you choose, the better shot you get, summer milky way river during July is always d best.

  • @koyagul ok final thing. Do you tend to bring along a constellation map or something, so you know your bearings? google sky map is a little...awkward.

  • @Speekerful well actually I am advanced amateur astronomer and I keep sky map in the back of heart, so I dnt need any map, you may do for a while , then you will get use and wont use it any more, your questions are always welcomed and do not hesitate in asking anything :{D bests

  • @koyagul Would you recommend a sky map I can print off please? One with nebulae and galaxies as well as constellations and such. I live in the UK...so I guess thats northern hemisphere.

  • Wally Pacholka...master astrophotographer.

  • just amazing. im getting my 550d next week would it be capable of doing this kind of shoots? and what lens and filter you used.?

    thanks

  • @ateiwiz 550D is an excellent camera with great capabilities,yes it can do such work for sure but with the proper lens,first try to shoot the nightsky with your lens that comes with the pack(18-55mm) , set the lens on infinity,18mm and camera on manual mode,then choose shutter speed 30 seconds,see the results :-) experience and practice will teach you what to do next but with time you will realize that you have to use a lens with smaller F stop ,please notify me with your first results

  • who on earth would dislike this!?!?!??

  • @SaturnAndItsRings Mr.Nobody would :P

  • the wonder of it all

  • lots of pics of orion....

  • and without photoshop?

  • @fallfly1 photoshop has been used in some of these photos to produce a dynamic picture,I mean to joint sevral shots in a single frame besides,its also been used to subtract thermal noise,however some New cameras can to this work by itself :)

  • Brilliant.

  • Awesome bro

  • hhahha, absolutely not,all of them been taken without any aid,but a camera with a good lens and stable tripod,Nikon D90 is an excellent camera,but the bad news is that: only Canon has lenses for this kind of photography,you need a wide 28mm lens,exposure for about 20 seconds befor stars motion start to appear the shutter should be closed,you also might need acable release or remot controller,try to look at astropix.com to see the whats the best camera for astrophotography.regards

  • these are the most beautiful photos i have ever seen. space to me is so awe inspiring to thing about. this is the direction in photography im taking. i can only hope to be half as good as this guy. this is my new dream, this is what i need to do. it wont be easy to learn im sure, but i must.

  • @eLLriDe420 : its nt difiicult brother!!! you dont even a telescope to be a widefield astrophotographer!! you ned a prosumer Canon DSLR (like 50D)camera and the right lens,you may also need a six angle star filter..bt trust me its nt difficult :) Im a pharmacist and I can do it ,amateur work!

  • @koyagul i have a nikon d90. i just never new about this type of photography. everywhere ive been looking says you need 5 grand telescopes and such. i wanna be able to close ups of teh moon anf stuff. are these photos here taken with a telescope aimed towards our horizon rather then space?

  • @eLLriDe420 hhahha, absolutely not,all of them been taken without any aid,but a camera with a good lens and stable tripod,Nikon D90 is an excellent camera,but the bad news is that: only Canon has lenses for this kind of photography,you need a wide 28mm lens,exposure for about 20 seconds befor stars motion start to appear the shutter should be closed,you also might need acable release or remot controller,try to look at astropix.com to see the whats the best camera for astrophotography.regards

  • These are some of the most brilliant and beautiful astrophotos I've ever seen!

  • @typhonfighter Thanx brother,they've been taken by an american astrophotographer Wally Pacholka,livin in Long beach western california

  • @typhonfighter I agree fully with you my friend..I am working on learning astrophotography and I have started gathering my equipment..This video has inspired me..

  • The image at 1:23 is awesome!

    Nice work

  • @lunitar78 Yeah , it sure does.....Our Galaxy , The Milky Way.

  • What kind of camera are you using?

  • beautiful! looks like utah

  • is there a website??

  • Thanks! and great pics too! Thanks a lot! =D

  • you welcome brother, anytime

  • Adiago , Yanni

  • What is the title of the music please??

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