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by joshspankit
1696 days ago
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Even your reply would be a big help on that page. Personally, I like to use the best tools even if they are well outside my current skillset (diving in to early Photoshop was overkill to recolour images and took me dozens of hours to start to learn, but working with it paid off many times over the years). Sounds like the most efficient path is: 1. Nice camera with long exposure via remote shutter: Take photos of stars / milky way / some nebulas 2. Add tripod and mount to automatically move the camera that can be optionally controlled via some smart device: Adds the ability to see more nebulas, and focus on objects for longer (meaning they show up brighter, with more detail) 3. Add software and maybe a telescope that can connect to the camera + mount: Adds the ability to capture things not normally visible, and really tune in to the details Is that right? |
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And depending on how into it you get, you might not even bother with a mount for a camera. If you end up going the telescope route you’ll want a good equatorial mount for that, and typically the camera will attach directly to the telescope.
And speaking of mounts, for astrophotography, an equatorial mount is a must. It rotates along the earths axis, so it can keep the image orientation correct. If you get a mount that moves up/down left/right (they call that alt/azimuth) then your image will rotate as the night progresses.
For learning, there’s also no better place than the cloudy nights forums in my opinion:
https://www.cloudynights.com/
edit: dylans comment is also really good and tracks with my experiences as well