Nov 26, 2013, 17:00
Hello everyone, I have recently sold half my house contents to buy myself a DSLR Camera and finally settled on the Nikon D7100 Body Only then purchasing a Nikon 18-200mm VR11 Lense. To say I am delighted with both would be an understatement, I'm over the moon.
Last few weeks I have been getting to grips with certain aspects of the camera and how it works. I enjoy taking pictures of almost anything, to give a pictorial history of where I've been and what I've been up to and my little trusty compact has served me very well amassing many Giga-bytes of pictures.
Something I am interested in giving a go of is 'Star Trails' and I've read quite a bit and understand there are several ways of achieving this from long exposures of many minutes to a time lapse scenario and then stacking the pictures to produce same as the former, in that 80 odd pictures or so make one.
Question is, given me set up, is the Lense I own suitable, and if so what would be the better starting place to for aperture, shutter and ISO to help achieve something to begin with. I do appreciate the season doesn't lend itself very well as less chance of a crystal clear night but with the Comet heading our way, if opportunity arises I'd like to have some degree of a fighting chance to catch it on film.
Many thanks in advance,
MrBob6939
Last few weeks I have been getting to grips with certain aspects of the camera and how it works. I enjoy taking pictures of almost anything, to give a pictorial history of where I've been and what I've been up to and my little trusty compact has served me very well amassing many Giga-bytes of pictures.
Something I am interested in giving a go of is 'Star Trails' and I've read quite a bit and understand there are several ways of achieving this from long exposures of many minutes to a time lapse scenario and then stacking the pictures to produce same as the former, in that 80 odd pictures or so make one.
Question is, given me set up, is the Lense I own suitable, and if so what would be the better starting place to for aperture, shutter and ISO to help achieve something to begin with. I do appreciate the season doesn't lend itself very well as less chance of a crystal clear night but with the Comet heading our way, if opportunity arises I'd like to have some degree of a fighting chance to catch it on film.
Many thanks in advance,
MrBob6939