Tripod
ISO 800
A 20 - 31 mm lens most likely is the best choice. Over 50mm means you'll be
cutting out too much sky and you don't know exactly where the meteor may fly
through the frame. Too wide and the image of the meteor is likely to be to
small to make a good impression.
Aperture, bigger t
Tripod
ISO 800 or 400 if light polluted
A 20 - 31 mm lens most likely is the best choice. Over 50mm means
you'll be cutting out too much sky and you don't know exactly where
the meteor may fly through the frame. Too wide and the image of the
meteor is likely to be to small to make a good impressi
I recommend ~35mm to 50mm lens for 35mm cameras, ~20mm to 35mm for APS size
sensors to catch some sky, as you can't predict exactly where the trails
will appear. Must be on tripod. No point in having any of the ground in the
shot, unless for effect. NO LIGHTS IN FRAME! Lens should be wide open,
At 3:03 PM -0700 10/19/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>This weekend the Orionid meteor shower will be going on. Sunday is also my
>birthday, so since I'm going to be staying up late anyway, I figure I might as
>well go out and shoot some shooting stars.
>
>What are good settings for shooting such th
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