DEEP SKY Astrophotography How To (Using a DSLR Camera)

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 418

  • @iancraig2507
    @iancraig2507 Před 4 lety +124

    And I am a 66 year old beginner astrophotographers it also means watching all your videos I can find. You have been such an inspiration.

    • @suspats7868
      @suspats7868 Před 3 lety +3

    • @rooftopastronomer2697
      @rooftopastronomer2697 Před 3 lety +1

      Hey old man. Don't respond/do what these spam replies from bots tell you to.

    • @TheWhaddeva
      @TheWhaddeva Před 3 lety +3

      Go Ian, all the best and enjoy :-)

    • @thiy4gu
      @thiy4gu Před 2 lety +3

      Good luck man👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @Doctoberfest
      @Doctoberfest Před 2 lety +2

      You've been at it for a year how are things going?

  • @aemyttyastro
    @aemyttyastro Před 5 lety +247

    For Me Being A Beginner 11 Year Old Astrophotographer Means Watching Your Videos A Lot,! Keep Up The Great Work Trevor!

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety +57

      That's why I keep making them. Thank you for letting me know! All the best and clear skies my friend

    • @ant9944
      @ant9944 Před 5 lety +7

      AstroBackyard currently starting out untracked. It is helpful to learn processing, although I hope to buy a small tracking mount for my camera soon. (It’s just a Nikon d90 and a 70-300mm zoom lens)

    • @gamechecktvbauloewe
      @gamechecktvbauloewe Před 5 lety +60

      11 Years old? My hope in the upcoming generation is restored.

    • @saahilsinha5558
      @saahilsinha5558 Před 5 lety +10

      AE Mytty yeah do that not Fortnite

    • @AV_204
      @AV_204 Před 4 lety +6

      AE Mytty I started when I was 11 years old too

  • @hotflashfoto
    @hotflashfoto Před 3 lety +1

    I watched this a year ago and here I am watching it again. I wish I could give it a second like!
    I'm slowly getting my stuff together and trying to find opportunities to get out more. What I lack at this point is a laptop for auto-guiding. I really appreciate the patience you exhibit toward your craft, and the way you explain things for noobs like me.

  • @AncalimeNL
    @AncalimeNL Před 3 lety +4

    1:19 shooting deep sky objects using 'beginner' level gear. Oke, I am interested. I am a beginner. Ffwd to 2.09. What do we see: an expensive tripod, a computerized goto mount with hand controller. A 73 mm apochromatic William Optics Zenithstar 73 refractor telescope with F/5.9 as main scope, paired with a smaller William Optics as a guidescope (with camera of course. A Canon 60 DA (optimised for astrophotography) a dew heater and a laptop. Oke Trevor, I really like you videos, I really do. They are quality, and it's videos like this that made me pick up my old astronomy hobby in times like this, but, I really have to say this: This is by far not a beginner setup. Yes it is a setup I am interested in for sure, but it is really really really not a beginners setup. The amount of cost going into this is huge! I am financially good, but I can not buy this in one go. I am more looking towards a redcat 51 with a skygyuider pro, a good tripod and some other stuff. Even that combination is just south of 2000 bucks. No, I disagree with you in this video. That's not to say that as I mentioned already I think you are a great guy, make great tutorials and videos, but in this case, you have missed the ball...... sorry...

  • @hossome1
    @hossome1 Před 5 lety +24

    Still just dreaming about getting into AstroPhoto, but I value the time and effort in putting together this video. Thx for the work!

  • @Wheeljack678
    @Wheeljack678 Před 4 lety

    I've been dabbling in Astrophotography for barely a couple of years. I learn something new with each of your videos, keep. I really appreciate you "dumbing it down" (in lack of a better term) and over-explaining what perhaps is considered of many to be basic minor details. It really does help.

  • @bradley8418
    @bradley8418 Před 5 lety +1

    Don’t fix the counter weights. It’s iconic to Astro backyard. You show real results from humble beginnings and prove that one doesn’t need to break the bank to produce great photographs of space. Keep up the great work.

  • @michaeloberly6129
    @michaeloberly6129 Před 4 lety +4

    Thanks for doing this very detailed video. It's hard for me to believe how far astrophotography has come since I was dabbling in it 30+ years ago, and it's stunning the results that you and others get from your back yards in city environments. You have what looks like a perfect yard to set up this stuff, anyway. (aside from the mosquitoes -- always a peril of this activity) If I decide one day to seriously get back into this, I'll definitely be using the instructional material you provide here.

  • @WaltherMekkie
    @WaltherMekkie Před 5 lety

    The ending of this video sums it all up perfectly. The sky after sunset, how your busy with it all and the results. And a perfect piece of music along with it. Even my 20 month old daughter is watching it with me...hope she will have the astrovirus as well someday 🙂

  • @lyndonvickery2589
    @lyndonvickery2589 Před 4 lety +5

    Coming across your videos has brought me back to the night skies.. Having had a 6" reflector of somewhat dubious Russian origins many years ago just visual observing and showing the 'kids' another view of our world was always awesome. Now having seen what you can do from 'your own back yard' with the advances in technology I am again hooked. As usual Trevor a great video. As an aged newcomer some details on physical connections between pieces of kit would be useful .
    Keep up the great work

  • @marcagostini3051
    @marcagostini3051 Před 5 lety +9

    18:30 I think I can tell you what's happening there: Electroluminescent foil or LED based Flat field generators have a certain frequency, usually about 100 Hz; If your shutter speed (like 1/1600s) is faster than this frequency, you will get rolling shutter effects in your flatframes. The way to mitigate this is to lower your flatfield generators light output by putting some sheets of white paper between the panel and the scope so you can take flats at shutter speeds longer than let's say at least 1/50s. Maybe you could get rid of that Artifact that way.
    Would be very glad if I could help you, as I learned most of my skills from this Channel :)

    • @13_cmi
      @13_cmi Před 2 lety

      It’s definitely there with electronic shutter. But with a dslr or mirrorless camera shutter it’s much less. I don’t even think you can see it.

  • @dslrnightsky
    @dslrnightsky Před 5 lety +5

    I’m looking forward to watching this! Keep up the excellent work! 😀🔭

    • @83jbbentley
      @83jbbentley Před 5 lety +2

      DSLR Night Sky love your vids!

    • @dslrnightsky
      @dslrnightsky Před 5 lety

      josh bentley83 Thank you for the note. I’m glad you enjoyed the videos. I’m grateful to CZcamsrs like Astrobackyard, they are a inspiration and an excellent resource for all of us. Best regards! 😀🔭

  • @Lessgetbrootal
    @Lessgetbrootal Před 5 lety +13

    This channel is amazing. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us Trevor, it's inspiring

  • @stevefpv7249
    @stevefpv7249 Před 5 lety

    Hey Trevor! my first passion was viewing thru my Celestron C-90 way back in the 80's. Have a Sky-Mentor 10" dob in the garage that I just dusted off after about 15 years thanks to stumbling onto your vids. Re-realize how much I love it:) Thank you!

  • @simonworger
    @simonworger Před 5 lety +4

    I followed some it last night but it was quite late in the UK so just finished watching the rest. Love the final image, great colours and no noise. I have a few CMOS cameras, cooled and non cooled but I still like to use the dslr.

  • @MilkyMatterCore
    @MilkyMatterCore Před 3 lety

    all I can say is thanks! Waiting on my first setup to be delivered now. And I've poured through so many of your videos for either education or inspiration! The APT tool is gonna be my best friend. Automate all the things!

  • @dianagalaxy7928
    @dianagalaxy7928 Před 4 lety +2

    A Red-Shouldered Hawk! They are so beautiful. Oh, astrophotography, wonderful work and demo.

  • @RagMama123
    @RagMama123 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent informative video. Thanks.

  • @JackMack465
    @JackMack465 Před 2 lety

    All I can say is, "wow". The final image left me speechless.

  • @radpunch
    @radpunch Před 5 lety

    Watching this while my scope is outside imaging the Iris nebula, the first time I mustered up the confidence to leave my equipment alone outside lol. I wouldn't be doing this if it wasn't for you Trevor, so thank you for introducing me to this wonderful hobby.

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety

      Thank you Jordan! Yes, I know that feeling! Cheers

  • @briannichols118
    @briannichols118 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for the video. Just a minor technical note for folks using a DSLR camera with a fixed display (doesn't angle outward)--try a DSLR controller app for your phone/tablet to get almost full control of the camera including image viewing from the device. In addition, if the camera doesn't have WIFI (camera/tablet attaches via USB cable) the right DSLR controller app will turn the attached device into a hot spot to transfer camera control and imaging to a remote device. Battery consuming but handy.

    • @edwardoliver2086
      @edwardoliver2086 Před 5 lety

      Does the built in hdmi work as well

    • @briannichols118
      @briannichols118 Před 5 lety

      @@edwardoliver2086
      If I understand the question correctly, sadly I've never had the need to view HDMI output from my camera while controlling it (via USB) from an external device, therefore don't know whether HDMI output is affected.

    • @edwardoliver2086
      @edwardoliver2086 Před 5 lety

      Thanks anyway

    • @briannichols118
      @briannichols118 Před 5 lety

      @@edwardoliver2086
      For slaps and giggles I researched the question using my ancient and still unmodded** Canon 7D used primarily for astrophotography. Experiments showed that simply connecting the USB output of the camera to a live device (tablet, phone, PC) shut down HDMI output and none of the apps I use to control the camera both in still picture and movie mode via direct USB connect to mobile devices and a couple of PCs changed that.
      This seems consistent with a footnote to page 177 of the manual for the Canon 7D that I finally stumbled across; namely, "The camera's terminal and terminal cannot be used at the same time".
      Therefore, using both USB and HDMI outputs simultaneously appears impossible with my setup and a cursory Internet search didn't turn up any claims by someone who had managed it with any setup. Bottom line, a null Internet search means little and since it appears to be a camera issue we can't rule out there may be a brand out there that can do it.
      **remove the IR/UV filter between the sensor and the optics of a stock DSLR camera

  • @wardastrophotography5098
    @wardastrophotography5098 Před 5 lety +2

    Man.... Your videos are extremely informative and helpful and very enjoyable to watch, I really appreciate the hard work that goes into them and the quality is second to none! 🙌🔭👏

  • @user-cp2oq6hd1x
    @user-cp2oq6hd1x Před 5 lety

    Everytime i see you with a light shining on you im like.. How is he not swatting mosquitos!
    Also having 2 little dogs myself I really enjoy seeing your bond with Rudy, dogs are THE BEST!

  • @ccasche5088
    @ccasche5088 Před 3 lety +1

    You have a gift! Thank you for getting so many of us and me started.

  • @niklasonne2509
    @niklasonne2509 Před 5 lety +3

    Great video, and great results Trevor! I bought my first telescope recently and am starting to get into astrophoography. Your videos are always inspiring and it is nice to see some videos for us newbies as well. Kepp up the good work!

  • @Sergeant_Nugget
    @Sergeant_Nugget Před 5 lety

    I am buying my first home really soon and I really want to give Astrophotography a try. I bought my first DSLR camera and trying to get use to it. I am hoping to buy a telescope by next year and start giving this a go. This video will help me out. Even saving it to get back to this easily.

  • @kevinf9423
    @kevinf9423 Před rokem

    Absolutely incredible info! Thank you so much! Great pic of the bird too! ☺

  • @Gigglesgirl2000
    @Gigglesgirl2000 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for suggesting to enjoy the view and getting to know the sky first. I just starting watching your great tips. I wondered if you ever just enjoyed viewing the sky. You did your lens to one eye time. I am currently happy finding simple things I have not seen before and taking pictures of my new discoveries with my cell phone. But I want better quality. Got a little Nikon. So not yet a astrophotographer. Just want to remember that enjoyable moment. Thanks again Trevor!!

  • @AstroBenni
    @AstroBenni Před 5 měsíci

    really cool videos Trevor ! I really enjoy looking them. i like the way you explain things ! I´m quite new in Astrofotographie but with your videos there is no way not to make it :) Thanks buddy !

  • @LysdexicGamer
    @LysdexicGamer Před 4 lety +1

    Literal chills at the end. Great work!

  • @patrickwynne6666
    @patrickwynne6666 Před 5 lety +4

    fantastic video clip!! i am just beginning to understand how it's work!! thanks mate :)

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety

      That was exactly what I was hoping to hear! Thank you!

  • @Michael-Gill
    @Michael-Gill Před 5 lety +1

    Great video. For the bugs I recommend a mic cover and a decent fan a few feet away. Then noise cancel. Mosquitoes are weak fliers so they get blown away in the air stream.

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety

      Great point about the mic cover - thats why I couldn't run one while filming - Thanks Michael!

  • @livintolearn7053
    @livintolearn7053 Před 3 lety +20

    POV: Getting the slight feeling of being called broke while watching the video.

    • @dreamsandmonsters
      @dreamsandmonsters Před 2 lety

      "Hey! Moon with a zoom lens looks nice. Let's get a telescope.
      Oh my! Deeps-sky objects... nebulas. AWESOME.
      Ok, a motorized mount is a must have. Let me close my eyes while I press "Buy now".
      Mhhh... blurry. I need a shutter-release cable.
      Looks like I could use a filter for light pollution.
      Photoshop plugin.
      Woa! The Veil! Wait, it's blurry? 5mins exposures... I could use a Polemaster to help.
      New SSD for laptop.
      Nop, not good enough. Let's see... so, I need a new finder and... another camera?!
      How about a dew heater..."
      Today
      Looks at the savings account... in 1 month huh.
      In 1 month
      Dear Santa Claus...

  • @fusion-music
    @fusion-music Před 4 lety

    Love your "mistakes" video and this dslr basics. Glad you are seeing it as important to cover these things.

  • @zhymm45
    @zhymm45 Před 5 lety +3

    Trevor, I really love your videos. You provide a great service to the astrophotography community.
    Just one thing (lol) - as a former astronomy teacher and planetarium director (34 years, I'm retired now), sidereal has four syllables, not two (si·​der·e·​al | \ sī-ˈdir-ē-əl ). Blame the teacher in me for finding your pronunciation a bit jarring, :P
    Keep up the good work.

  • @maurizioangelo64
    @maurizioangelo64 Před 3 lety

    I love your feeling for the nature, for the sky, I love too the sunset, that thst you show to us was so beautiful!! Thanks man!! All the pictures of the sky are very very nice!!
    Have you a great holiday!!

  • @DirbyOne
    @DirbyOne Před 4 lety

    Wow!! Just wow! Well worth watching all the way through.

  • @LifeIsPlug
    @LifeIsPlug Před 5 lety +2

    You should do a video on setting your polar scope. I had trouble with this and still dont think I perfected it but would be a good video for beginners.

  • @MattsAstrophotography
    @MattsAstrophotography Před 5 lety +1

    Looks great Trevor and thanks for these videos, you have helped me alot over the years so never quit making the beginner to intermediate videos with a ton of info.

  • @emanuelacostagutierrez2255

    Your videos always motivate me to try new techniques
    I'm gonna start to save money to buy that APO telescope

  • @taine5883
    @taine5883 Před 5 lety +18

    Getting my HEQ5 next week, can’t wait!
    Clear skies

    • @christophergemeinhardt3404
      @christophergemeinhardt3404 Před 5 lety

      taine that’s a great mount. Great choice! Mine works perfectly out of the box and I can easily achieve 900s+ guided subframes.

    • @taine5883
      @taine5883 Před 5 lety

      @@christophergemeinhardt3404 Great to hear :)

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety

      It's such a great mount. Mine's been to hell and back (frigid winters - blistering summers, travel) and keeps on ticking.

    • @taine5883
      @taine5883 Před 5 lety +1

      AstroBackyard sounds like I made the right choice, thanks Trevor 😁

  • @cliveroberts415
    @cliveroberts415 Před 5 lety +2

    I use the live view function with the crosshairs in APT for alignment, much easier than the DSLR screen.

  • @BKBees
    @BKBees Před 5 lety

    The dust trail is so cool on that image. I thought the cocoon nebula was too small for my 80mm but seeing this makes me want to give it a shot.

  • @YTMegiddo
    @YTMegiddo Před 4 lety +3

    haha, "Staying put like a boss!" I love it.

  • @andyhello23
    @andyhello23 Před 4 lety

    Amazing man, what an average person can do with this stuff today.
    Just found your vids, and great to see someone trying to help out those beginners.
    I always think, one of the most beautiful sights in nature, is a clear nights sky. You have a great hobby there, and nice to see how much you appreciate all this.

  • @eightmilesupwind9030
    @eightmilesupwind9030 Před 2 lety

    OMG. This video is SOOOOO good! Thanks!

  • @JohnCollins-qo2bb
    @JohnCollins-qo2bb Před 4 lety

    Thanks very much, Trevor, for the very clear and well done Videos. I have 50 years photography experience and one week in Astro, but I'm feeling the passion and looking forward to learning with your help!! Best in All from outside of Boston!

  • @johnr1960
    @johnr1960 Před 5 lety

    As always, another great, educational video to help all of us that are just starting out. Thanks Trevor.

  • @davidmurren4644
    @davidmurren4644 Před 5 lety

    Trevor, is that an Artesky flats panel? I have one, their nice! Tip: dont take flats with it during the day. The ambient daylight can be stronger than the output of the panel, depending on the voltage, and can light up the opaque material in the panel causing strange gradients on the flats. I found this out myself when trying to take daytime flats with the panel. My mount and scope was by a window and my flats were brighter on one side than the other. You need to use the panel either at night or in an environment where the panels output is stronger than ambient.

  • @DonGoddardAllAboutPaint
    @DonGoddardAllAboutPaint Před 5 lety +1

    Another spectacular video and a great tutorial as well. However, you're about 3 weeks too late. LOL I've chugged through most of this using your other videos as guides and enjoyed it. I would suggest others do the same, even if there is a huge portion of what you need here. The individual videos go more in detail and you get to see more of Trevor's images. Great job, Trevor!

  • @scottcameron393
    @scottcameron393 Před 5 lety +1

    Glad to see some beginner videos. Thanks!

  • @richardgrudzien2798
    @richardgrudzien2798 Před 5 lety +1

    A great video, so helpful for those like me who are just starting out with guided DSLR +telescope astrophotography. Much appreciated, Trevor!

  • @davegibson6604
    @davegibson6604 Před 5 lety

    Good video for fairly advanced equipment, but I'm a very basic equipment owner:
    130 mm reflector on a cg3 mount with a clock drive, and a Nikon D7100 camera.
    It's not very sophisticated and it was a lot of work to get any kind of reasonable results, but I didn't have to take out a second mortgage to try my hand at astrophotography.
    I just wish there had been a video on how to use gear at this unsophisticated level.
    Topics like equipment setup, manual polar alignment (no polar scope), and how to navigate the sky and find targets (no goto controller) would be very useful for those of us on a limited budget.

  • @cdkslakkend5742
    @cdkslakkend5742 Před 4 lety

    Enjoying learning from your experience. Very excited.

  • @kevinashley478
    @kevinashley478 Před 2 lety

    Wow! Great video and as an absolute beginner, this answered some of the questions I had in a comment on another video of yours. Just a couple here:
    How do you power the rig when you are not at home?
    Does the software save the images to your laptop vs on the camera card?
    Once you are polar aligned and tracking, why would you need to use the autoguider for sharp stars? Once you are focused, polar aligned, and tracking at sidereal rate, why would your images show trailing or any tracking errors that would require autoguiding?
    I hope I am not being a pain in the ass with all my questions. You are an absolute inspiration and it is great and motivating to see someone who is teaching others that is as passionate about the subject as you are. You should be very proud of what you are doing. Thank you.

  • @slyknezz6862
    @slyknezz6862 Před 4 lety +18

    How to Astrophotography.
    Step 1: Bother wife!
    Step 2: Get yelled at off camera.
    Step 3: Goto dog for acceptance!
    😂

  • @calleywilkinson2371
    @calleywilkinson2371 Před 5 lety

    I should have added what my set up is, Canon 700D, Skywatcher Evostar 80ED & Field Flattener, EQ6 Pro, 50mm Guide scope.
    Just setting up, have not started taking photos yet, hopefully shortly. Thank you for all your videos i have learned a lot, which i will be putting into practice shortly Calley Wilkinson

  • @TrickshotSchuppi
    @TrickshotSchuppi Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much for this video. I learned a lot.

  • @hkanderful
    @hkanderful Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing this great video!!

  • @Astro-George
    @Astro-George Před 5 lety +61

    For bugs I use a thermacell and find it keeps the bugs away.

  • @shawnewaltonify
    @shawnewaltonify Před 5 lety

    This is high quality content you are producing. Really well done. The Cocoon Nebula is very beautiful. Thank-you as always! I am going to focus on observing for now and get a dobsonian, and maybe come back to astro-photography. I'll be watching here.

  • @iancoates2506
    @iancoates2506 Před 3 lety

    as a very beginner I wish I had someone like you nearby to get one to one information from

  • @eirikkittelsen9787
    @eirikkittelsen9787 Před 5 lety

    Another great video Trevor! Have just purchased all equipment needed. ASI Air, asi 183mm pro, skywatcher eq6 r pro and all required filters. Now just waiting for nights to get dark here at 60 degrees north in Norway 🇳🇴!

  • @cruikshank
    @cruikshank Před 5 lety

    Thank you again for an excellent video that is informative & entertaining. Your video production gets better with each release.

  • @iridikim
    @iridikim Před 5 lety

    If you push the up and down, or the left and right button (or down and up, right and left) your scope moves fast in a direction.
    Tip of the week!

  • @kevinlamberg9724
    @kevinlamberg9724 Před 11 měsíci

    Very helpful video-thank you!

  • @amp2amp800
    @amp2amp800 Před 3 lety

    Very clear and complete. Been looking for this for a while. Thanks! I thought your final piece of advice was going to be.... insect repellant!

  • @azdh85224
    @azdh85224 Před 5 lety

    Great video - great advice - thanks so much for sharing your dslr image capture info and knowledge. Btw, nice to see your wife, and Rudy - and your yard looks fantastic. Another Spectacular image! 👍🏻📷🔭

  • @curtishustace
    @curtishustace Před 3 lety

    Im just starting out. This video is very interesting, but looks really advanced. haha. Im going down that rabbit hole pretty fast! Sheese!

  • @neilsmith5883
    @neilsmith5883 Před rokem

    excellent video, just what i need to help me decide what gear to start off with.

  • @richardcranium5839
    @richardcranium5839 Před 3 lety

    biggest problem with the german equatorial mount is objects close to the meridian. in order to track those at some point you have to do "the flip"

  • @microreniassance2929
    @microreniassance2929 Před 6 měsíci

    Dude, run inside and get some DEET. You're making me itch, just watching you😅 Honestly great videos. And thanks for putting them out there. Lots of us benefit greatly from them.

  • @sleeplessingc
    @sleeplessingc Před rokem

    great, great video. top notch. A beginner tutorial on the software would be cool. mention the things that the other guys don't say anything about.

  • @jalenab2374
    @jalenab2374 Před 5 lety

    I absolutely adore your videos!! I LOVEEEEE astronomy and I have a telescope but it’s not meant for deep sky. I’m saving up a telescope and I watch your video to know what the best thing is to get I’m thinking of getting the setup you have in this video!! I love love loveeeeee the picture you take they’re breathtaking!!!!!! Keep up the good work! 😁😁😁

  • @benscrobunges
    @benscrobunges Před 5 lety +1

    Nice Championship T shirt Trevor, flying the colors. Congrats to the Raptors, i guess your wife was filming a raptor, very popular type of bird right now in your area.

    • @AstroBackyard
      @AstroBackyard  Před 5 lety

      Ha! You noticed.. I was waiting for that! 😊

  • @philipgelsheimer5705
    @philipgelsheimer5705 Před 5 lety

    Hey Trevor, great video as I am glad you went back to reintroduce your old equipment and techniques 'cause I am exactly where you were. As I am just 'down the road' from you and part of the Halton Outdoor Group, I can share that when it comes to those mosquitoes I live by 'Great Outdoors' by Watkins. You can get it at a dedicated Hiker shop or even on Amazon. The bugs go from driving me batty to 'what bugs?'. Cheers!

  • @FAMUCHOLLY
    @FAMUCHOLLY Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks Trevor. Hey; how about a video explain every step, every piece of equipment and software you use for astrophotography... for absolute beginners. You know; where each aspect is described as if the listener is eager to learn but CLUELESS.
    Thanks!

  • @abramians1
    @abramians1 Před 5 lety +1

    As always, great information! Love the final image!!!

  • @BeautifulL1fe
    @BeautifulL1fe Před 3 lety

    Thank you for this very informative video..

  • @paulgarrod1066
    @paulgarrod1066 Před 3 lety

    You are clearly very expert in this field and your final shot was breath-taking, stunning, beautiful and amazing. Sadly I don't feel any more knowledgeable after watching your video, in fact the reverse. Not your fault as clearly I need to study hard basic basics!!!!!!!!! Many thanks and sorry about the biting bugs

  • @sleeplessingc
    @sleeplessingc Před rokem

    also, a vid for folks on a tight budget would be great too. correction just saw the posted vid on your budget rig.

  • @AstroDenny
    @AstroDenny Před 5 lety

    Hi Trevor- I use the same rig you showed here for 80% of my imaging but I started using IndigoSky to run everything, It drives my camera, mount, and guiding from a Raspberry Pi and makes an ad-hoc wi-fi network to remote control it-- No wires to trip over between your gear and the computer! I'd love to hear your take on that software and maybe do a review? Keep up the great work. You are a huge influencer in the astro community.

    • @NG-VQ37VHR
      @NG-VQ37VHR Před 5 lety

      Dennis Ruzeski I have a couple pi 3b+’s and an Arduino uno laying around and had been wondering if I could set them up to handle guiding.
      You wouldn’t happen to have a link to any of the resource material you used to get your setup going, would you? Thanks.

  • @tigercloud6945
    @tigercloud6945 Před 4 lety

    I'm glad I stumbled upon your site please keep it up it is very helpful.

  • @smellow5338
    @smellow5338 Před 5 lety +25

    2:35 my heart stopped --- thought i got a dead pixel :D (his face)

  • @firemountain8481
    @firemountain8481 Před 5 lety +1

    hey brother love your work thanks for helping us all out

  • @Broccoli_32
    @Broccoli_32 Před 5 lety

    Great video Trevor, One of your best!

  • @ReeWrayOutdoors
    @ReeWrayOutdoors Před 5 lety +2

    Really enjoyed the music track you used with the final image sequence. Great match! And excellent information!

  • @Ericrbo
    @Ericrbo Před rokem

    Thanks Trevor.

  • @merbella4201
    @merbella4201 Před 3 lety

    Hi, thanks for an awesome video. I am busy researching what I should invest in to start in astrophotography and your videos and website have been refreshing compared to some tech-heavy videos/websites that I've looked at. You explain things very well. I know I have a ways to go but I feel better informed with every article/video of yours. Thank you.

  • @aysolar
    @aysolar Před 4 lety

    Wow - I had no idea! Thanks for sharing your passion

  • @lmo3154
    @lmo3154 Před 5 lety

    great video using a cheaper set up just what us beginners need keep up the good work

  • @wayneparker9782
    @wayneparker9782 Před 5 lety +1

    It nice to see you again....i have watch other videos when you are useing a DLSR camera. Why do you unscrew or screw the camera and the flattner on together instead of using the adapter for the camera. That way you would just click the camera on or off the flattner.

  • @markattardo
    @markattardo Před 5 lety

    Good timing! Just dug my scope out and need to start learning again.

  • @antdx316
    @antdx316 Před 4 lety

    I thought having stars in your landscape w/ a fast lens wide-open is astrophotography but this is real astrophotography.

  • @michael-mvtd
    @michael-mvtd Před 5 lety +5

    Love your channel... Very 'meaty' with useful details! I just have an old 8" dob and a few eyepieces but this gets me thinking of new stuff. Having watched a few of your other vids, you clearly have a rather large $$$ investment in gear. I'd appreciate a video of recommended gear (mount, scope, etc) at mid and high price points for astrophotography. (I don't think there's any cheap entry point!)

  • @ME2K23
    @ME2K23 Před 5 lety

    Thanks very much Trevor! Really appreciate this type of tutorial. Indeed, very few of us have the knowledge, let along the gear but I can bet many of us want to know what can be done with the basic gear they own, or could get as a startup kit. 👍🌟🔭📷

  • @LiveseyMD
    @LiveseyMD Před 5 lety +5

    When you're talking about a "beginner level gear" its highly subjective. The mount itself costs more than I spent on my telescope including all the stuff that I bought after.

    • @Flinty88
      @Flinty88 Před 5 lety +3

      Ya this guy tends to do that. Pretty sure he doesn't have kids so has money burning a hole in his pocket

    • @Mr.SisterFisster
      @Mr.SisterFisster Před 4 lety +7

      My version of "Beginner" is mounting my camera to my tripod...

    • @LiveseyMD
      @LiveseyMD Před 4 lety +1

      @@Mr.SisterFisster This will definitely work.

    • @TheAnhydrite
      @TheAnhydrite Před 4 lety +3

      The cost of entry into Deep Sky Astrophotography is higher than most people want to pay. There really isn't cheaper gear that gets the job done. Sure you can use sub par mounts that cost half of what his cost...but then you end up with half your data being useless. Also...the mount should be your most expensive astrophoto item normally.

    • @LiveseyMD
      @LiveseyMD Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheAnhydrite I know prices, but when you're talking about "beginner level", you should probably mention that it is expensive hobby. Also, I think, it should be explained why do I need this expensive setup.

  • @joryodom4923
    @joryodom4923 Před 4 lety +2

    “A vicious beast” is hilarious! 😂

  • @denodan
    @denodan Před 3 lety

    To me DSO astrophotography is an extremely high learning curve, so prefer planetary imaging, so much easier. All the same, love your videos and Informative

  • @ibrahimabdoel9601
    @ibrahimabdoel9601 Před 5 lety +1

    Amazing work as always
    Keep it up!