How to Plan a Photo of the Next Full Moon with a Building

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  • čas přidĂĄn 16. 07. 2024
  • 👉 To start planning your photos: www.photopills.com/
    Learn how to plan a photo of the next Full Moon with PhotoPills to the last detail. Including planning the field of view (framing) and the depth of field, so you get, in focus, both your subject and the Moon.
    TIME INDEX
    00:00 Introduction
    00:56 Set the Full Moon date
    01:46 Place Red Pin next to your subject
    02:26 Place Black Pin on subject
    03:21 Find the initial shooting spot and shooting time
    06:26 Adjust the shooting spot and shooting time
    09:20 Check Moon size
    11:00 Plan field of view and depth of field
    13:44 Check natural light
    15:12 Save and share the plan
    15:53 Final words
    --------------------------------------------
    PHOTOGRAPHY GUIDE MENTIONED:
    - Moon Photography guide:
    www.photopills.com/articles/m...
    - 15+ Photography guides collection:
    www.photopills.com/articles
    --------------------------------------------
    PHOTOS PLANNED BY PHOTOPILLERS
    / photopills
    SUBMIT YOUR PHOTOS (PHOTOPILLS AWARDS)
    www.photopills.com/awards
    --------------------------------------------
    INSPIRATION
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    PHOTOGRAPHY FUNDAMENTALS
    - Understanding Natural Light: Golden Hour, Blue Hour and Twilights
    • Understanding Natural ...
    - Understanding Depth of Field (DoF) and How to Calculate it
    • Understanding Depth of...
    - Understanding the Hyperfocal Distance (and How to Calculate it)
    • Understanding the Hype...
    - Learn How To Focus at the Hyperfocal Distance in 1 Minute!
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    MILKY WAY PHOTOGRAPHY
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    - How to Calculate the Milky Way Photography Exposure Time
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    MOON PHOTOGRAPHY
    - How to Plan a Photo of the Next Full Moon with a Building
    • How to Plan a Photo of...
    - How to Photograph the Moon with Foreground
    • How to Photograph the ... ​
    - Moon Photography Masterclass with Jennifer Khordi
    • Moon Photography Class...
    - Photographing a Full Moon Silhouette from Another Galaxy
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    SUNSET & SUNRISE PHOTOGRAPHY
    - How to Plan a Powerful Sunset Photo | When You Know the Date
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    - Photographing the Sun setting through the natural arch of Es Pont d’En Gil
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    LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
    - Landscape Photography with Nigel Danson
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    - How to Edit Your Landscape Photography in Photoshop with Sean Bagshaw
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    LONG EXPOSURE PHOTOGRAPHY WITH LENS FILTERS
    - Calculating Long Exposure Times Using ND Filters
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    SEASCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY
    - Seascape Photography Masterclass with Francesco Gola
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    METEOR SHOWER PHOTOGRAPHY
    - How to Plan Any Meteor Shower Photo You Imagine
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    SOLAR ECLIPSE PHOTOGRAPHY
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    LUNAR ECLIPSE PHOTOGRAPHY
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    LEARN PHOTOPILLS
    - Photography Planning Masterclass with PhotoPills app
    • Photography Planning C...
    - How to Enable and Use the PhotoPills Widgets
    • How to Enable and Use ...
    - How to move the Red Pin of the Planner
    • How to move the Red Pi...
    - How to Save, Share and Import Plans and Locations with PhotoPills
    • How to Save, Share and...
    - Mastering the Load button of the Planner
    • Mastering the Load but...
    - Calibrating the Augmented Reality Views (AR)
    • Calibrating the Augmen...
    - Understanding the Map Buttons of the Planner
    • Understanding the Map ...
  • ZĂĄbava

Komentáře • 193

  • @artistwithcameras
    @artistwithcameras Před rokem +2

    Insane that this is $10. You are a genius. Is easily pay $100 for this app.

  • @trystwithlight
    @trystwithlight Před 3 lety +3

    After I bought photopills a long time back, this is when I actually learnt the actual planning (my laziness). This is excellent explanation. Now on to planning.

  • @ericvanhorn7986
    @ericvanhorn7986 Před 4 lety +7

    So nice, it seems you’ve thought of and included everything we need. Great job!

  • @salsam07
    @salsam07 Před 4 lety +2

    Amazing, love the way you explained. having PhotoPill from long time without knowing it has this many features ;) thanks for sharing.

  • @geoffchatfield1160
    @geoffchatfield1160 Před 3 lety +1

    I am inspired to get started with your app! You have created a truly comprehensive set of videos, written tutorials and practical examples that I have started to work my way through. I look forward to putting the theory into practice on the Mornington Peninsula, near Melbourne, Australia. Well done!

  • @aashirwadtripathy1113
    @aashirwadtripathy1113 Před 4 lety +2

    It's so cool that you divided the timeline into parts for easy access to the parts I like to view🔥🔥👍🏻

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety

      Thanks so much Aashirwad. Work Smarter not Harder! 😜

  • @fulinfoong5890
    @fulinfoong5890 Před 4 lety +1

    Well explain in clear simple language. An excellent guide for shooting the moon.

  • @KevinPhillipssb
    @KevinPhillipssb Před 4 lety +1

    Another excellent 'how to' video! Thank you for doing these as they are really good practical examples.

  • @Stillfilm1
    @Stillfilm1 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you. You explain it all so well.

  • @stamford70
    @stamford70 Před 4 lety +1

    Great descriptive video as always Rafael

  • @f.5233
    @f.5233 Před 3 lety +4

    You guys are simply great. I can't believe one gets so much with such a small investment.
    Kudos!

  • @oldad73
    @oldad73 Před 4 lety +1

    Demonstrating once again the power of PhotoPils. The only bit left to do, apart from taking the shot, is to ensure you can actually see the subject from the red-pin spot. It might be a bit hard in NYC to have a clear view of the Empire State from the NJ shoreline.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you David! The better you know the location the better. But in this case I'd recommend you to use google street view to have a better idea of it.

  • @MrMingyau
    @MrMingyau Před 4 lety +1

    wow, thanks for answering my question that i emailed you about! this is so great. very comprehensive. your app is the best!

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety

      Thanks so much Ming!

    • @MrMingyau
      @MrMingyau Před 4 lety

      is there a way to toggle between the moon and sun height with the black pin?

  • @BogacErkan
    @BogacErkan Před 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    Such an amazing software. I am so happy being your customer and I am so glad to see the effort behind this. Longing for the desktop version, though. Thank you!

  • @benbeaup8557
    @benbeaup8557 Před 12 dny +1

    absolutely awesome !! thanx a lot !!!!

  • @tomersi
    @tomersi Před 3 lety

    I got an amazing photo of the moon right behind the Empire State Building last night (October 1st, 2020) thanks to this awesome tutorial. Thank you so much! You're amazing!!! PhotoPills puts us in the right place at the right time :)

    • @Epicfail911
      @Epicfail911 Před 3 lety

      hello, would you willing to share the location you shot from in jersey?

    • @tomersi
      @tomersi Před 3 lety

      @@Epicfail911 Hi Carl. Sure. It was right by where "Amanda Bananas" ice cream is. You can Google it.
      Notice that the location changes based on the date/time you're taking the photo so the app really shows you exactly where to be.
      I got to the location the app showed me an hour early, and then I turned the app on and walked to the best exact location. I hope this helped!

  • @rodneytopor1846
    @rodneytopor1846 Před 3 lety +1

    Great tutorial. Thanks!

  • @nevadaxtube
    @nevadaxtube Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you!!!

  • @macsprotte1436
    @macsprotte1436 Před rokem +1

    Great! What a phantastic piece of software that is.

  • @alisonfairley5444
    @alisonfairley5444 Před 4 lety +1

    Fabulous advice once again - thank you :-)

  • @nueschi
    @nueschi Před 4 lety

    Nice, thank you!

  • @gavinjames4066
    @gavinjames4066 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent tutorial, thank you. I’m inspired to attempt a legendary Full Moon Photo or two this Friday... fingers crossed!

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety +1

      Plan&Pray!

    • @user-sf5bt8eb4y
      @user-sf5bt8eb4y Před 4 lety

      ​@@PhotoPills Thanks PhotoPills for this clutch video on the moon. I was actually going around youtube searching for moon planning video for this friday's Moonshot. My first time shooting the moon and first time fully utilizing the such a comprehensive application. Just a feedback, maybe add the night AR function when you are at location (personally my favorite feature to try to predict and visualize the upcoming moonshot )
      From my side of earth, it seems like the moon elevation is really high with 60+ degrees and height from blackpin of 1.2km, I think i might faced an issue here. I tried shifting around the different timing but seems like thats the best i can do.

  • @HaiNguyen-kv1ho
    @HaiNguyen-kv1ho Před rokem +1

    Awesome! I like it.

  • @TheSaumon15
    @TheSaumon15 Před rokem +1

    Very good thanks

  • @user-ws1zt4lj5g
    @user-ws1zt4lj5g Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks

  • @kelv52
    @kelv52 Před 3 lety +2

    Raffi thank you so much for all the tuition you do its so helpful, but I really wish that it were possible to roll out a desktop version, as most planning would be done from home in any case, and the mobile used when not if that was available, I am absolutely sure there would be so much more use of the app if there were a desktop version as well. I know there is always TPE for desktop but much prefer my Photopils

  • @bertnase9933
    @bertnase9933 Před 3 lety +1

    Best app ever. So much knowledge inside! To this video I have a question Raphael. Why is the black pin set in the middle of the ESB which is/should be ground level? To my understanding it should be set on street level?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Bert! Yew, when I say ground level I mean street level :)

    • @bertnase9933
      @bertnase9933 Před 3 lety +1

      @@PhotoPills Thanks Rafael (with f ;) Shouldn't be the pin then more downwards till the street?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Nope... place it at the center of the building if you want the Moon aligned with it. The building is a vertical structure :)

  • @basilbcf
    @basilbcf Před 3 lety +1

    I drove 4 hours to photograph the Supermoon setting behind a famous rock formation. Spent the night in a hotel and was out on location early the next morning. Unfortunately, the weather did not cooperate and the moon was completely obscured. Oh well, I'll try again.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      There is another one in May :)

    • @basilbcf
      @basilbcf Před 3 lety

      @@PhotoPills Cool! This time I'm only going if forecast is 100% to be decent weather! LOL

  • @adventures.less.traveled
    @adventures.less.traveled Před 3 měsĂ­ci +1

    Awesome tutorial, would love to see what the actual final shot looks like though - do you have a link to see it?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 měsĂ­ci

      I'm afraid not! But you can see many cool Moon shots on our instagram: instagram.com/photopills

  • @danc1873
    @danc1873 Před 3 lety +1

    Outstanding! Depth of field: please include f/15 as it is a typical f ratio of some refractors. Please...

  • @MattStuttardParker1
    @MattStuttardParker1 Před 4 lety +2

    Who's the muppet who downvoted this!? Incredible work dude, best app ever keep it up! :)

  • @RayDDavid
    @RayDDavid Před 3 lety +2

    I'm finally getting around to learning how to use PhotoPills. I've been watching a lot of your videos which are great. I'm planning on shooting the next full moon rising next to the Utah State Capitol in Salt Lake City. I have everything planned out, but the only thing I can't figure out how to do in PP is determining if the moon will be visible above an object that falls between the moon and my subject. In my case the Wasatch mountains fall between the capital and the moon. I know how to figure this out using the Photographer's Ephemeris so I know the moon will be visible when I want it to be, but I can't figure out how to determine this in PP.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hi Ray, the way we do it is by placing the Black Pin on the Wasatch mountains right on the moon's azimuth thin blue line. If the line turns dashed, then, the mountains hide the center of the moon. Also on Panel 2 you have the height of the center of the moon above the ground level of the black pin. And it's apparent diameter.

    • @RayDDavid
      @RayDDavid Před 3 lety

      @@PhotoPills Thanks for the quick reply. I don't ever get the blue azimuth line to be dashed even when I know the moon is below the mountains. The height of the moon in panel 2 works great though. Thanks again.

  • @ericchappuis9744
    @ericchappuis9744 Před 4 lety +4

    thanks for the video
    Couldn't it be quite "easy" for you to draw the line on the map with all position where the moon will be seen at this eight... so we can simply find the best place along the line? It seems you have every thing to compute as you use terrain elevation. You could at least do with a 15 minutes period and draw those points.... which are intersection of the line moon object-at-height and terrain?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety

      Hi Eric! Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @vitorazinheira2195
    @vitorazinheira2195 Před 3 lety +1

    Seems to easy but takes a lot time to plan and learn the App.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      It's a matter of watching the video you need for the photo you want and then practice :)

  • @MichaelF1026
    @MichaelF1026 Před 3 lety +1

    great video. I'm new to photopills and this is going to help out a lot. Is there something inside the app where it can tell you if you are standing right where you put your red pin drop at?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes! You can switch on your position on the map. Tap the (+) map button and then tap the icon with the shape of an arrowhead. A blue circle will appear on the map. Then walk till the blue circle is concentric with the spot the Red Pin digs the ground: czcams.com/video/0tZCuMgjtfM/video.html

    • @MichaelF1026
      @MichaelF1026 Před 3 lety

      @@PhotoPills this is great. Thank you so much.

  • @wdchase12
    @wdchase12 Před 4 lety +1

    I was wondering if the Moon size rule, the rule of 100, works the same in feet, as it does in meters? Or is the calculation different? Thanks for the great videos, I am trying it out tomorrow.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes! It works the same way :)

  • @erniehuang5763
    @erniehuang5763 Před 4 lety +1

    I assume you can also use this to plan to shoot the setting moon over a subject (like Jetty) over the west horizon a couple of night after the full moon (waning Gibbous moon)?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, it's the same exact workflow but using the Moonset line as a guide.

  • @CetusPaddler
    @CetusPaddler Před 4 lety +1

    Hi - thanks for this, some new features I didn't know were there! Must look again at that bit and practise. Just one question - having made your plan, you can see exactly where you should stand to take your photo(s). I'm planning a moonrise shot for Monday 3rd August and I will need to stand on a failrly featureless beach so finding my way to the exact spot is going to be difficult. Is there a way to show my current position in addition to the red pin etc? I could then walk along the beach and home in on my chosen spot. Thanks!
    By the way - Photopills is awesome, just love it and use it a lot.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety +1

      Yes! Tap the (+) button on the map, there you'll find the button you need. Here you have the info: www.photopills.com/user-guide#step5

    • @CetusPaddler
      @CetusPaddler Před 4 lety

      @@PhotoPills thanks! Just tried it, perfect for my needs.

  • @tomersi
    @tomersi Před 3 lety

    Your tutorials are phenomenal! Thank you!
    I have a question regarding elevation. Does PhotoPills take into consideration the altitude of where I'm standing/red pin? In this video, it all works well because across the Hudson I will stand at the same level as the ground floor of the Empire State. But what if I were on a rooftop or at a different height than the ground level? How does it come into play?
    Again, incredible app and explanation. Thank you!

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi! We take it into account. But only the ground level. If you are on a rooftop you'll have to manually set the building height by tapping "More > Altitudes" . You'll see you can add an offset to the altitude, this way you don't need to work out the number, just add the building height as offset.

    • @tomersi
      @tomersi Před 3 lety +1

      @@PhotoPills Perfect! I just looked at it and saw how it works. Thank you for your quick response.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      @@tomersi Thanks!!

  • @EileenODonnellPhotos
    @EileenODonnellPhotos Před 2 lety +1

    Your tutorials are great... I'm running into a problem where the menu. When I go 2 over from the full moon, I have times for blue hour and golden hour. Do you have any idea what setting might be wrong?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Eileen! I don't quite understand the issue. Could you send us an email via support@photopills.com with more details? Thank you!

    • @EileenODonnellPhotos
      @EileenODonnellPhotos Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills I just sent an email. Thank you!

  • @gerryrousseau4066
    @gerryrousseau4066 Před rokem +1

    I am confused where you placed the black pin, you mentioned placing it on the ground floor, would that not be at street level? Love Photopills!!

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před rokem +1

      Hey Gerry! yes, it's street level :)

  • @kozmoba
    @kozmoba Před 3 lety

    Loving your app and tutorials. I need help with something. In the planner I have an altitude difference of 3,579 ft with the object pin higher than the shooting position. The altitude angle though is -0.04 degrees. How is the altitude difference positive but the angle negative? angle negative because it takes into account the curvature of the earth? My two points are 82 miles apart. Thanks for all.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hi! Yes, we take into account the curvature of the Earth :)

  • @PedalPlanet
    @PedalPlanet Před 3 lety +1

    Hey Guys PhotoPills is awesome! but need some help .... I want to plan a Supermoon moon shoot with the Spinnaker tower Portsmouth UK in the foreground? but unsure how to make the most of it using PP, I believe we have a SUPERMOON 27th April ....any help appreciated keep up the great work

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Follow the same workflow I explain in this video: czcams.com/video/u8OLTsKTDwY/video.html

  • @FelixBerthelmann
    @FelixBerthelmann Před 4 lety +1

    Where it still gets complicated for me is when the height of the object and the height of the proposed point I will take the photo from are not precisely known. I guess I should measure those beforehand.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety

      Scouting is key. Also looking for images of your subject online. The more you understand the location the better of course.

    • @FelixBerthelmann
      @FelixBerthelmann Před 4 lety

      @@PhotoPills Yes. I plan to use a laser distance measurement tool to measure distance as well as the angle to the target to get a more precise plan in a hilly surrounding.

  • @musashi06
    @musashi06 Před 3 lety +1

    About the elevation of the moon at the black pin, is it for the center of the moon? Or the top, or the bottom?

  • @ciderlog6597
    @ciderlog6597 Před 3 lety

    Hi! Question about shooting the full moon over a small mountain peak. Does the height of the moon over the black pin already incorporate the height of the mountain peak or do I need need to know the height of the mountain peak and add that to the black pin height? I hope this question makes sense. Thank you!

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      We already take into account he the height of the mountain peak. Check this video if you want to learn how to plan a moon shot over a mountain :) czcams.com/video/uQWWV-DY6M0/video.html

  • @aminahyder6111
    @aminahyder6111 Před 3 lety +1

    Can you make a video of how to photograph The new moon

  • @zonibjd
    @zonibjd Před 3 lety +1

    Rafael: I am planning a shoot of the lunar eclipse behind the Teton Mountains. My shooting spot is near Oxbox Bend. I've placed the black pin on the top of the Tetons. Distance 25km and altitude difference of 1900m. At 5:19am Moon Height is 50m from Black Pin. Does that mean it is 50m above the mountains? When Moon Height indicates negative, does that means the moon is descending behind the mountains? Also, Size = 230m. Does than mean the moon starts to go behind the mountains at a Moon Height of 280m? (I recall watching a video on how to calculate when the moon will go behind the mountain range, but I can't find it). Thanks.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hey DJ! When it says Moon height is 50m above Black Pin it means the center of the Moon is 50m above the mountains. If you want the moon to be all above the mountains Moon height above Black Pin should be the Radius of the moon (115m). This is going to be fun!

  • @ivan_12345
    @ivan_12345 Před 2 lety +1

    What is the Altitude? is it the level (hight) of your position or the object's?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      Altitude is measured from sea level.

  • @ci3828
    @ci3828 Před 9 měsĂ­ci

    Hi and thanks for the great videos. I joined PhotoPills a few months ago and am still in the learning process. I'm planning a shot with the moon behind a historic building. the subject is located on the top of a hill 280 meters above sea level. I placed the black dot in the middle of the building. the building is 42 meters high from the top of the hill. Should the correct height of the moon next to the building be (280+42) approximately 300 meters or 42 meters? furthermore, if the red dot is not at the same altitude as the black dot, but lower, how does this affect the programming and the other black dot from the moon? Thank you for your time. Christian

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 9 měsĂ­ci

      Hi! You have to have the moon at 42m to align the center of the moon with the top of the building. We take into account the terrain difference between the two pins to calculate the height of the moon above the black pin terrain.

    • @ci3828
      @ci3828 Před 9 měsĂ­ci

      @@PhotoPills Gracias

  • @andrelefrancois7732
    @andrelefrancois7732 Před 4 lety +1

    As my understanding, Photopills indicates always on red and black pins the elevation of the ground level. If want to stand on a roof top of a building or any elevated structure, the alignment of the moon with my subject (black pin) and the photographer ( red pin) will change. How can I manage this situation with Photopills?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 4 lety

      Tap on More (at the bottom) and then on Altitudes. There you can manually adjust them.

  • @HelenHayesHospital
    @HelenHayesHospital Před 3 lety +1

    How would you figure that size of the moon you want? You mentioned 50 meters, but I have no point of reference as to how big or small 50 meters is. With a tape measure I can see that from where I am standing to a tree is 50 meters, but how do I relate that to the moon size behind a building? 50 meters could be 2x the size of the building or be hidden by the building. Thanks

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hi Helen! It's a Moon of diameter 50m and then you can compare it with the size of the building. That's the way it works. PhotoPills gives you the apparent size of the Moon at the Black Pin position so, if you place the Black Pin on your subject, then you can compare it with the size of your subject.

  • @gabrieljakab
    @gabrieljakab Před 2 lety +1

    First of all, thank you very much for these tutorials. I would have a question: how I should set the altitude of the moon if the building in the forefront is standing on a hill? E.g. the ruin of the castle which I would like to shoot with the full moon in the background is on a hill with 375 m above sea level. The castle is approx. 20 m high. My shooting position is on 182 m above sea level. Should I take the difference of the sea level into consideration, or only the height of the building? (The "black dot" is set to the place where the castle meets the ground.) Thank you very much in advance for your answer.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      Hi Gabriel! Do it like I do in the video. Panel 2 takes into account the terrain altitude. So , if you place the Black Pin on the mountain, the height above Black Pin is the height above the mountain of the center of the Moon.

    • @gabrieljakab
      @gabrieljakab Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills Thanks for the fast response. So if I got it correctly, the altitude of the black pin is calculated automatically by the app and then I only need to set the height of the building. Please confirm or correct me. Thank you

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety +1

      @@gabrieljakab Yes, you can compare the height above Black Pin (on Panel 2) with the height of your subject. Terrain is automatically taken into account in the calculations.

  • @joeschwartz9569
    @joeschwartz9569 Před 3 lety +1

    If your plan doesn't happen at golden hour or blue hour (6 deg to -6 deg) do you have to pick another full moon date as that one won't work for a single shot?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Yes, we do that. Also, depending on the Moon elevation you need the day before or after the Full moon might give you better light. We always check the days around full moon too :)

  • @Kesslerlite
    @Kesslerlite Před 2 lety +1

    SeĂąor Rafael, is there a way to plan the moon height when the moon is setting?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      Use Panel 2 (height of the Moon above Black Pin. That's the height of the center of the Moon above the terrain where you place the Black Pin.

    • @Kesslerlite
      @Kesslerlite Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills gracias Rafa👍🏽

  • @ReinholdFriedrichAuer
    @ReinholdFriedrichAuer Před rokem +1

    What is the minimum distance to the forground subject, getting the moon of a reasonable size into my picture?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před rokem

      That's a very good question. It depends on how big is your subject and also on how far the location allows you to go away and still see your subject agains the sky. So it's really a matter of location limitations and the subject size vs moon size you'd like to have in the photo. For example, with a human figure... Moon sizes between 3 and 10 meters work great. If you wish to learn more about moon photograph check this guide: www.photopills.com/articles/moon-photography-guide

  • @tomm8843
    @tomm8843 Před 3 lety +1

    Does it hast to be one day after Full moon, f.e. 24th Juli this Montag. I was hoping to Do it at the 23rd? Moon rises 10 minutes after sunset, but I need the moon at 2° above Horizon, it takes arpund around 30mins after sunset To Reach this height. Is the skytooo bright to see the moon? What time would you recommend after sunset. I live in Germany 52° North

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      What we do is to plan for the full moon date and the day after and before to see the light we'll have. In Panel 3 you have the elevation of the Sun (which tells you the light). Golden hour is 6 degrees till - 4 degrees. Blue hour from -4 to -6... For us the best light is when the Sun elevation is between 0.5 and -6 degrees.

  • @kk6t
    @kk6t Před 3 lety

    Really good tutorial but it leaves out one step. When I actually go out to shoot the full moon, how can I use PhotopPills to show me when I'm at the spot I need to shoot from?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Tap the (+) on the map to show the map toolbar. Then tap the 8th button in this toolbar to enable to show your current location on the map. You'll see it appears a blue circle showing your current location. Then you can walk towards your shooting spot and make sure you are at the red pin position.

  • @ivan_12345
    @ivan_12345 Před 2 lety +1

    Is there an option to show my current position? to make sure I came to the right place (esp. if it's an unknown location)

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      Hi Ivan! Yes, tap on the (+) button you see on the map (bottom right) and then tap the arrow head icon (4th button starting from the right). Your position will appear on the map as a blue circle. Here you'll find what all the buttons do: www.photopills.com/user-guide#step5

    • @ivan_12345
      @ivan_12345 Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills great, thanks!

  • @katox349
    @katox349 Před 3 lety +1

    and how to plan otherwise - I have a place and a photo and I want to check if and when there will be a moon over the building - it can be done?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Here you have it: czcams.com/video/9X2Z65sXoFQ/video.html

  • @steveb013
    @steveb013 Před 3 lety +1

    hi rafael
    a question here about he altitude difference ( in your video 16 Meters between red and black pins ) my question is do I have to adjust the height of the moon ( minus 16 Meters ) 381 - 16 = 365m , so adjust to moon height at 365 instead of 381 , do have it centered at 381 with the altitude difference between the red and the black pins ?
    thanks

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hi Steve, if you place the black pin on your subject, then Panel 2 tells you the height of the center of the moon above the black pin ground level. For example, if your building is 100m tall, then having a height above the black pin of 100m means that the center fo the moon will be aligned with the top of the building. PhotoPills takes into account all the terrain calculations for you.

    • @steveb013
      @steveb013 Před 3 lety +1

      @@PhotoPills ok but in your video of punta nati, you made this calculation like i mentioned in my first message !!
      czcams.com/video/WG9eaaJLsD0/video.html

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      It's an old video... now Panel 2 is different ;)

    • @steveb013
      @steveb013 Před 3 lety

      ok so if I understand now even if the black pins is a mountain or even ground or whatever else, we do not need to take the altitude difference in to account ? for example, the altitude difference is 3M ( the black pin is higher ) and in the panel #2 the sun height is at 5.5m, I don't need to have the sun at 8.5m to have it at the "same" 5.5m ( 5.5m ( sun ) + 3m ( altitude ) ) , I just take in account of the height of the sun and that's it ?

  • @luv2machine
    @luv2machine Před 3 lety +1

    How do you plan a crescent moon?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      It's the same workflow. Set the date of the crescent moon an start planning :)

  • @godspeedro1383
    @godspeedro1383 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey, maybe I'm wrong, but if the moon appears to be about 30m in size and the building is 380m high, shouldn't the altitude of the center of the moon be at 395m? If we set it to 380m like in this video, we would see only half the moon... ?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      That's right! The video shows the workflow you need to follow. But you first need to make the creative decision of where you want the Moon to be vs your subject. If you want the moon to be above your subject then you need a height for the center of the moon above the building height + moon radius :)

  • @FLORAMORAITINI
    @FLORAMORAITINI Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for explanation but for a first time user of photopills it does not seem at all easy.......

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety +1

      Hi Flora! It is not!! The Moon is the more difficult celestial body to plan. It's an iterative process. I recommend you to Plan your shot the best you can and go and take it. You'll learn a lot by trying 2-3 full moons for training. It's much easier to learn by practicing. And it's normal to fail in the first attempts. Also, check our Moon Photography guide, it'll help you a lot: www.photopills.com/articles/moon-photography-guide

  • @newbee1016
    @newbee1016 Před 3 lety

    Hi Rafael, I have just down loaded Photo Pills, I have watched quite a few videos and have noticed the on one of them it had Pin to Pin geodetic info in the top line second page, my down load has the red and black pin on the second page. Has there been an up date where Pin to Pin has been removed. I have an Android phone. Is there any difference of the program between Android and IOS?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      It’s the same panel, we redesigned it a couple of years ago. Now It has the same info and more. For example the height of the moon/sun/galactic Center over a subject. We explain it in this video :)

    • @newbee1016
      @newbee1016 Před 3 lety

      @@PhotoPills Hi Rafael, thanks for your quick reply, I have been catching up on alot of the videos on Photo Pills as I had it on my phone a few years ago, I had some phone issues back then and I uninstalled Photo Pills. I am planning on getting out to take some night time photos. Robert Vict' Aust'.

  • @ivan_12345
    @ivan_12345 Před rokem +1

    The Altitude difference -N meters means the shooting point is lower than the target? Hope, -6m shouldn't be a problem if I'm planning to shoot a 25m building?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před rokem

      Hi Ivan! If the Height of the Moon from Black Pin is Negative, it means that the center of the Moon will be below the ground level of the Black Pin... so the Moon is not visible. If you want the Moon at the same height of your building... then the height of the center of the Moon from Black Pin needs to be the height of the building :)

    • @ivan_12345
      @ivan_12345 Před rokem

      @@PhotoPills that's obvious, I meant the Altitude (it's not changing)

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před rokem

      ​@@ivan_12345 If the altitude difference is -N meters, it means the shooting spot is N meters above the target.

    • @ivan_12345
      @ivan_12345 Před rokem

      @@PhotoPills oh, good, thanks

  • @BobDevlin
    @BobDevlin Před 3 lety

    When the app says the moon height is "400m above the black pin" is that measured from the center of the moon or the bottom edge?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Hi Bob! From the center of the moon.

    • @BobDevlin
      @BobDevlin Před 3 lety +1

      @@PhotoPills Thanks. Now I just have to hope Mother Nature cooperates for my plan to work.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      @@BobDevlin Plan and Pray!

  • @ivan_12345
    @ivan_12345 Před 2 lety +1

    How do we copy the coordinates to paste into the Google maps? They just hide when I tap.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety

      It's a bit hidden. Tap on the more button (bottom right), then action and then copy.

    • @ivan_12345
      @ivan_12345 Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills thanks

  • @qwertyasdf2838
    @qwertyasdf2838 Před 9 měsĂ­ci

    What if I do not know the height of subject and where to retrieve infos about it?thx in advance

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      Wha I usually do is to look for it on Google or compare it with another building. If it looks like a building of 4 floors. Assuming that each floor is 4m... then 4x4 is 16m. Then the day of the photo I get to the location early, check the view with the AR button... and I'm always ready to move a bit when I see the Moon :)

    • @qwertyasdf2838
      @qwertyasdf2838 Před 9 měsĂ­ci

      @@PhotoPills thanx!

  • @katox349
    @katox349 Před 2 lety +1

    do you not take into account the difference in the height of the terrain of the black and red pin?

    • @katox349
      @katox349 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/0D-n7y9ud6g/video.html

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 2 lety +1

      Panel 2 takes into account the terrain differences automatically :)

    • @katox349
      @katox349 Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills Thank you
      Do I understand correctly?
      if the black pin is higher than the red pin by 10 m and there is a 10 m building in the black pin, the position of the moon must be 10 m or 20 m?
      I see some people add the height of the black pin

    • @katox349
      @katox349 Před 2 lety

      @@PhotoPills Everything is clear once again, thank you. Powerful application

  • @isoria07
    @isoria07 Před 3 lety +1

    Please,
    instead of a building, if I want to take a picture of the moon on top of a mountain : for planning with satellite map, i have to place the black pin on the top of the mountain, correct ?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, that's right! And Panel 2 will tell you the height of the center of the Moon above the Black Pin ground level (this is the top of the mountain).

    • @isoria07
      @isoria07 Před 3 lety

      @@PhotoPills Thank you very much for the quick response ;-)

  • @pervertomucho
    @pervertomucho Před 3 lety

    hola, recien instale PP pero me aparece un "REQUEST DENIED", al capturar "load" el nombre y me aparace : "an error ocurred when selecting a place(REQUEST DENIED) This API projectin not authorized to use this API" . . . podrias ayudar?

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety +1

      Tiene la pinta de que estĂĄs utilizando una versiĂłn muy antigua de la app. Descarga la Ăşltima versiĂłn de la Play Store y te funcionarĂĄ. MĂĄndanos un mail a info@photopills.com si te sigue fallando

  • @gerrymein5282
    @gerrymein5282 Před 3 lety +1

    I've been following along but I'm still confused...he keeps saying super easy tho, maybe something wrong with me.

    • @PhotoPills
      @PhotoPills  Před 3 lety

      Maybe this guide can help you see the light: www.photopills.com/articles/moon-photography-guide

    • @The_Druid
      @The_Druid Před 3 lety +1

      Koko Koko you need to watch the photopills screen on the left. There are some small yellow arrows that appear as Rafael speaks. Also, make sure you are working on your photopills app at the same time. You’ll have to pause the video a few times to keep up. You’ll be able to do it if you don’t let the video run ahead of you. Take your time with this and you’ll be fine. Hope this helps. Happy shooting.

  • @SPDRailfan
    @SPDRailfan Před 3 lety

    Massive APP...!!!!

  • @quartytypo
    @quartytypo Před rokem

    Quit taking beauty shots and start shooting what you see. Incase photographers didn't get the memo: There are no more calendars to sell to.

  • @husseinghareh5280
    @husseinghareh5280 Před 3 lety +1

    I believe you are a very nice guy and passionated of what you’re doing, but your English is foggy and hard to follow.