I went after the Perseids meteor shower, and as mentioned in a previous thread it was a bust as I knew the moon was rising too early. But, I figured I could still just get in some regular star or Milky Way shooting before the moon did rise.
So on the 2nd night I got to Mono Lake after dark. I prefer to set up while it's still light out, so getting there while it was dark was going to be an extra test in getting the new Sigma 14mm f1.8 set up. I manually set up the focus to match what I had used up in Tuolumne Meadows the night before where I was able to focus before it was dark. I did an educated guess as to the exposure settings, set up a composition about 12 feet away from these tufas with the still brilliant Milky Way in the comp, and took the shot. It was just a hair dark, raised the ISO a notch, and then took this image.
So far I am really liking the new Sigma 14mm f1.8. Even at f1.8, I still had enough DOF to get everything in focus in one shot. I quickly processed this one last night, but I think I am liking the way it looks.
All comments are welcome!
Jim
So on the 2nd night I got to Mono Lake after dark. I prefer to set up while it's still light out, so getting there while it was dark was going to be an extra test in getting the new Sigma 14mm f1.8 set up. I manually set up the focus to match what I had used up in Tuolumne Meadows the night before where I was able to focus before it was dark. I did an educated guess as to the exposure settings, set up a composition about 12 feet away from these tufas with the still brilliant Milky Way in the comp, and took the shot. It was just a hair dark, raised the ISO a notch, and then took this image.
So far I am really liking the new Sigma 14mm f1.8. Even at f1.8, I still had enough DOF to get everything in focus in one shot. I quickly processed this one last night, but I think I am liking the way it looks.
All comments are welcome!
Jim