Brilliantly done. It's a great tutorial to learn the concepts of both PS and LR. To bring out this level of detail out of almost invisible Milky Way is astonishing. Great work!
It's amazing how much detail you can pull from that original image where you could barely even see the Milky Way. Very well done. I picked up on several Photoshop tricks from this video. There are so many different ways to edit the MW in post processing and this gives me some additional tools for my edits.
It really is! Thats what I wanted to show in this Video, that it is still possible to get great results without having to go to the darkest places or needing the best camera 😊 I was amazed that nobody on RUclips has shown this til now! I will upload more Videos that are valuable like this so be sure to stay tuned😉 I'll soon upload another editing tutorial which has some more techniques
@@travel_with_sven Yes, I have an Instagram account, but I haven't shared it yet. I sent you via dm. I used Lightroom for milky way photos before but this is my first time using Photoshop for milky-way.
Thanks! I took my first Astrophotography photos on a backpacking trip but didn’t realize you were supposed to do a separate exposure for the foreground. Anyhow, this really helped me understand how to make the Milky Way pop! Thanks!
Happy I could help you! Well you dont need to take seperate exposures if you dont have a star tracker which you probably dont have if it was your first time😉 You can take everything in one exposure and then just tell sequator where the sky is as I said in the tutorial😊 The problem with that is that when you then do my editing from the tutorial, the foreground would look weird because the editing process of the fore- and background are different. The second thing is that the foreground needs a really long exposure so it gets bright. If you do a to long exposure tho, then you get star trails. Thats why you maybe have to make seperate exposures anyways, depending on how dark the foreground is😉 So I would suggest you that you still take sky- and foreground photos separately, you just get a better result if you do it correct
@@travel_with_sven Yeah I took about five exposures for each location I did. I shot them on f1.4 with a 20 second exposure and 1600 ISO. The stars turned out great but I was in the mountains (foreground) and cant get them to look good because it's so underexposed in all the images. Ill be waiting for your next video! Im just going to try to do my best with the silhouette of the mountains I have in the photo. Im just sad because the photo would have been beautiful and I screwed it up because I didn't take a foreground exposure. (hiked 35 miles to this location)
@@tylerbradley8124 Oh yeah thats pitty! Just do a silhouette, thats the best thing you can do in that case🤷🏻♂️ next time just get yourself a shutter release cable and expose the foreground at very low iso for 2, 3 minutes. Just as long as you need to so it gets bright enough😉
I really did😂 Took me a long time to collect and master all of those techniques but it makes a world of a difference🙌🏻 Thanks so much for the lovely feedback, I will definitely make more Content like this so stay tuned😉
@@travel_with_sven editing tutorials. Yours was one i had never seen before. I just got into landscapes and night photography and it's all too confusing, your video helped me with a milkyway shot of my own.
Thats a very helpful tutorial, thanks! Just started trying out astrophotography. Living in big city definitely doesn’t help. What was your exposure time, focal length and other settings? Any suggestions for untracked setups? So far I tried 400 short 1-2” exposures and some one shot long exposures with wide lens. Results are not great :)
If you live in a big city, forget it, even with those advanced methods you cant get good photos if you have to much light pollution🤷🏻♂️ At least go to a bit darker place. The darker, the better! Thats the bigest tip I can give you. As an exposure time 1 or 2 secods are way to short. Shoot as long as you can without getting startrails. i would start at 25sec and look if the stars are round. If they are not reduce the time until they are round and if they are, try 30 sec. The aperture you want to be fully open. The last thing to then correct is the ISO. Set your shutter speed and aperture and then take a testshot at ISO1600. If its to bright, decrease the iso as far as possible and if it's ro dark, increase the iso😊 My biggest tip for untracked is, take a lot of exposures, as many as you can🙌🏻
If you’re using a 24mm lens with a APS-C camera use around 10s exposure, with a full frame 15s. 14mm APS-C use 15s, and full frame 20s. And you just can’t shoot the Milky Way in a big city.
Thanks a lot! There is some good information in here so try to follow the Tutorial with one of your photos and tell me how it turned out, I would love to see your endresult😊 If you got any questions or want to show me your result, I would love to hear from you on @riederphotography on Instagram. And dont forget to sub if you liked the tutorial and I could help you, would really help me out😉
Thanks a lot! Just a simple and cheap Fujifilm X-T20 with the 18-55mm Kit-Lens. Both together cost about 600€😉 I dont recommend it as there are better Cameras and Lenses but if you want a really small ald lightweight kit, this is perfect!
Hi there.. thanks for sharing your skills i hope you Do more like this video. and also please include your camera settings of astrophotography. Thank you 😊😊
You know, I dont think that camera settings are that important. But yeah, that video is in planning😊 I'll do a specific one on how to shoot the milky way so definitely subscribe if you havn't yet so you dont miss it😉 It makes me really happy that you like it🙏🏻
wow- what a workflow. I tried to do as you did in the video and it really worked although I had a 15-stack-foto where the milkyway wasnt really visible per eye in raw. So many new ideas for milkyway fotos become possible for me in future. But I have one question. What is it exactly you do on 12:46 min? Do you choose a special preset there for curves? I could not find that in PS. Thank you very much in advance and i hope for much more milkyway videos!!!
Thank you soo much🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 In the new tutorial I did it without them. It's a oreset I downloaded from the internet and it's used to stretch the image. You can do it without it tho or download it😊
Thanks for the video. Very helpful. Interesting comments here so far. Personally, I have no problem with using Starnet. Separating stars from not-stars is a totally valid and usually necessary technique for optimal processing. However, I _do_ take issue with using any old foreground. IMO, your image then becomes art and no longer an astrophoto. Blending in a non-tracked image of the actual foreground in front of your camera would have kept it real. Nothing wrong with using unrelated foregrounds if the goal is pure art, but I hope you are upfront with your technique in your descriptions of images wherever they appear.
I absolutely agree 💯 As you have also seen in this Video, I do not use a different foreground. I shoot the foreground and the background always in the same position, just that I edit them separately because I was using a Startracker. Using a different foreground wouldn't be cool with me as well but sadly a lot of people do it anyways🤷🏻♂️ Happy that you liked the video and I hope you get some amazing results with the techniques😊
@@travel_with_sven Okay, then! It was not clear to me from the video that the foreground was shot at the same time and location. The foreground was very dark in the sky stack (of course), so not obvious to me that it was the same as the much brighter non-tracked shot.
Bro! Thanks so much! I got and installed and wNice tutorialle watcNice tutorialng tNice tutorials I'm following your steps, and I really fully understand. So Kool! Thanks
Tolles Tutorial! Kleine Frage: Als du die Milchstraße einzeln zugeschnitten hast, wurde das Bild mit den Sternen nicht zugeschnitten? Dann wäre am Ende die Position der Nebel in der Milchstraße zu den Sternen inkorrekt. Das würde auch erklären, warum ich das Bild so seltsam finde...
Vielen Dank!😊 Weisst du noch wo das im Video war? Kann gut sein, dass ich da einen Fehler gemacht habe. Passiert mir normalerweise nicht aber manchmal gehen beim Aufnehmen gewisse Dinge vergessen😉
I think it's very noisy. What ISO and aperture did you set? I saw you shot just couple frames. Maybe if you would done like 25-30 frames on lower ISO this would look way smoother. But I liked the idea of another layer (blurred sky) where you pop-up gradient of the visible gases and matter (all that yellow hue).
Ever, photo gets grainy if you stretch it so far because of the light pollution but yeah you're right. It would have helped if I would have taken more shots and lowered my iso which I could have as I used a Star Tracker😊 Yeah I use that gradient technique all the time, it's great😍🙌🏻 Thanks a lot for your feedback🤙🏻
@@travel_with_sven I live in a Bortle 5 area and whilst watching the whole video I was hoping that you weren't in really dark skies. All the milky way photos and videos I've seen have been taken in dark skies but I want to try and photography the milky way from my garden for practise. You've inspired my to try harder haha!
@@leomacherla Thank you so much for your comment man, really apprechiate it! That is exactly why I did this video and will do such videos in the future🔥 I just want to inspire people to just go out to shoot the night sky, no matter where you live! Go out, take some photos and just follow my tutorial step by step and you will get some great results😉
I didnt learn it anywhere, I just made smaller projects, worked with tutorials and by doing that I learned it. I can really recommend you Piximperfect, he makes the best Videos about Photoshop!
The shooting stars may disappear when you stack the images, you probably have to change some settings when stacking or edit them back in after stacking
Hallo! Könntest du bitte einen Link teilen? Irgendwie finde ich nur die Version, die NUR mit pixinsight funktioniert.. Und ich bin so begeistert von diesem Tutorial! Endlich klappt es auch bei mir (ich arbeite zwar mit DeepSkyStacker, aber alles andere war extrem hilfreich und nicht unnözig kompliziert)! Würde gerne such mit StarNet ausprobieren.. 😊
So for the foreground use a low ISO (under 800) and expose as long as you need so the foreground is bright. For the stars you want the aperture to be wide open, look how long you can expose for without getting startrails and then just set the iso as low as you can with the sky being exposed well. Thats the best method😉 I will do a specific video about taking photos of the milky way soon tho so make sure to subscribe so you dont miss it😊
I used the Fujifilm X-T20 and the 18-55mm f/2.8 lens that comes with it, really cheap but good kit for beginners and intermediates😊 I will soon upload a Video on how to prepare and how to shoot the Milky Way so be sure to be subscribed so you don't miss that Video😉
Glad I could help you man🙌🏻 I would love to see the result you got, if you want to show me, just send me the photo on Instagram, I'm excited on what you could get out of your photo😊
@drock213 At this point, I understand that you're clueless on how is MilkyWay or in general Astrophotography done. Although I don't deny that they're many different ways and styles to edit it, more or less the process will be similar unless you live middle of NOWHERE and you're COMPLETELY outside of light pollution so you can just capture the MilkyWay with absolutely no effort and with barely any post processing. Unfortunately that's not the case for most of the hobby photographers out there.
@@Affectionate-Box30 Dawg that's the whole point of milky way photography, to get a real photo that isn't photoshopped to high hell. If anything, you're the one who has no idea what they're talking about, good astrophotographers don't need to fake the milky way
True, muss ich dir recht geben😂 Dir kannst du aber vom Internet herunterladen. Du kannst aber auch einfach Ctrl + L drücken und in den Levens den mittleren Slider nach links schieben. Ich habe ein neues Tutorial schon bereit, welches in den nächsten Tagen kommt, wo ich es ohne die Presers zeige. Hoffe der Rest vom Video hat dir etwas beigebracht😊 Kannst ja im neuen Video vorbeischauen, ist besser geworden als dieses, war halt mein erstes Tutorial
Thats not the point of the Video... What if you have an amazing location but there is a lot of light pollution? And by the way, these techniques also work in darker locations to get even nicer shots😉
@@travel_with_sven I was actually joking... ;-) Because, unfortunately, it is very difficult to get people to turn off unnecessary lights (public and private).
No offense, but this is NOT true Astrophotography. It was all negligible until you popped your image into an AI, now that's just too much artificiality, I'm sorry. Might as well just throw in a Milky Way stock overlay at this point 💀🤷♀
Why is it artificial after the AI? If you look at the starless and stars Version of the photo you'll see that it is litrally the same, one just has stars and the other does not. This means that I didnt add anything that was not there in the first place. It is just a tool that everybody in Deep Sky Astrophotography uses. Thats where I found this technique. Look at Deep Sky Editing Tutorials, almost everybody there is using this technique. Does that mean they are all not doing astrophotography? I don't think so...
Feel free to not use this tutorial if it is too strong of an edit for you, I totally understand! But if you don't remove the stars you can not edit the milky way that strong without making the photo look absolutely horrible. You have to remove the stars, thats the only way😊
Please don’t edit Milky Way nightscapes like this. Try and keep it as “natural” and “realistic” as you can. Not so much saturation and clarity. Just visit a Bortle-1 location, take a 15-second, ISO-6400 and you will be truly amazed.
If I can do that I obviously do that but thats not always possible man, if you have a dope location that is in a lot of light pollution you have to be more aggressive with the editing. And that is what I show in this tutorial. Everybody has different prefferences on what look they like more and like less. A lot of people like this look and as long as I don't add something that wasn't in the photo originally I don't see the problem, as long as you are not hiding it and saying that that is how it looks like unedited😉 If it isn't your style, then dont edit it that strong but thats what you have to do in a bright location😊
Love the time lapses you have on your channel by the way🙌🏻 And just as an information, I already have shot the milky way in really dark skies and it's true what you are saying, I love those conditions the most obviously😂
Brilliantly done. It's a great tutorial to learn the concepts of both PS and LR. To bring out this level of detail out of almost invisible Milky Way is astonishing. Great work!
Thank you so much man! Really appreciate your great feedback!🙏🏻 I'll definitely keep on putting as much knowledge in my future videos as possible🔥
A hidden gem! Nice tutorial, very helpful
Thank you so much bro🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 Stay tuned, I will soon start uploading regularly😉
It's amazing how much detail you can pull from that original image where you could barely even see the Milky Way. Very well done. I picked up on several Photoshop tricks from this video. There are so many different ways to edit the MW in post processing and this gives me some additional tools for my edits.
It really is! Thats what I wanted to show in this Video, that it is still possible to get great results without having to go to the darkest places or needing the best camera 😊 I was amazed that nobody on RUclips has shown this til now! I will upload more Videos that are valuable like this so be sure to stay tuned😉 I'll soon upload another editing tutorial which has some more techniques
Thank you for your comprehensive tutorial. I also have Fujifilm XT-20 camera and XF18-55 lens, I get a great result!
Thank you so much man, I will upload more Videos like this one soon so stay tuned😉 Do you have Instagram? I would love to see your results!😊
@@travel_with_sven Yes, I have an Instagram account, but I haven't shared it yet. I sent you via dm. I used Lightroom for milky way photos before but this is my first time using Photoshop for milky-way.
Thanks! I took my first Astrophotography photos on a backpacking trip but didn’t realize you were supposed to do a separate exposure for the foreground. Anyhow, this really helped me understand how to make the Milky Way pop! Thanks!
Happy I could help you! Well you dont need to take seperate exposures if you dont have a star tracker which you probably dont have if it was your first time😉 You can take everything in one exposure and then just tell sequator where the sky is as I said in the tutorial😊 The problem with that is that when you then do my editing from the tutorial, the foreground would look weird because the editing process of the fore- and background are different. The second thing is that the foreground needs a really long exposure so it gets bright. If you do a to long exposure tho, then you get star trails. Thats why you maybe have to make seperate exposures anyways, depending on how dark the foreground is😉 So I would suggest you that you still take sky- and foreground photos separately, you just get a better result if you do it correct
I will soon upload a tutorial on how to shoot the milky way the best way possible so make sure to subscribe so you dont miss it😊
@@travel_with_sven Yeah I took about five exposures for each location I did. I shot them on f1.4 with a 20 second exposure and 1600 ISO. The stars turned out great but I was in the mountains (foreground) and cant get them to look good because it's so underexposed in all the images. Ill be waiting for your next video! Im just going to try to do my best with the silhouette of the mountains I have in the photo. Im just sad because the photo would have been beautiful and I screwed it up because I didn't take a foreground exposure. (hiked 35 miles to this location)
@@tylerbradley8124 Oh yeah thats pitty! Just do a silhouette, thats the best thing you can do in that case🤷🏻♂️ next time just get yourself a shutter release cable and expose the foreground at very low iso for 2, 3 minutes. Just as long as you need to so it gets bright enough😉
This is an amazing tutorial. Really well done. I appreciate your generosity in sharing your techniques.
No problem mate😊 I'm sure you will love the Videos that are coming soon if you liked this one😉
Thank you for a helpful tutorial. I will need to go back and re-edit some of my images 👍
No problem😊 Would love to see them! If you upload it to Instagram, feel free to tag me so I see it🙌🏻
Thank you friend! I will try to apply your tutorial in my astros.
Incredible! I can't wait to try these techniques on my recent set :)
Thanks man! Tag me @riederphotography on instagram when you upload your result on Instagram😊 Would love to see the Result!
wow this dude just turned the image upside side down by using his skills amazing very nice and detailed explaination
I really did😂 Took me a long time to collect and master all of those techniques but it makes a world of a difference🙌🏻 Thanks so much for the lovely feedback, I will definitely make more Content like this so stay tuned😉
VERY HELPFUL! Will have to try when I go back to the shore
Thanks a lot! I would love to see the result when you're done so if you want you can send me a message on @riederphotography😊
So smooth! EverytNice tutorialng he says goes into my brain and sticks in.
Thanks😊🙏🏻
Well done so interesting and well explained 💯👏👏👏
Thank you so much😊🙏🏻
incredible, u deserve a lot more recognition kuddos to u!!!!!!!also thanks bud.
Thank you soo much man😊🙏🏻 Hope I can get some more recognition so I can help more people like you in the future🙌🏻
Thank you for this informative tutorial. I learned a lot from it 🙂
Hi, very helpful tutorial,pls make more content
Thnaks a lot! What would you like to see? Any specific wish?😊
@@travel_with_sven editing tutorials. Yours was one i had never seen before. I just got into landscapes and night photography and it's all too confusing, your video helped me with a milkyway shot of my own.
@@piyushgadkari162 Really apprechiate it a lot man, thanks so much, I will definitely do more of them in the future😊
Thats a very helpful tutorial, thanks!
Just started trying out astrophotography. Living in big city definitely doesn’t help.
What was your exposure time, focal length and other settings?
Any suggestions for untracked setups? So far I tried 400 short 1-2” exposures and some one shot long exposures with wide lens. Results are not great :)
If you live in a big city, forget it, even with those advanced methods you cant get good photos if you have to much light pollution🤷🏻♂️ At least go to a bit darker place. The darker, the better! Thats the bigest tip I can give you. As an exposure time 1 or 2 secods are way to short. Shoot as long as you can without getting startrails. i would start at 25sec and look if the stars are round. If they are not reduce the time until they are round and if they are, try 30 sec. The aperture you want to be fully open. The last thing to then correct is the ISO. Set your shutter speed and aperture and then take a testshot at ISO1600. If its to bright, decrease the iso as far as possible and if it's ro dark, increase the iso😊 My biggest tip for untracked is, take a lot of exposures, as many as you can🙌🏻
If you’re using a 24mm lens with a APS-C camera use around 10s exposure, with a full frame 15s.
14mm APS-C use 15s, and full frame 20s. And you just can’t shoot the Milky Way in a big city.
Amazing... I'll give this a try
Thanks a lot! There is some good information in here so try to follow the Tutorial with one of your photos and tell me how it turned out, I would love to see your endresult😊 If you got any questions or want to show me your result, I would love to hear from you on @riederphotography on Instagram. And dont forget to sub if you liked the tutorial and I could help you, would really help me out😉
TNice tutorials is so amazing thanks for the videooo ;D
No problem! I'm happy I could help😊 Make sure to subscribe, I'll upload an updated Video soon, just edited it yesterday😉
Hi, which camera did you used to do this ? Very nice video btw
Very helpful! Thanks a lot!
No problem! I will upload more helpful Videos like this soon😉
Amazing!! What camera and lens did you use to shoot the sky?
Thanks a lot! Just a simple and cheap Fujifilm X-T20 with the 18-55mm Kit-Lens. Both together cost about 600€😉 I dont recommend it as there are better Cameras and Lenses but if you want a really small ald lightweight kit, this is perfect!
@@travel_with_sven Thanks a lot!!😁
Hi there.. thanks for sharing your skills i hope you Do more like this video. and also please include your camera settings of astrophotography. Thank you 😊😊
You know, I dont think that camera settings are that important. But yeah, that video is in planning😊 I'll do a specific one on how to shoot the milky way so definitely subscribe if you havn't yet so you dont miss it😉 It makes me really happy that you like it🙏🏻
Sick! Thank you for the info!
No problem man🤙🏻🙌🏻
wow- what a workflow. I tried to do as you did in the video and it really worked although I had a 15-stack-foto where the milkyway wasnt really visible per eye in raw. So many new ideas for milkyway fotos become possible for me in future. But I have one question. What is it exactly you do on
12:46 min? Do you choose a special preset there for curves? I could not find that in PS. Thank you very much in advance and i hope for much more milkyway videos!!!
Thank you soo much🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 In the new tutorial I did it without them. It's a oreset I downloaded from the internet and it's used to stretch the image. You can do it without it tho or download it😊
Thanks for the video. Very helpful. Interesting comments here so far. Personally, I have no problem with using Starnet. Separating stars from not-stars is a totally valid and usually necessary technique for optimal processing. However, I _do_ take issue with using any old foreground. IMO, your image then becomes art and no longer an astrophoto. Blending in a non-tracked image of the actual foreground in front of your camera would have kept it real. Nothing wrong with using unrelated foregrounds if the goal is pure art, but I hope you are upfront with your technique in your descriptions of images wherever they appear.
I absolutely agree 💯 As you have also seen in this Video, I do not use a different foreground. I shoot the foreground and the background always in the same position, just that I edit them separately because I was using a Startracker. Using a different foreground wouldn't be cool with me as well but sadly a lot of people do it anyways🤷🏻♂️ Happy that you liked the video and I hope you get some amazing results with the techniques😊
@@travel_with_sven Okay, then! It was not clear to me from the video that the foreground was shot at the same time and location. The foreground was very dark in the sky stack (of course), so not obvious to me that it was the same as the much brighter non-tracked shot.
Bro! Thanks so much! I got and installed and wNice tutorialle watcNice tutorialng tNice tutorials I'm following your steps, and I really fully understand. So Kool! Thanks
No problem man, happy you like it😊🙌🏻
Tolles Tutorial!
Kleine Frage: Als du die Milchstraße einzeln zugeschnitten hast, wurde das Bild mit den Sternen nicht zugeschnitten?
Dann wäre am Ende die Position der Nebel in der Milchstraße zu den Sternen inkorrekt.
Das würde auch erklären, warum ich das Bild so seltsam finde...
Vielen Dank!😊 Weisst du noch wo das im Video war? Kann gut sein, dass ich da einen Fehler gemacht habe. Passiert mir normalerweise nicht aber manchmal gehen beim Aufnehmen gewisse Dinge vergessen😉
Amazing
Thanks🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Love your stuff! Big help!
Thanks so much man! I just uploaded an updated Version of my workflow, definitely check it out if you liked this one😊
Thanks for this tutorial! 😍👌
I think it's very noisy. What ISO and aperture did you set? I saw you shot just couple frames. Maybe if you would done like 25-30 frames on lower ISO this would look way smoother. But I liked the idea of another layer (blurred sky) where you pop-up gradient of the visible gases and matter (all that yellow hue).
Ever, photo gets grainy if you stretch it so far because of the light pollution but yeah you're right. It would have helped if I would have taken more shots and lowered my iso which I could have as I used a Star Tracker😊 Yeah I use that gradient technique all the time, it's great😍🙌🏻 Thanks a lot for your feedback🤙🏻
AMAZING!!!
Very helpful, thank you
No problem😊 Eill upload more helpful Video so stay tuned😉
If tNice tutorials isnt the most true tNice tutorialng ive ever read
what bortle class is this in? also, beautiful picture!
Thanks a lot! It is in about Bortle 5 or 6😊 With your bare eyes you couldn't see the milky way
@@travel_with_sven I live in a Bortle 5 area and whilst watching the whole video I was hoping that you weren't in really dark skies. All the milky way photos and videos I've seen have been taken in dark skies but I want to try and photography the milky way from my garden for practise. You've inspired my to try harder haha!
@@leomacherla Thank you so much for your comment man, really apprechiate it! That is exactly why I did this video and will do such videos in the future🔥 I just want to inspire people to just go out to shoot the night sky, no matter where you live! Go out, take some photos and just follow my tutorial step by step and you will get some great results😉
Where do you learn photoshop like this?
I didnt learn it anywhere, I just made smaller projects, worked with tutorials and by doing that I learned it. I can really recommend you Piximperfect, he makes the best Videos about Photoshop!
My light frames have many star shooting but it doesn’t come star shooting line with Milky Way when I edit. How to do and how to write? Please teach
The shooting stars may disappear when you stack the images, you probably have to change some settings when stacking or edit them back in after stacking
Is it possible to use starnet ++ v2 without installing pixinsight? If so would be very helpful if you share how to do that.
Yeah of course, I didn't use pixinsight as well. Just google Starnet V2 Download and you should be able to download it for free😊
Hallo! Könntest du bitte einen Link teilen? Irgendwie finde ich nur die Version, die NUR mit pixinsight funktioniert.. Und ich bin so begeistert von diesem Tutorial! Endlich klappt es auch bei mir (ich arbeite zwar mit DeepSkyStacker, aber alles andere war extrem hilfreich und nicht unnözig kompliziert)! Würde gerne such mit StarNet ausprobieren.. 😊
what settings would you recommend for the foreground compared to the stars (specifically exposure time and ISO)
So for the foreground use a low ISO (under 800) and expose as long as you need so the foreground is bright. For the stars you want the aperture to be wide open, look how long you can expose for without getting startrails and then just set the iso as low as you can with the sky being exposed well. Thats the best method😉 I will do a specific video about taking photos of the milky way soon tho so make sure to subscribe so you dont miss it😊
Những tấm ảnh anh dùng để xếp chồng có qua bước hậu kì chưa ạ hay file raw từ máy ảnh
Wow!
what camera and lens you have used?
I used the Fujifilm X-T20 and the 18-55mm f/2.8 lens that comes with it, really cheap but good kit for beginners and intermediates😊 I will soon upload a Video on how to prepare and how to shoot the Milky Way so be sure to be subscribed so you don't miss that Video😉
Holy oversaturated batman.
Very well :D
Thanks a lot!🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Thanks bro!!
No problem man🤙🏻🙌🏻
this really works
Glad I could help you man🙌🏻 I would love to see the result you got, if you want to show me, just send me the photo on Instagram, I'm excited on what you could get out of your photo😊
Amazing! ✨✨✨🌌🌌 Thanks a lot...! I wanna click the Subscribe button right now...! 🥳🥳🚀
Thanks! You should😉 Great Videos filled with knowledge coming up soon🔥
the resulting photo is just too "fake", might as well take a picture with no milky way and photoshop it from another pic ...
Is Nexus free for soft soft
great
"Let's pick a color to organize tNice tutorials" *picks the sa red for every soft
SALUDO AMIGO SOY DE PANAMA
At this point you might as well just photoshop the Milky Way in to any picture you take, daytime or nighttime.
Yeah sure go for it, if that's your style of editing :)
@drock213 At this point, I understand that you're clueless on how is MilkyWay or in general Astrophotography done. Although I don't deny that they're many different ways and styles to edit it, more or less the process will be similar unless you live middle of NOWHERE and you're COMPLETELY outside of light pollution so you can just capture the MilkyWay with absolutely no effort and with barely any post processing. Unfortunately that's not the case for most of the hobby photographers out there.
@@Affectionate-Box30 that's a long way to say you are a bad photographer
@@Affectionate-Box30 Dawg that's the whole point of milky way photography, to get a real photo that isn't photoshopped to high hell. If anything, you're the one who has no idea what they're talking about, good astrophotographers don't need to fake the milky way
elps a lot and gives mo motivation to create
Happy to hear that!😊
damn tNice tutorials felt like i learned a new language or programming.
Happy to hear that, thanks😂
....und bei 12.45 eigene Presets verwenden? Danke!
True, muss ich dir recht geben😂 Dir kannst du aber vom Internet herunterladen. Du kannst aber auch einfach Ctrl + L drücken und in den Levens den mittleren Slider nach links schieben. Ich habe ein neues Tutorial schon bereit, welches in den nächsten Tagen kommt, wo ich es ohne die Presers zeige. Hoffe der Rest vom Video hat dir etwas beigebracht😊 Kannst ja im neuen Video vorbeischauen, ist besser geworden als dieses, war halt mein erstes Tutorial
@@travel_with_sven Alles gut danke. Das Tut gefällt mir war nur etwas überrascht. :-) Mach weiter so, bin gespannt auf das Neue!
@@patrikschmidiger2206 Verständlich! Weisst du was, ich lade das Video heute Abend hoch, dann kannst du es dir als erstes anschauen😉
@@travel_with_sven Ich muss zuerst dieses Video noch abarbeiten. ;-) Aber bin gespannt und werde es sicher schauen! 🙂
@@patrikschmidiger2206 Okay ist gut, viel Glück und wenn du Fragen hast kannst du gerne auf mich zukommen!
i lost 50% of my braincells trying to figure out how to use tNice tutorials
I have a much quicker process: turn off unnecessary lights at night.
Thats not the point of the Video... What if you have an amazing location but there is a lot of light pollution? And by the way, these techniques also work in darker locations to get even nicer shots😉
A lot of beginners also dont know where the dark locations are or just want to start shooting from their backyard
@@travel_with_sven I was actually joking... ;-) Because, unfortunately, it is very difficult to get people to turn off unnecessary lights (public and private).
@@GB-ek2em Good, I am glad😂 Thats true, sadly... But can't do a lot about it🤷🏻♂️
No offense, but this is NOT true Astrophotography. It was all negligible until you popped your image into an AI, now that's just too much artificiality, I'm sorry. Might as well just throw in a Milky Way stock overlay at this point 💀🤷♀
Why is it artificial after the AI? If you look at the starless and stars Version of the photo you'll see that it is litrally the same, one just has stars and the other does not. This means that I didnt add anything that was not there in the first place. It is just a tool that everybody in Deep Sky Astrophotography uses. Thats where I found this technique. Look at Deep Sky Editing Tutorials, almost everybody there is using this technique. Does that mean they are all not doing astrophotography? I don't think so...
Feel free to not use this tutorial if it is too strong of an edit for you, I totally understand! But if you don't remove the stars you can not edit the milky way that strong without making the photo look absolutely horrible. You have to remove the stars, thats the only way😊
Please don’t edit Milky Way nightscapes like this. Try and keep it as “natural” and “realistic” as you can. Not so much saturation and clarity. Just visit a Bortle-1 location, take a 15-second, ISO-6400 and you will be truly amazed.
If I can do that I obviously do that but thats not always possible man, if you have a dope location that is in a lot of light pollution you have to be more aggressive with the editing. And that is what I show in this tutorial. Everybody has different prefferences on what look they like more and like less. A lot of people like this look and as long as I don't add something that wasn't in the photo originally I don't see the problem, as long as you are not hiding it and saying that that is how it looks like unedited😉 If it isn't your style, then dont edit it that strong but thats what you have to do in a bright location😊
Love the time lapses you have on your channel by the way🙌🏻 And just as an information, I already have shot the milky way in really dark skies and it's true what you are saying, I love those conditions the most obviously😂
@@travel_with_sven All good points. I agree, thanks.
@@afryhover No problem man, have a great weekend🙌🏻🙏🏻
"Just visit a Bortle-1 location..." have you ever heard of Europe? Its a beacon of light, only bortle-1 we get is Ocean
Thats not natural and too over edit i didnt like it
just get a modded yt lmao free premium no ads
What does that have to do with the Video?
Two crazy. I can't first grade level on this s*** Any good videos you could point me towards🤣😅
Too fast to be helpful
Fantastic hack! I did everything you showed here and it worked! Thanks a lot!
So happy I could help you!😊 Can you show me your result? Would love to see it. Just send me a DM on Instagram to @riederphotography
Damn! I didn’t know about half of this stuff. Going to give it a try later and see what I can do.
Thanks!
No problem man! Happy that you are learning that much😊