The moon is an interesting subject to shoot. I began in 1965 in Vietnam with a Pentax, 300 mm Super Takumar telephoto and Lunasix light meter. After some calculations and test shots, I was able to shoot the moon with good detail on ASA 64 Ektachrome transparency film. I now shoot it with a Canon R and 500 mm f/4 + 1.4 teleconverter (700 mm). My best detail was rendered at f/5.6, 1/1250 sec. @ ISO 800. Eliminating ANY vibration and getting critical focus is vital to get maximum detail. It's fun to do and the cropped photo to show to your friends always seems to impress. Here in the Midwest, we have lots of haze and humidity during the warmer months which makes shots of moon rises/settings problematic. Your tips on how to shoot with a foreground subject is very good. I also use PhotoPills; another useful app is TPE.
I have some experiences recently shooting the moon and based on those experiences, I know you summed up all the most important tips and details a photographer needs to know. I’ve watched a lot of photography tutorials and you’re the best and the smartest guy IMO. Thanks so much!
Absolutely excellent. Adresssed common glitches clearly, in a very organized manner, with very practical tips. For a 12-minute tutorial, it is unparalleled. Great work. Thank you.
I've been trying to explain to people about how beautiful it is when the moon rises at the same time the sun sets It is epic. My most awesome full moon rise at sunset was in St Augustine in 2002. It will forever stick out in my mind. I continue to search for a setting that is as awesome as that.
Searching for moon overexposure solutions, there are sooo many tips that say, "make your aperture smaller, faster shutter speed, decrease iso" like we can't figure that out. Thank you for acknowledging that the goal is to make both the landscape and the moon correctly exposed and providing the solution (starts at 4:20 - "The Moon is Really Bright").
This is great and super helpful. I've been taking moon photos and they've been sooooo boring because i have nothing else in the photo. I will work on this more now. Thank you.
Thanks again, Joshua. I always come back to this video when I want to try my very amateurish hand at moon photography. I haven't seen any new videos rom you lately.
Having just re-activated my passion for photography, I really laughed out loud at "that sucks!" LOL With the Scorpio Moon having just presented itself to the world on April 26th, I took well over 200 photos of it, never having taken moon photos before. I was pleasantly surprised and gifted with many that were stunning, but just as many ended up like your "that sucks!" moon. This is a fabulous vlog. Thanks so much.
Love this video man! You explain things so well! I'm currently suffering from a chronic illness and rarely leave my bed. I decided to buy a decent camera because I'm limited in what I can do. My bed faces south and from my window i get fabulous views of the moon rise! There's little else i can photograph at the moment so moon shots it is! You've given some great advice here man, new sub incoming!
I'm a hobbyist photographer, so I won't spend a lot on equipment. I got the Sony rx10 iii. It's great for travel and has a 24-600 zoom. I've gotten some great moon shots with it.
Thanks Josh, I've been obsessed with mastering my full moon photography for a while now, still a work in progress, all the tips I can learn from the masters will help me step up my game. Off to do a dry run now for a shot hopefully this evening, clear sky permitting!
Only had my DSLR for a couple of months with a 200mm lens, had one session capturing the full moon and although I’m quite happy with the result myself, it’s a simply boring shot on a completely black background. I shot it at f11, 200mm, ISO 100, 1/125 sec and underexposed it on purpose as it is so bright as you say. Your tips on getting it at sunrise and sunset with an interesting foreground and light on the landscape have been taken on board and will be on my list of challenges. As you say planning a shot like that is the biggest challenge. Great tips Joshua, thanks 👍
Right on! The first time you get that nice detailed shot of the moon it's a great feeling. But it does start to get a little stale quickly. I hope these tips give you some more mojo!
Have a plan in place to get the next full moon on the 30th Dec just after moonrise, should have just under an hour before the sun completely sets and it goes dark. We have a very tall church spire close to where I live and I have worked out where I need to be to get them both in frame. It might all go “Pete Tong” but I am going to give it a try, the church spire will be about a mile from my position and should stand tall above the horizon, just hope the moon is high enough before it goes dark for it to work 🤞🌖
The above plan failed, terrible light. Oh well will try again next month. One beginners question that I will probably get slated for is, what do I focus on, the object in the foreground (probably half a mile away) or the moon itself 😊 I presume the object in the foreground 🤔
I couldn't agree more about the moon by itself. Every time we have one of these special moons, we are inundated with photos of a moon in a black field which to me is lacking a great deal. Great video!
I follow you closely. Love your content and love your entertainment value. I’m not a photographer but I like to capture my trips into the backcountry. My videos and pics are strictly for my remembrance of the event. Would love to see more content on shooting pics/videos with an iPhone. I especially suck at shooting moon shots or nighttime skyline shots. Huge fan!
Incredible information. I really bomb out on night shoots. I study and plan but so far have never had a YAHOO moment. This video has rattled my cage and I will putting more effort in. Excellent video Joshua. Thank you.
Josh, I shot my shot of the super moon rising over Raleigh NC at sunset (along with my photo club... I’ve tagged the photo in instagram as you suggested). I still had issues getting the correct exposure even doing it at this time. I still had to bracket with extreme under exposure to get the details and then combined in post. Am I missing something? I used my 70-200 (at 70 ) because we couldn’t get back any further due to city restrictions (it was literally taken on a bridge over a railroad).
Good one, Joshua. I've had trouble getting started with PhotoPills, so I appreciate the augmented reality tip. I will tag a couple of my full moon shots.
Blue Supermoon tomorrow. Special bonding moment for my new used 7D that came this week and this beginner......lol. Make or break moment. Hope it can forgive me! I have plenty of mountains and nice backdrops near me to potentially compose with, and it would be a blast to chase down great opportunities on my Royal Enfield if it wasn't going to be like 100F tonight.....so dang car it is. Can't complain :)
I've been an amateur astronomer for 30 years or more. Visual observation only but now I'm really wanting to try some astrophotography. I have a Fuji FinePix S1500, a Sony T77 Cyber Shot cameras. Neither can have an adaptor attached so I can mount them directly to my telescopes. I have to go with the afocal method. Not all that easy to do. Any tips? I have a proper mount to hold the camera to the eyepiece but getting good focus is near impossible.
Inspirational -thank you for a great tutorial your advice will save me a lot of wasted time trying to work out how to get good results-one of the best presentations I have seen
Very informative and entertaining video! I'm heading to Southern Utah this September and hope to get some descent full moon image while in Arches NP. Is your only video on shooting the full moon?
Photopills just put on a RUclips live with a phenomenal moon shooter out of New York last week. Did you see it? She went into pretty good detail about how she's sometime 25 miles away from her shot with her 1000mm or 1200mm focal length.
I saw a full moon effect the other night but the moon was going down (setting) . It was huge but a darker shade of red also. Does anyone know what this effect is called so I can google when it will happen again. Thanks in advance.
Hi josh! Can I use any lens to take moon photos or is there a minimum type of lens needed? I mean i can't get a decent moon shot using my fuji xa5 kit lens, but using my phone samsung s20 ultra, i got the full details. So i was kind of turned off with my mirrorless cam.
Informative stuff here. I learned something too. Yay!!! I've been an astronomer for over, oh......50 years. And you mentioned that our nearest neighbor movies its own diameter approximately every 160 seconds. I don't know why I didn't know that. But. I DO NOW. Thanks, dude . I'm basically an optical observer, or visual actually is a better term. But I'm trying my hand at some Afocal astrophotography. Not really wanting to invest in a quality dedicated CCD camera I have a Canon sx40 HD and a Fuji Finepix S1500 . Gonna try the Canon for some lunar, Milky Way photos and maybe some Star Trails too. Maybea DSLR and a " T " Ring later? Good video though.
The full moon is much, much dimmer than the sun. But it's the same apparent size as the sun. This means the dynamic range of the bright full moon and the moonlight on the ground is the same as between the sun and sunlight on the ground. So the full moon in the sky will blow out in exactly the same way as the sun does. Except it won't ruin your camera. When there's haze on the horizon, you can take pictures of the moon just like you can when you see a red sun at sunset.
Looked at this video out of interest. I've a file of moon shots take at f5.6 to f8 at nothing higher than ISO 400 and between 1/125sec and 1/500sec. I shoot them at 300mm on a Nikon D7200 sometimes with a tripod and try to get them during daylight. I could use my D800 but the cropping would just give the same effect. I then can add them in Photoshop to other shots. I know this is sacrilege to you but it works for me, I'm just an enthusiast If the opportunity ever arises? I try your suggestions 👍
I never understand why people want to photograph a full Moon, it's the worst possible time to do it, the direct light flattens all the detail, far better to take a shot during the waxing or waning phases.
I’ve found the augmented reality moon position display in PhotoPills can be significantly off, accuracy depends on phone or tablet compass calibration. I’ve planned countless moon rise and set shots with high precision using full capabilities of PhotoPills Planner, previously with careful use of The Photographers Ephemeris. I was totally mystified by PhotoPills Planner until Brenda Petrella posted her PhotoPills Friday series on her Outdoor Photography School RUclips channel.
Really helpful, I watched other photographers mention the F11 rule and the ISO should be the same as the shutter speed; couldn't figure that one out as the fotos were always underexposed. In fact didn't get focus right too.
I want to see your moon shots! Tag them #JoshuaCrippsPhotography on Instagram
Done! Curious for your feedback @6iography 🙏
i bet today a lot of new viewer like me come to you and want to say thank you! :Di hope i get a good shot with the S21 Ultra 5g :D #hobbyphotograph.
ruclips.net/video/TuBpmwK4j1E/видео.html
The moon is an interesting subject to shoot. I began in 1965 in Vietnam with a Pentax, 300 mm Super Takumar telephoto and Lunasix light meter. After some calculations and test shots, I was able to shoot the moon with good detail on ASA 64 Ektachrome transparency film. I now shoot it with a Canon R and 500 mm f/4 + 1.4 teleconverter (700 mm). My best detail was rendered at f/5.6, 1/1250 sec. @ ISO 800. Eliminating ANY vibration and getting critical focus is vital to get maximum detail. It's fun to do and the cropped photo to show to your friends always seems to impress.
Here in the Midwest, we have lots of haze and humidity during the warmer months which makes shots of moon rises/settings problematic. Your tips on how to shoot with a foreground subject is very good. I also use PhotoPills; another useful app is TPE.
That intro is so true lmao
Right? Tricky little moon.
Surprised he didn’t use flash, that would have been funny!
me when i use an iphone to take pictures lmaooo
So true.. literally just did it last night 😩😂
I have some experiences recently shooting the moon and based on those experiences, I know you summed up all the most important tips and details a photographer needs to know. I’ve watched a lot of photography tutorials and you’re the best and the smartest guy IMO. Thanks so much!
Absolutely excellent. Adresssed common glitches clearly, in a very organized manner, with very practical tips. For a 12-minute tutorial, it is unparalleled. Great work. Thank you.
Great to hear you enjoyed it!
I've been trying to explain to people about how beautiful it is when the moon rises at the same time the sun sets It is epic. My most awesome full moon rise at sunset was in St Augustine in 2002. It will forever stick out in my mind. I continue to search for a setting that is as awesome as that.
Searching for moon overexposure solutions, there are sooo many tips that say, "make your aperture smaller, faster shutter speed, decrease iso" like we can't figure that out. Thank you for acknowledging that the goal is to make both the landscape and the moon correctly exposed and providing the solution (starts at 4:20 - "The Moon is Really Bright").
Guess I would have to say "Wow". Concise, on point, easy to follow, audibly, very clear. Thank you Josh!
I was hooked by the time you said "that sucks!".
Hahaha!
😄
This content is pure gold
This is great and super helpful. I've been taking moon photos and they've been sooooo boring because i have nothing else in the photo. I will work on this more now. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
I tried shooting the full moon the other night after watching your video and your tips were sensational! Thank you so much!
Thanks again, Joshua. I always come back to this video when I want to try my very amateurish hand at moon photography. I haven't seen any new videos rom you lately.
This is one of the best videos I have seen that has practical, useful advice for shooting great full moon pictures. Thank you very much!
Having just re-activated my passion for photography, I really laughed out loud at "that sucks!" LOL With the Scorpio Moon having just presented itself to the world on April 26th, I took well over 200 photos of it, never having taken moon photos before. I was pleasantly surprised and gifted with many that were stunning, but just as many ended up like your "that sucks!" moon. This is a fabulous vlog. Thanks so much.
Love this video man! You explain things so well! I'm currently suffering from a chronic illness and rarely leave my bed. I decided to buy a decent camera because I'm limited in what I can do. My bed faces south and from my window i get fabulous views of the moon rise! There's little else i can photograph at the moment so moon shots it is! You've given some great advice here man, new sub incoming!
I'm a hobbyist photographer, so I won't spend a lot on equipment. I got the Sony rx10 iii. It's great for travel and has a 24-600 zoom. I've gotten some great moon shots with it.
I'm using an app called Sky Tonight. Its pretty awesome and sounds like it has the same features. ❤ Thanx for the info!
Thanks Josh, I've been obsessed with mastering my full moon photography for a while now, still a work in progress, all the tips I can learn from the masters will help me step up my game. Off to do a dry run now for a shot hopefully this evening, clear sky permitting!
Only had my DSLR for a couple of months with a 200mm lens, had one session capturing the full moon and although I’m quite happy with the result myself, it’s a simply boring shot on a completely black background. I shot it at f11, 200mm, ISO 100, 1/125 sec and underexposed it on purpose as it is so bright as you say. Your tips on getting it at sunrise and sunset with an interesting foreground and light on the landscape have been taken on board and will be on my list of challenges. As you say planning a shot like that is the biggest challenge. Great tips Joshua, thanks 👍
Right on! The first time you get that nice detailed shot of the moon it's a great feeling. But it does start to get a little stale quickly. I hope these tips give you some more mojo!
Have a plan in place to get the next full moon on the 30th Dec just after moonrise, should have just under an hour before the sun completely sets and it goes dark. We have a very tall church spire close to where I live and I have worked out where I need to be to get them both in frame. It might all go “Pete Tong” but I am going to give it a try, the church spire will be about a mile from my position and should stand tall above the horizon, just hope the moon is high enough before it goes dark for it to work 🤞🌖
The above plan failed, terrible light. Oh well will try again next month. One beginners question that I will probably get slated for is, what do I focus on, the object in the foreground (probably half a mile away) or the moon itself 😊 I presume the object in the foreground 🤔
Useful tips in cutting down my learning struggle. Thanks.
Like just for the intro alone! You just made a new fan!
I couldn't agree more about the moon by itself. Every time we have one of these special moons, we are inundated with photos of a moon in a black field which to me is lacking a great deal. Great video!
This is the video I want about moon photography! Thank you for this video🙋🏻♂️
thnaks. is the focus on the moon, or focus on the foreground subject? or is it hyperfocal?. Any stack necesary, or single shot?
Thank you again👋
Heading out tonight for the full Moon, so came and watched this again for a refresher! Don't want to screw it up! #obsessed
Thanks for the great video. I shared it with my photo club.
This is the best video on moon photos thank you!
Thanks for the upload. Good information.
I also enjoyed seeing the Eastern Sierra Corridor.
Thank you so much for this video! I’ve always been taking photos of the moon but they’ve always been very samey, this is so easy to follow as well :)
Wow same lens I use . with a Nikon Z7ii
Awesome info, bro. Thanks for sharing.
All excellent points. Thank you!
I follow you closely. Love your content and love your entertainment value. I’m not a photographer but I like to capture my trips into the backcountry. My videos and pics are strictly for my remembrance of the event. Would love to see more content on shooting pics/videos with an iPhone. I especially suck at shooting moon shots or nighttime skyline shots. Huge fan!
Great tips Joshua, thanks for sharing.
Just got the Sigma 60-600mm for my Nikon, can't wait for the moon to come back!!!!
Awesome opening! Great vid really
Thanks a lot. With your tips I could take a reasonably good pic of the full moon.
Incredible information. I really bomb out on night shoots. I study and plan but so far have never had a YAHOO moment. This video has rattled my cage and I will putting more effort in. Excellent video Joshua. Thank you.
What's the idea with the thing on the lens around 7.00? Does it stabilise the long lens or what it just used as a shelf
So glad I found your channel! 😁
Thanks, Joshua. Your vids are always very enlightening.
Glad you think so!
Super info Joshua! Thanks 🌝
When photographing the Moon with a zoom lens, what shutter speeds are you using to keep it sharp? It moves 'faster' when it's zoomed. Thanks!
1/125 or 1/160
I laughed so hard at the intro! I rented way too hard lmao
The intro gave me a dejavu
Great video! Love your tips! Thank you so much!
Thank you! Very helpful.
Great simple explanation to encourage beginners to give it a try (then be hooked)’
Just came across your channel and subscribed Josh. It would be nice to have someone like you shooting the moon. You know your moon stuff well.
4:41 Thank you. Exactly what l was looking for. It would be so easy if you could just temporarily dimm the moon...
Brilliant presentation, thanks much for effort/sharing :-)
Hi Josh, I take boring moon pics and I sure am going to try your tips! Thanks
Josh, I shot my shot of the super moon rising over Raleigh NC at sunset (along with my photo club... I’ve tagged the photo in instagram as you suggested). I still had issues getting the correct exposure even doing it at this time. I still had to bracket with extreme under exposure to get the details and then combined in post. Am I missing something? I used my 70-200 (at 70 ) because we couldn’t get back any further due to city restrictions (it was literally taken on a bridge over a railroad).
Great tips mate. I’ll be sharing this with my niece 👌
PhotoPills is ace. I love it for my Milky Way planning.
Good one, Joshua. I've had trouble getting started with PhotoPills, so I appreciate the augmented reality tip. I will tag a couple of my full moon shots.
Glad it was helpful!
Great video!
I been taken Moonlights photograph but timely play major getting those shots.
Great video Josh! I really appreciate you describing the struggle!
My pleasure!
Thank you for this awesome video not only informative but funny too 🤣🤣loved it
Blue Supermoon tomorrow. Special bonding moment for my new used 7D that came this week and this beginner......lol. Make or break moment. Hope it can forgive me! I have plenty of mountains and nice backdrops near me to potentially compose with, and it would be a blast to chase down great opportunities on my Royal Enfield if it wasn't going to be like 100F tonight.....so dang car it is. Can't complain :)
I've been an amateur astronomer for 30 years or more. Visual observation only but now I'm really wanting to try some astrophotography.
I have a Fuji FinePix S1500, a Sony T77 Cyber Shot cameras.
Neither can have an adaptor attached so I can mount them directly to my telescopes. I have to go with the afocal method. Not all that easy to do.
Any tips? I have a proper mount to hold the camera to the eyepiece but getting good focus is near impossible.
Excellent video, thank you
It really is a complicated tool but it is so good
thank you,, you're the best👌
Great tips
jajaja... great intro!
Inspirational -thank you for a great tutorial your advice will save me a lot of wasted time trying to work out how to get good results-one of the best presentations I have seen
Moon is not interesting? Objection, your honour!
I love detailed Moon photos without any background.
Thanks. Nice timing with a full moon in a couple of weeks.
Good luck!
So informative, so l subscribed !
Terrific stuff. I tried this yesterday, but it was cloudy and there wasn't a full moon and it was daytime......
Another great video Josh. If you’re ever down in San Diego hit me up. Always down for a good moon time lapse shoot!
Very informative and entertaining video! I'm heading to Southern Utah this September and hope to get some descent full moon image while in Arches NP. Is your only video on shooting the full moon?
Yes it is . Lovely by itself
Photopills just put on a RUclips live with a phenomenal moon shooter out of New York last week. Did you see it? She went into pretty good detail about how she's sometime 25 miles away from her shot with her 1000mm or 1200mm focal length.
Jennifer Khordi I believe. Her NYC moon stuff is so good!
Thank you
Thanks!
Thanks for giving back to the photography community. It means a lot.
Thanks
Brilliantl observations , now l know why my moon pics suck!😢
Top Josh :) Thank You for the video
First 25 seconds define all my photos.
I saw a full moon effect the other night but the moon was going down (setting) . It was huge but a darker shade of red also. Does anyone know what this effect is called so I can google when it will happen again. Thanks in advance.
Thanks I was thinking I was letting it get too dark out.
Hi josh! Can I use any lens to take moon photos or is there a minimum type of lens needed? I mean i can't get a decent moon shot using my fuji xa5 kit lens, but using my phone samsung s20 ultra, i got the full details. So i was kind of turned off with my mirrorless cam.
Is 140mm enough?
Informative stuff here.
I learned something too. Yay!!!
I've been an astronomer for over, oh......50 years. And you mentioned that our nearest neighbor movies its own diameter approximately every 160 seconds. I don't know why I didn't know that. But.
I DO NOW. Thanks, dude .
I'm basically an optical observer, or visual actually is a better term. But I'm trying my hand at some Afocal astrophotography. Not really wanting to invest in a quality dedicated CCD camera I have a Canon sx40 HD and a Fuji Finepix S1500 .
Gonna try the Canon for some lunar, Milky Way photos and maybe some Star Trails too. Maybea DSLR and a " T " Ring later? Good video though.
The full moon is much, much dimmer than the sun. But it's the same apparent size as the sun. This means the dynamic range of the bright full moon and the moonlight on the ground is the same as between the sun and sunlight on the ground. So the full moon in the sky will blow out in exactly the same way as the sun does. Except it won't ruin your camera.
When there's haze on the horizon, you can take pictures of the moon just like you can when you see a red sun at sunset.
Looked at this video out of interest.
I've a file of moon shots take at f5.6 to f8 at nothing higher than ISO 400 and between 1/125sec and 1/500sec.
I shoot them at 300mm on a Nikon D7200 sometimes with a tripod and try to get them during daylight.
I could use my D800 but the cropping would just give the same effect.
I then can add them in Photoshop to other shots.
I know this is sacrilege to you but it works for me, I'm just an enthusiast
If the opportunity ever arises? I try your suggestions 👍
Hahaha! Loved that intro too......reminds me of your old videos that used to make me laugh. Good tips & yes, in reality, it IS TINY & moves fast!!!
Thanks, Diane! It's time to bring the silly back.
@@JoshuaCrippsPhotography That's good. The world needs a bit of silly ATM. Not sure it's just me but it always made me crack up.
Hahaha !!! Great way to begin your video 📸 big hugs from Chile.
Nice
I never understand why people want to photograph a full Moon, it's the worst possible time to do it, the direct light flattens all the detail, far better to take a shot during the waxing or waning phases.
Thank you Josua, very helpful. Still trying to figure out how you impersonated me so well in the beginning 😁
Haha. Because that was me!
Is there a handy-dandy rule for photographing the moon similar to the sunny-16 rule under normal conditions? Maybe a lunar-11 rule?
Something free comparable to photopills ?
Settings? Please and thank you 😊 🙏
I’ve found the augmented reality moon position display in PhotoPills can be significantly off, accuracy depends on phone or tablet compass calibration. I’ve planned countless moon rise and set shots with high precision using full capabilities of PhotoPills Planner, previously with careful use of The Photographers Ephemeris. I was totally mystified by PhotoPills Planner until Brenda Petrella posted her PhotoPills Friday series on her Outdoor Photography School RUclips channel.
Agreed! @brendapetrella is great!
Really helpful, I watched other photographers mention the F11 rule and the ISO should be the same as the shutter speed; couldn't figure that one out as the fotos were always underexposed. In fact didn't get focus right too.
Glad it was helpful
Are you removing reflections (within the lens) in post? That seems to be one of the things that bothers me most in trying to photograph the moon.