by Lance McVay » Tue Nov 20, 2007 3:12 am
Thank you all for the kind comments.
The object near the moon is, as far as I know, nothing more than lens flare. I was using a 12mm lens at full aperture, and in my experience, pointed at a bright light source, this lens will definitely flare.
The photo was taken early in the morning of October 4th, 2007. I'm not sure if I had changed the camera's setting for daylight savings or not, so it was either taken around 4 or 5 am.
The moon was just a crescent, and there was no visible aurora that night, just a faint light that outlines the mountains from the sky, which is sometimes hard to tell if it is a faint aurora or just the moon illuminating the Juneau Icefield behind these peaks. I was exposing for the foreground icebergs with the hope that I would get some subvisual aurora. The photo has had some slight adjustment to levels in Photoshop, but no more than I do to any other photo. There is certainly no false coloring or other trickery involved.
It is a 30 second exposure at ISO 3200 taken with a Canon 20D. I generally take a high ISO photo at a short shutter speed to check for framing before taking longer photos at lower ISOs. Photo IMG_2288.jpg on this page:
http://sacredartichoke.com/coppermine/d ... m=8&pos=16
was a longer, two and a half minute exposure at ISO 200.
Again, thanks for the kind words. I've been overwhelmed with the response I've gotten today from this photo.
Lance McVay
lancemcvay@gmail.com
http://sacredartichoke.com
Thank you all for the kind comments.
The object near the moon is, as far as I know, nothing more than lens flare. I was using a 12mm lens at full aperture, and in my experience, pointed at a bright light source, this lens will definitely flare.
The photo was taken early in the morning of October 4th, 2007. I'm not sure if I had changed the camera's setting for daylight savings or not, so it was either taken around 4 or 5 am.
The moon was just a crescent, and there was no visible aurora that night, just a faint light that outlines the mountains from the sky, which is sometimes hard to tell if it is a faint aurora or just the moon illuminating the Juneau Icefield behind these peaks. I was exposing for the foreground icebergs with the hope that I would get some subvisual aurora. The photo has had some slight adjustment to levels in Photoshop, but no more than I do to any other photo. There is certainly no false coloring or other trickery involved.
It is a 30 second exposure at ISO 3200 taken with a Canon 20D. I generally take a high ISO photo at a short shutter speed to check for framing before taking longer photos at lower ISOs. Photo IMG_2288.jpg on this page: http://sacredartichoke.com/coppermine/displayimage.php?album=8&pos=16
was a longer, two and a half minute exposure at ISO 200.
Again, thanks for the kind words. I've been overwhelmed with the response I've gotten today from this photo.
Lance McVay
lancemcvay@gmail.com
http://sacredartichoke.com