Groucho said:I'm sure that it helps greatly if you go far away from any lights and shoot on a cloudy night.
Groucho said:I apologize for being inscrutable. I hereby sentence myself to having to exclusively use a Kodak Disc camera for the next week.
(I used to have one of those, I wonder what happened to it...)
Phew!Master Mason said:I have my grandma's old disk camera in a box in the garage... but they quit making disks for it, so your off the hook do to lack of supplies
AZ JazzyJ said:I have a couple of pictures of the moon that was out when the plumber came over to fix our kitchen sink when it started to do it's Yellowstone Park geyser imitation.I think it would be best if I didn't post those as this is a family board. My eyes are still burning and I may have to replace my cell phone as I think the camera refuses to function after that sight.
Jeff
Groucho said:Phew!
I even have one of the short-lived Kodak instant cameras somewhere, too... the ones that Polaroid forced them to stop making. I remember getting a check as part of a settlement... which really makes for mixed feelings when you're a kid, you want the camera but money's awful nice too!
I can't remember what my primary camera was before I got my K-1000... it seems like I must have had a PnS 35mm but I'll be darned if I can remember what it was.
boBQuincy said:Our Moon has a reflectance of about 10% average. As 0bli0 pointed out, the "sunny day rule" is about right since it is designed for a reflectance of 18%. Bracket one stop around that and the results should be pretty good.
Our camera meters are about worthless for getting a reading of the Moon since there is so much dark sky in the picture (unless you're sporting a 1000+ mm lens).
Anyway, Moon shots are fun, the best days are supposed to be about two days before full, with the sky a nice shade of deep blue instead of black.
handicap18 said:I use the longest lens I have which is a 70-300mm and extend it out to 300mm which on a dSLR is film equivilent of 450mm
THis can be confusing. Because of the crop factor of some digital cameras the above relation is made. It is not untrue, but only in two dimensions. THe sensor in the back of a digital camera is smaller than the regular film negative. So the field of view captured with crop sensor digital cams is not as wide and not as tall as the old film. Like if you had zoomed the additional amount from 300 to 450mm. But you will not be any closer to the moon. If viewed actual pixels then the moon will be the same size and no greater detail. But since the digi capture is smaller it must be "stretched" to print the same size as the film negative. Therefore if you print two 8x10 prints the moon in the crop digi print will be bigger.