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look is kind of a orangish brownish flew
right and the blue can vary from day to
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day and from location to location so
just like sometimes we go out it's kind
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of like a pale sian blue sky and other
days we go out and it's like this deep
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rich blue sky that translates to night
as well so sometimes but were
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photographed and get this deep rich blue
and other times it's a pale blue and I
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like to make it through which you know
it's a natural but looks really cool and
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you might prefer a warmer temperature
lot of people like it a little bit
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warmer so play around and choose what
you like I said line to 4,400 it does so
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just after the Sun Goes Down and it's
kind of a cool blue it's still really
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blew out I said to 4,400 by the time we
get into the deeper the night I two
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hours or so after sunset then I'm down
to thirty six hundred or so and I like
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that 3600 Kelvin temperature because
it's really blew to do that you set it
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on your camera set it to the Kelvin
temperature setting and said 3200 on it
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and that'll make this guy really blue if
you don't know how to do that or you
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just want something easier just set it
to text and/or the light bulb icon
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standing on your camera and that will
turn blue and it looks beautiful of
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course you can do this all in raw and
post-processing if you're shooting rod
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then you can change that after the fact
but it's kinda nice to see it blew just
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beforehand and the color of the final
color that you want I try to get as many
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things done in-camera beforehand and the
basic New Moon settings we took a look
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at the wide angle lens 20 seconds or so
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F 1.4 3205 2.8 sixty four hundred and
thirty-six hundred Kelvin temperature
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for the white balance on that then you
want to check your histogram so when the
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first time that I went out photographed
the Milky Way for the first time and I
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took some shots and i was looking at
them on the back of the LCD screen like
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wow this is so me think that was the
same night that I photograph the two
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stars and was totally surprised by how
many
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and things are absolutely gorgeous what
is this is a stunning with his back in
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2006 and I thought wow this is
incredible and then the next morning I
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look at him almost completely black
frames my eyes adjusted to the light
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side I looked at the back of the
viewfinder and what was really bright to
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my eyes was actually very dim so the
images were useless they were so
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underexposed I couldn't use the model
and then so now what I do is I take the
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LCD screen and I change the brightness
level two manual and I lower it so that
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it's not so bright so I'm not full by
that and then in addition I check the
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histogram the main thing is to have
information all in the last third of the
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histogram frame so take a look at these
histogram examples and you could see how
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where the information is both for Canon
and Nikon and that way you'll be sure to
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get a good exposure do not trust your
eyes they will feel you so you would
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think you have a good exposure when you
see it at night but your eyes are
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subject to being tired and to being
adjusted for the low light so they're
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picking up more sensitivity what looks
like a good exposure might not be so
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good and a few tips to remember the long
exposure noise reduction again I turned
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that off as well as you can apply noise
reduction of post-processing I use
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camera Rob but there's also Nick defined
2.0 and high ISO noise reduction I
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turned that off that although place your
JPG refusing the camera software will
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show up and the high ISO noise reduction
works to reduce the noise and basically
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apply a noise reduction filter however
if you apply that then if you go to
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process your image later the noise is
slightly reduced and noise reduction
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software programs cannot pick up that
noise and so it will do a poor job of
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that so it only slightly takes out the
noise which really doesn't look good so
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I just recommend turning that off
altogether you don't need to worry about
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that if you're shooting wrong in using
Adobe remember always usually because
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that could to keep the lens warm and
keep the two off as well as you look
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cooler with you when you have the place
will end zone on and that's the basics
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for the camera settings