High-Quality Astrophotography With Basic Camera Equipment
Photography Life Photography Life
97.8K subscribers
51,815 views
0

 Published On Mar 2, 2020

This is my favorite tip for star photography, both wide angle (with a foreground) and for deep-sky astrophotography! It's called image stacking. There's no better way to stretch the limits of what your camera can do. Even if you have basic entry-level equipment.

Here are my software recommendations. I'm not getting any kickbacks on these (heck 3 of the 4 are free), they're just what I recommend.

When you have no foreground:

- Lynkeos (Mac). It's free, works great. The only issue is that you may need to align the photos yourself (only roughly) before loading them into the software, by batch cropping them in Lightroom or Photoshop. https://lynkeos.sourceforge.io

- DeepSkyStacker (Windows). Freeware, and amazing at what it does. Highly recommended. http://deepskystacker.free.fr/english...

When you have foreground elements:

- Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac). It's not free (costs $40) but it works well, and there is no free alternative at the moment for Mac users that I've been able to find. It's what I used for the wide angle Milky Way photo in this tutorial. https://sites.google.com/site/starryl...

- Sequator (Windows). Free, gets excellent reviews. https://sites.google.com/site/sequato...

If you have any questions about star photography, let me know below and I'll do what I can to answer!

~Spencer
  / spencercoxphoto  

👇👇👇

This video is not sponsored! You can support Photography Life and Spencer Cox Photography by buying anything through my affiliate links!

Here is all the photo equipment I use: https://bhpho.to/3XUv32a

And here’s my video gear to film this video: https://bhpho.to/3Yt8th1

#Astrophotography #DSLR

show more

Share/Embed