Hi Charles, Gary and all.
>My question is how best to meter with the
>OM? I've read elsewhere to spot meter adjacent to the sun but I wonder if it
>would not be better to meter manually and use some variation of the Sunny 16
>rule. Thanks.
The best way to determine sun exposure is to try your intended setup (lens,
filter, slide film) shooting a roll with a full range of exposures of the
plain sun -- no need to get Venus around, yet ;-) However, the day of the
Transit I encourage you to bracket, just in case...
If you need a starting point, last time I shot an eclipse I used 1/60 at
f/22, home-made filter and Kodak E200.
>Speaking of astrophotography, has anyone had any luck shooting the comet
>currently visible in the western sky? Don't remember the name.
It's called NEAT (Comet C/2001 Q4). I took several shots (all without
tracking -- just a tripod) on the EOS300D, mostly with the Zuiko 85/2, plus
some with Zuiko 28/2 and Tamron 200/3.5. Here are a few samples; some are
1:1 crops from the original 3072x2048 file, and the rest are downsized
versions of the full pics. Unless otherwise indicated, the only PS
processing was a (constant) gamma correction (1.41)
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3533.JPG> 4 sec, ISO 800, 85/2
[crop]
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3536.JPG> 5 sec, ISO 1600, 200/3.5
[crop]
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3537.JPG> 15 sec, ISO 1600, 200/3.5
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3539.JPG> 15 sec, ISO 400, 85/2
[crop]
Three pics with the 'beehive' (M44) above the comet:
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3542.JPG> 8 sec, ISO 800, 85/2
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3561.JPG> 30 sec, ISO 800, 28/2 @ f/2.8
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3566.JPG> 10 sec, ISO 800, 85/2
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3569.JPG> 10 sec, ISO 1600, 200/3.5
[crop]
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3570.JPG> 30 sec, ISO 1600, 200/3.5
(no gamma correction, saturation +20) -- the most visible tail.
Some pics of other sky objects, taken the same day... errr, I mean, night ;-)
The Hercules Cluster (M13):
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3547.JPG> 10 sec, ISO 1600, 85/2
[crop]
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3548.JPG> 30 sec, ISO 1600, 85/2
A very bright Venus, with Mars and Saturn aligned:
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3549.JPG> 25 sec, ISO 1600, 28/2 @ f/2.8
The North Star (Polaris):
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3571.JPG> 30 sec, ISO 1600, 200/3.5
.
Scorpio rising (Summer's coming!!! ;-)
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3576.JPG> 10 sec, ISO 800, 85/2
Finally, a few pics of no scientific interest, just for fun (all Zuiko 28/2
@ 2.8):
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3550.JPG> Alien Living Form :-) :-)
25 sec, ISO 1600
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3554.JPG> Watcher of the Skies. 30
sec, ISO 800, gamma=1
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3558.JPG> Satellite. 30sec, ISO 800
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3562.JPG> Watcher of the Skies (II).
10 sec, ISO 800
<http://cjss.sytes.net/etc/cometa/IMG_3563.JPG> 15 sec, ISO 800, 28/2 @
f/4, gamma=1, white point=192, saturation +20
>Here in light-polluted Arlington it is only visible through binoculars
>or more and looks like a fuzzy star.
The same here... but this time, chimping was most helpful: I had to shoot
several pics with the 85 around the expected area, until the comet showed
up on the LCD ;-)
Enjoy,
...
Carlos J. Santisteban
<cjss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
<http://cjss.galeon.com>
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