Felt I captured the moon pretty well!
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09-07-2024LAST POST
Felt I captured the moon pretty well!
gameson wroteHonestly don’t think you can get close with an iPhone, if so, probably some third party software? I’m sure it’s possible, but I have no idea.any technique on how to take picture with iPhone that can do that? i understand you took it with digital camera... but some of pictures i have seen are taken by iPhone.
Fredcohiba wroteThank you!Nice shot. Tripod? What were your settings and ISO?
No tripod, just point and shoot!
I will check my settings when I’m back with my camera (I was playing around with ISO anywhere between 100-320 and f stop between 5.6 and 8).
Jbrown7403 wroteThank you!Great shot! I pinched the image to zoom in and it is really clear!
SaMaster14 wroteNikon D7500 with a Tamron zoom lens (70-300). Full zoom, and I want to say ISO 320, f6.3Thank you!
No tripod, just point and shoot!
I will check my settings when I’m back with my camera (I was playing around with ISO anywhere between 100-320 and f stop between 5.6 and 8).
but damn cool!A NASA camera aboard the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) captured a unique view of the Moon as it passed between the spacecraft and Earth. A series of test images shows the fully illuminated “dark side” of the Moon that is not visible from Earth.
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Jbrown7403 wroteWoah! Very, very cool!Not my shot (duhbut damn cool!
A NASA camera aboard the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) captured a unique view of the Moon as it passed between the spacecraft and Earth. A series of test images shows the fully illuminated “dark side” of the Moon that is not visible from Earth.
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gameson wroteIn my experience the iPhone camera can't handle the contrast difference of a dark sky and very bright moon. Lens/lens cover flare is one issue, lens and sensor resolution are another issue.any technique on how to take picture with iPhone that can do that? i understand you took it with digital camera... but some of pictures i have seen are taken by iPhone.
c1pher wroteThat’s fair… but I can’t get used to the clunky android UI (in my opinion), nor losing iMessage and the apple ecosystem. Too many cons outweigh the benefit of a slightly better camera (where if I’m really being serious, I’d just grab my DSLR anyways).If you use a Samsung phone you will get a perfect moon shot every time.
I imagine with a tripod/stabilization setup and some tinkering, the iPhone can capture a photo nearly as well, too.
SaMaster14 wroteI think you took me literally:That’s fair… but I can’t get used to the clunky android UI (in my opinion), nor losing iMessage and the apple ecosystem. Too many cons outweigh the benefit of a slightly better camera (where if I’m really being serious, I’d just grab my DSLR anyways).
I imagine with a tripod/stabilization setup and some tinkering, the iPhone can capture a photo nearly as well, too.
https://www.techradar.com/phones/samsung-phones/heres-how-i-finally-proved-that-the-galaxy-s23-ultra-moon-pictures-arent-fake#:~:text=This%20wasn't%20a%20hoax,scene%20and%20possibly%20add%20detail.
c1pher wrotelol; that article is “proving” they aren’t fake though, right? But I guess “every time” is a huge stretch
I feel like in general, the Samsung cameras are slightly better “out of the box” than the iPhone cameras, although with proper equipment, both can do phenomenal work for phone cameras.
I shot this handheld with my D7500 with an old Sigma 70-300 @ 300mm (450mm with APS-C crop), 1/1600, f5.6, iso 200 on 27 September 2023.
Nikon D7500, Nikkor 18-200 VRII @ 200mm, Manual mode, 1/160, f5.6, ISO100. If I remember correctly this was on a tripod in my driveway on a timer. I prefer this shot over the other I posted by a wide margin.
(And I got the Swatch special haha)