How to Photograph the Milky Way Tutorial For Beginners




In this video I’ll show you the basics of photographing the Milky Way. This is intended for beginners or people who have never attempted this before. If there’s anything I’ve left out or questions you have, please leave them in the comments and I’ll get back to you.

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Thanks!

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41 responses to “How to Photograph the Milky Way Tutorial For Beginners”

  1. Everett Bloom, i got a camera not to long ago, about a month ago and i have been wanting to take Milky Way pictures, i have the Canon T5i and i was wondering if that would take Milky way shots??

  2. Hi…really enjoyed watching your video….will be going out to Joshua Tree in a few weeks. Will keep some of your tips in mind. First, any patricular area of Joshua atree you recommend? I have the 750 also and am debating a new lense….Sigma 20mm 1.4 or Tamron 15-30 2.8…you have any opinions on them?…probably leaning towards yhe Tamron, figure it will be more useful overall….Finally, last question…for the focusing, as you mentioned using the digital zoom….thats done with keeping the lense in manual mode correct?….Thanks

  3. How you clicked the photo on your cell phone… like the all stars (lines) coming towards you. If we choose polarious as center then we get circle, but I am not sure how to get this lines around you.

  4. Thank you for sharing. This helps a lot. By the way, you have a really distracting background😂, the black cat is so adorable. Cant stop myself from looking at him(her). Were you taken photos at borrego Spring?

  5. Thank you so much for such an informative video.thank you for taking the time to make this amazing video, I learned a lot. I got a Nikon D3400, five months ago, and my first challenge was taking a picture of the moon, finally I got it, than the stars, now I am on level three, I have been trying to take a picture of the Milky Way, but that has been more difficult. once again for the tips, I will cal it a class, and I will let you know.

  6. On the iPhone you can tint your entire screen red by going to Settings, General, Accessibility, Display Accommodations, turn Color Filters on, click Color Tint and adjust the Intensity slider all the way up, I also turn the screen brightness down to intensify the effect more…

  7. Great video, thanks for taking the time to share. I do have a question when using a 14mm wide angle lens taking photos of very distant objects like the Milky Way, why can't you just set focus to infinity?

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