The following night sky time-lapses were shot by André Higuti using his Huawei P30 Pro by pairing Intervalometer app and rendered the time-lapse video. Here is his youtube channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCogd_Re2xMYyo2JLZbWGmLQ
Tag: milkyway
New Android app “Light Trails” is now available in Google PlayStore for creating star trails. It is an image stacking app for users to create stacked image from a series… [Continue Reading]
TimeLab is a video rendering and image processing Android app for time-lapse photography. It takes input from a series of images to create a time-lapse video as well as image… [Continue Reading]
Smartphones usually have equivalent focal length of around 30mm. To take a close-up view of the core of Milky Way, cropping is needed to approximate similar focal length as 45-50mm lens… [Continue Reading]
Update [2020-07-16] – Intervalometer is now available in Huawei’s AppGallery Update – now support alternate time interval to work with camera’s light painting mode (bulb mode). Playstore link – Intervalometer Noticing… [Continue Reading]
Winter Milky Way is another part of Milky Way that we will see during December, January and February because the core of Milky Way lies behind the Sun and it… [Continue Reading]
To create lower noise Milky Way images, I have tried image stacking with different number of images using DeepSkyStacker (it can be done with Adobe PhotoShop but I feel that DeepSkyStacker… [Continue Reading]
All images are single exposure, shot in RAW format and edited in Adobe Lightroom, exported to smaller size (1024 pixels on long edge) to minimize the visibility of noise.
Due to earth rotation, the Milky Way band rotates across the sky over the night. The Milky Way core rises before dawn during first half of every year starting from February… [Continue Reading]
If a smartphone is able to shoot Milky Way images, why not the Milky Way time-lapse. Creating Milky Way time-lapse on smartphones involves a lot of post-processing to edit all… [Continue Reading]