These are a few shots I found that I had taken when I had the tamron lens.




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Personally, I think the P900 does a lot better Arthur. These are good though. A good practice to get great hand held moon shots is to use the very common "Loony 11 Rule". Set the camera to manual - focus to infinity and select f:11 and then set the ISO and Shutter Speed to the same settings. For example 100 ISO = 1/100th Shutter Speed / ISO 400 = 1/400th Shutter Speed. A real good starting point for good exposure of full moon shots.I Shoot A Canon
Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
I just fired myself from cleaning my house.
I don't like my attitude and I caught myself drinking on the job.
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Originally posted by Isac View PostPersonally, I think the P900 does a lot better Arthur. These are good though. A good practice to get great hand held moon shots is to use the very common "Loony 11 Rule". Set the camera to manual - focus to infinity and select f:11 and then set the ISO and Shutter Speed to the same settings. For example 100 ISO = 1/100th Shutter Speed / ISO 400 = 1/400th Shutter Speed. A real good starting point for good exposure of full moon shots.
And I am always on manual for them to. But since the Nikon P900 which has made me lazy.
These shots I took one night for someone on a photo page so I took these and posted the setting's so they had somewhere to work from.
To your full moon,well I try to miss that like a bad habit. I find the full moon so boring.
And find it much better at different amounts of it showing.
Thanks for your comments on both of the ones I have done also as I never thanked you for the last one.
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Thanks for the reply Arthur. The Looney 11 Rule also applies to different visible phases of the moon. Here's the settings for those:
I Shoot A Canon
Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
I just fired myself from cleaning my house.
I don't like my attitude and I caught myself drinking on the job.
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