I went out hoping to get the Milky Way and Comet Neowise but the clouds got in the way! So I shot them! It was about 2 hours before the comet finally appeared from behind the clouds! Ellensburg Washington
WOW
Thanks for sharing
Great shots
littlebiddle wrote:
I went out hoping to get the Milky Way and Comet Neowise but the clouds got in the way! So I shot them! It was about 2 hours before the comet finally appeared from behind the clouds! Ellensburg Washington
That is far more than I got, just clouds. Seems farther North was best. I'm near Pismo Beach, CA. What time did you actually photograph the comet? Your images are pretty darn good.
The clouds are much more interesting.
lamiaceae wrote:
That is far more than I got, just clouds. Seems farther North was best. I'm near Pismo Beach, CA. What time did you actually photograph the comet? Your images are pretty darn good.
I finally got the comet about 11:46 give or take a few seconds!
Love the last 2 images, Dave. Glad you "stuck it out".
littlebiddle wrote:
I went out hoping to get the Milky Way and Comet Neowise but the clouds got in the way! So I shot them! It was about 2 hours before the comet finally appeared from behind the clouds! Ellensburg Washington
Persistence pays off.......nice work Littlebiddle....Alan Jackson wrote a song about you.
Lucian
Loc: From Wales, living in Ohio
Something does not look right here because I am seeing stars or supposed stars on top of clouds in the images, which means the stars were below the clouds. In the real world, that just does not happen because clouds are a little bit higher than clouds. Can anyone explain how we can get stars to appear below clouds please?
It's a nice Photoshop effect of course but not too realistic. Now if you pay more attention and remove any of the star overlay brush that was showing on top of the actual cloud photo layer, then that would look more realistic and fool most people.
Wonderful shots of patience 💕👍🤗
Lucian wrote:
Something does not look right here because I am seeing stars or supposed stars on top of clouds in the images, which means the stars were below the clouds. In the real world, that just does not happen because clouds are a little bit higher than clouds. Can anyone explain how we can get stars to appear below clouds please?
It's a nice Photoshop effect of course but not too realistic. Now if you pay more attention and remove any of the star overlay brush that was showing on top of the actual cloud photo layer, then that would look more realistic and fool most people.
Something does not look right here because I am se... (
show quote)
The clouds are moving and the stars were in openings at one point!This is a long exposure!
Very enjoyable series! Finally it did show up but you had fun waiting.
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