@lbingle365 It's very easy. Another 365 member clued me in. You have to forget that it's night and set you shutter speed on your camera up higher because you are taking a picture of a light. I think this one was set at a shutter speed of about 1/200. I also have a 42x zoom, which I leave on auto focus. My camera is fairly auto, but it does have a few manual settings. If you just use auto settings and take a picture of the moon, the night will fool your camera and you'll end up with a blob. I have tons of blob pictures!
@susanalena@axika@kwind@zosimasy Thanks so much for the FAV! @lynne5477@aponi Thanks! @pinkpaintpot We live in a subdivision, but it's still fairly rural. But when we lived outside of Indianapolis, there was way too much ambient light to see stars and meteors (I usually just saw airplanes and helicopters LOL!).
@lynne5477 @aponi Thanks!
@pinkpaintpot We live in a subdivision, but it's still fairly rural. But when we lived outside of Indianapolis, there was way too much ambient light to see stars and meteors (I usually just saw airplanes and helicopters LOL!).