Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Introduction to Exposure Blending in Photoshop


In my "Introduction to Landscape Photography" written tutorial I mentioned that I would have a future tutorial on exposure blending, and this evening I was able to put together a video that is a quick crash course introduction to blending exposures in Photoshop.  This covers a basic blend using a layer mask, and an advanced blend using a layer mask with luminosity selections.  If layer masking and luminosity masks are new topics for you then you should Google around for some tutorials on those subjects, fully grasping them will make it much easier to do blending.

You can see the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7k5bRHegiXA

The original written tutorial is here: http://blog.adamwoodworth.com/2013/09/introduction-to-milky-way-landscape_2.html

The 720p version of the video should be available but you may have to reload the video to get that option.  Click on the gear icon in the bottom right part of the video player to find the 720p setting.

I hope to eventually put together a more extensive video that covers a start-to-finish project, starting with preparing the images in Lightroom, blending in Photoshop, and polishing the image in both Lightroom and Photoshop.


Thursday, October 24, 2013

Portland Camera Club October 28th!



On Monday October 28th I will be speaking at the Portland Camera Club!  The meeting starts at 7pm at the American Legion Hall, 413 Broadway, South Portland, Maine.  The event is free and open to non-club members.  I will be presenting a slideshow and talking about some of the stories and techniques behind my night photography.

http://www.portlandcameraclub.org

Monday, September 2, 2013

Introduction to Landscape Astrophotography

Hopewell Rocks, New Brunswick, Canada
Nikon D800E, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm/2.8.
Two exposures blended for depth of field and lower noise in the foreground.
Sky exposure: ISO 3200, 25 sec.
Foreground: ISO 3200, 10 minutes.

Welcome to the night sky! In this tutorial I will describe many of the tools and methods I use to create fine art landscape astrophotographs. I will be focusing on capturing photos of the Milky Way with minimal star movement. This tutorial does not cover star trail photography. My goal as a landscape astrophotographer is to create high quality dramatic images of the night sky, and as such I will be focusing on using professional grade tools with a strong attention to detail, with the end goal of being able to create large fine art prints, not just small photos for online viewing.

Keep in mind that my method isn't the only method, and you should experiment and figure out what type of images you want to create and which tools and methods work for you.

I should point out that this article assumes that you already have a fair amount of photography knowledge. If you're jumping straight into night photography as your first photographic endeavor then you should familiarize yourself with camera exposure settings, lenses, etc. Photography is a technical field, and fully grasping the details is essential.

So let's get started by talking about camera gear!


Equipment Needed

Full Frame DSLR
You can try to get by with a crop sensor DSLR, but you really want a recent full frame DSLR. Full frame will give you much less noise and greater dynamic range. Night photography pushes image sensors to their limits, and recent full frame sensors are better at handling noise and dynamic range than ever before.

Within the full frame size you can chose a high pixel density or low pixel density sensor. Low density means fewer but larger pixels (technically these are photosites on a sensor), and high density means more but smaller photosites. The trade off is that sensors with larger photosites will gather more light and thus have a greater signal-to-noise ratio but with a lower resolution, while sensors with smaller photosites will be more noisy but with a higher resolution.

That said, I use a Nikon D800E, which has a high pixel density of 36 MP. It's noisier than the Nikon D4, which is only 16 MP, but I find the extra resolution outweighs the downside of the noise, especially if you're using good noise reduction software. Stay away from older full frame cameras. The Canon 5D Mark II is a very popular landscape camera but it doesn't do well at high ISOs. Go with the much newer 5D Mark III or one of the other recent full frame Canons if you're a Canon shooter. I'm unfamiliar with the full frame offerings from Sony, but Sony does make the sensors that go into some Nikon cameras, such as the D800/D800E, so their cameras might perform well at high ISO.

Fast & Wide Lens
This is probably the single most important piece of equipment. The lens is your camera's view of the world, and cheaping out here will mean you're not using the full potential of your camera. You'll want a very fast (large aperture) wide angle lens. Arguably the best lens around for super wide angle night photography is the Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens. This lens is often used on Canon full frame DSLRs by way of an adapter. Both Canon and Nikon make 14mm f/2.8 prime lenses, but the Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 is sort of the gold standard of fast ultra wide angle glass. The Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 lens is a popular fast wide angle lens that is very affordable, but the quality varies from copy to copy and it definitely does not replace a pro grade lens.  Overall, you want a lens that is sharp at its largest aperture (smallest f-stop), otherwise the stars will be soft and blurry.

I use a Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 for most of my night photography.

Sturdy Tripod & Head
You need a tripod for night photography, and since the exposures can sometimes be many minutes long, you want a very sturdy one that will easily support the weight of your camera and lens for long periods of time. Some tripods have a center column that raises up for more height. Do not use this, it turns your sturdy tripod into an unstable monopod. Some tripods let you remove it entirely to save weight.

You'll definitely want a tripod head that uses a quick release clamp that supports using an L-bracket. The L-bracket attaches to your camera and will allow you to quickly orient the camera vertically without having to flop the tripod head to the side, allowing for better stability and overall easier operation.

I use a Gitzo GT2542L tripod (center column removed) with an Acratech GP ballhead. There are more heavy duty tripods and heads available at the cost of greater weight. I've been very happy with my setup, although a head that lets you control each axis of movement separately might be even better, at the cost of it being bigger and heavier. The benefit would be the ability to make small adjustments to composition for a single axis without effecting the rest of the orientation of the head.

Remote Timer & Release
For some reason camera manufacturers have designed limited firmware for the cameras that (usually) only let you chose 30 seconds as a maximum exposure time. Sometimes you need to expose for longer than that, particularly when doing long exposures for the foreground. Thus you will need a remote timer for your camera. This can be a wireless or wired remote. It will accomplish two things: it will let you trigger the shutter without actually touching the camera (reducing camera shake), and it will let you control the length of the exposure from anywhere between 1 second and many many minutes. You should get one that will also let you set it up to automatically take multiple photos, which you can use for star trail photography (not covered in this tutorial).

I really haven't found a perfect solution for a remote timer. The Vello ShutterBoss is what I normally use but I've broken a few of them due to a weakness in the design where the cable attaches to the body of the remote. I recently purchased the wireless ShutterBoss so we'll see how that goes. I suggest carrying a couple remote timers with you in case one breaks.

I haven't used one (yet) but the Promote looks like it could be a great solution, it doesn't look like it has the cable design weakness of the wired ShutterBoss.

West Quoddy Head Lighthouse
Dew in the air kept fogging up my lens, and I didn't have a heater to keep the lens warm so I was
only able to take a single exposure for this photo.  As a result the bottom of the lighthouse is a little out of focus.
Nikon D800E, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm/2.8, ISO 3200, 25 seconds.

Shoot RAW

If you're not shooting in RAW format with your camera then you need to start doing that and learn how to process RAW files. The RAW format is a digital representation of what the camera captured without any parts of it "lost" due to compression. Although some cameras support compressed RAW, so make sure you're not using that.


Software Needed

Excellent RAW Editor
You'll need a very good raw editor to go along with your RAW files. Night photography requires the use of high ISO exposures, so you want a RAW editor that can make the most of the limited dynamic range such high ISO exposures.. I strongly suggest using Adobe Lightroom. Adobe Camera Raw, which comes with Photoshop, contains the same RAW editor as Lightroom, but Lightroom will make organizing your photos a lot simpler.

Photoshop
Photoshop is used to blend exposures together and for editing the final image in ways that are not possible in Lightroom. There are some plug-ins for Lightroom that allow you to blend photos together, but you'll have the greatest control over your entire image editing process if you have Photoshop.

Noise Reduction
You may need a plug-in for Photoshop or Lightroom to help with noise reduction, particularly for the high ISO exposures of the sky. I use Nik Dfine as a Photoshop plug-in and find that it does an amazing job, better than what Lightroom and Photoshop provide by themselves.


Finding the Milky Way

When photographers talk about the Milky Way we usually mean the galactic center, which is the densest and widest part of the Milky Way, and thus the brightest part to our eyes and to the camera. Whether you can see the galactic center depends on your location and the time of year. The brightest part of the Milky Way is near the constellation Sagittarius and stretches up towards Cygnus. Various software applications are available to help you determine if you can see the Milky Way at night from your location. On the iPhone/iPad I use Star Walk, which is a commercial app, but Planets is another app available for free. I'm not familiar with Android apps, but it looks like Star Chart would fit the bill. You can Google for other options for iOS, Android, or desktops.

Finding the Milky Way using Star Walk for the iPhone.


Find a Dark Sky

A very dark sky is necessary in order to see the greatest detail in the Milky Way, so you want to be far away from the light pollution of cities and out at a time when the moon isn't going to wash out the sky. On the other hand, you can sometimes use light pollution to dramatic effect, and when the moon is low enough in the sky you can use it to light up the foreground. There are various apps available that will show you the phase of the moon and when it will rise and set. I most often use Focalware on the iPhone for this but there are many apps, including lots of free ones, that can do this.

You can head on over to this site to see NASA imagery of city lights at night, which can help you find dark sky areas:
http://www.blue-marble.de/nightlights/2012


Focus Bracketing

Due to the physical limitations of current cameras (not including something NASA might be able to produce), it is physically impossible to take a single exposure where both the stars and foreground are in focus while having minimal movement in the stars, a detailed sky, and a non-noisy foreground. In order to get an exposure for the stars at 14mm on full frame you need to expose somewhere around 20 or 30 seconds at f/2.8 or better, which means that if you're composing a shot with a near foreground it won't be in focus. So in order to create an image with a well exposed and in focus sky and foreground you can take multiple exposures at different focus distances and ISOs and then blend them together in Photoshop to create the final result. This is an advanced topic and I won't cover the details of it all here, but stay tuned for future tutorials.

Update: I now have a crash course video on exposure blending available here.




Light Painting

Light painting is a way of lighting your foreground at night by using a flashlight or some other source of light. This technique takes some practice to perfect. You'll probably want to use a diffuse light source because focused bright light can create very harsh shadows. I don't light paint too often, but when I do I often use a lens cloth over a flashlight, or bounce the flashlight off of something behind me, in order to cast soft light on the foreground.

The biggest thing you want to avoid is what I call the "car headlight" problem. This is when lightpainting looks like a car was parked behind your camera, shining its headlights onto the foreground, meaning that the foreground is far too bright compared to the sky and has harsh transitions between light and dark areas that look obviously like a light had been shining on the foreground.

Sometimes light painting is the only way to get a good exposure of the foreground within a reasonable amount of time if the ambient light is so low that it would take too long to capture a good exposure of the foreground. "Too long" is subjective, but one example would be when you're at the ocean and the tide is coming in and would cover you and your camera if you didn't move.

St. Matthew's Lupine Field
Light painting and focus bracketing were used to get the foreground field of lupines well exposed and in focus.
Nikon D800E, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm/f2.8.
Sky exposure: ISO 2500, 25 sec.
Foreground: 5 separate exposures, different focus distances, each at ISO 1000 for 60 seconds.
The foreground exposures were light painted with a diffuse light - an incandescent flashlight with
a lens cloth covering the bulb.
Camera Settings

So here we are, at the section that I get the most questions about. I'm frequently asked what settings were used for an image, but it is critically important to understand that the camera settings are only part of what makes an image, and the rest of it is what you do for editing in software. Using the exact same settings I use will not give you the same results out of your camera because there is a lot of editing needed after the shot is done. The photos that come out of the camera are the starting point, the rest is crafting the image in the "digital darkroom".

First off, you need to enable exposure delay or mirror lock-up in your camera. These settings create a delay between when the mirror is flipped up and when the shutter is opened. That delay lets the vibrations from the "mirror slap" dissipate before the exposure starts. I use a 3 second exposure delay.

Also, make sure you're shooting in RAW mode.

For white balance I normally leave this on auto and fix it later in software. With RAW files the white balance is just a piece of metadata and doesn't actually effect the data in the RAW file. You can completely correct the white balance of RAW files in your RAW editor.

Minimizing Star Trails
You may be surprised to discover how quickly the stars appear to "move" across the sky in your photos due to the Earth's rotation. This shows up in photos as star trails, instead of looking like pinpoints the stars look like streaks in the sky. In order to minimize star trails you have to limit your exposure to where the trails are acceptably small enough to look like pinpoint stars.

You may have heard of something called the "500 Rule". The idea being that you can calculate the exposure time for minimal star trails by dividing the 35mm full frame focal length into the number 500. Thus, for a 14mm shot, you'd come up with a "500 Rule" value of 36 seconds (500/14 = 35.7). However, I find 36 seconds at 14mm to be too long of an exposure, the star trails are too big. Doing the math, it looks like I tend to follow a "400 Rule" (I'm often using 25 or 30 seconds at 14mm), but you'll just need to experiment and find out what works for you. Keep in mind that when using ultra wide lenses the lens distortion will cause the stars in the edges of the frame to have longer trails than those in the center of the frame.

If you're using a crop camera you'll need to use the 35mm equivalent of your lens' focal length. This is calculated by multiplying the focal length of your lens by the magnification factor of the camera. Nikon DX cameras are 1.5x, Canon crop cameras are 1.6x. E.g., for a 10mm crop lens on a Nikon DX camera, you'd multiply 10 * 1.5 to get a 15mm full frame equivalent, then you would divide that value into 400 (or 500).

Long Exposure Noise Reduction
High ISO long exposures often result in hot pixels, pixels in the exposure that are clipped to bright red, green, blue, or white. In order to limit the amount of these hot pixels you can use your camera's Long Exposure Noise Reduction (LENR) setting, if your camera has it. With this setting turned on, for each exposure that you take that is over a certain length (on my D800E it kicks in for any exposure over 1 second) the camera will take another exposure at the same settings but with the shutter closed. This is called a "black frame", and the goal is that the exposure will contain most of the same hot pixels as the actual exposure, and the camera can then "fix" those hot pixels in the actual exposure before writing out the final RAW file. This does mean that your exposures will take twice as long but in my opinion it is well worth it. If you don't do this you'll likely end up having to spend quite a bit of time cleaning up hot pixels manually in your RAW editor or Photoshop.

Focusing In The Dark
As you may have experienced before, focusing in the dark is rather tricky. And if you're focus stacking you will need to change focus multiple times. So how do you do this in the dark? Ultimately the answer is that you will need to practice with your lens and examine the results. Not all lenses focus at infinity when the focus ring is set to the infinity mark. Many lenses will change their infinity point as the ambient temperature and humidity changes, and on zoom lenses the infinity mark may only be accurate for part of the zoom range.

On my Nikon 14-24mm/f2.8 lens I know that when it is at infinity then the stars are in sharp focus, even at f/2.8. This has been true of my lens in various temperatures, whether it's well below freezing or in the heat of summer. I know some other photographers with the same lens that have had the same experience, and others who have not, so it will depend on your luck of the draw with what you get from the factory, but you may be able to send your lens in for repair to correct it.

If you cannot get your lens to capture sharp stars at your widest aperture setting regardless of your focus distance then you may have a lens that is just not sharp with pinpoint light sources, or the lens may need repair.

For foreground exposures you can sometimes use a flashlight and live view to help you focus. On the other hand I often rotate the focus ring to varying points on the lens for each foreground exposure because I know my lens well enough to know where I should rotate it to and how many shots I may need for the depth of field of a given scene, but it always comes down to checking my results in the LCD.


Expose!
The actual exposure settings will depend on your camera and what you're photographing. My night photos almost always consist of multiple exposures, one for the sky, and additional ones for the foreground at different focus distances at lower ISO for longer exposure durations. The additional exposures for the foreground allow me to capture the foreground with much greater detail and sharpness than using just one exposure for the sky and the foreground. All of these exposures are then blended in Photoshop to create a single image.

For my sky exposures I'm usually shooting at ISO 2000 or 3200, 25 or 30 seconds, 14mm (full frame), at f/2.8.

You'll need to find out what works for your camera. If your lens is slower than f/2.8 you may have to sacrifice some noise and/or star trails by exposing at a higher ISO and/or longer time. Or if you're zoomed in more you may need to use a shorter exposure time to limit star trails and possibly a higher ISO to capture more light over the shorter exposure.

For the foreground exposures you'll want to stay at the same focal length (I'm normally at 14mm on full frame) but the ISO, exposure time, and f-stop can all vary. Depending on the amount of ambient light in the area, or if I'm light painting, I may be using anywhere between ISO 400 to 1600 or even 3200, for anywhere from 60 seconds to 10 minutes. It really depends on the situation and you'll need to experiment and be knowledgeable of "exposure math" to find out what works for your camera in various situations. I often take multiple foreground exposures, sometimes as many as 8 or 9 exposures, but you can also take a single foreground exposure at a small aperture (high f-stop number) for a very long exposure duration to get a single shot that has the entire foreground in focus. Then you blend the foreground exposures with the sky exposure in Photoshop to create a single image.

New Hampshire Seacoast
This image consists of two exposures blended together.
The bright area above the left side of the horizon is from the sun nearing the horizon for sunrise (but still well before sunrise).
Nikon D800E, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm/2.8.
Sky exposure: ISO 3200, 20 sec.
Foreground: ISO 1600, 120 seconds.

Editing Basics

Taking the photos are only half the process of photography. The editing process is where you clean up the photos, blend them together (if you're doing focus stacking), and craft your final image. If you rush through this part and don't develop a personal style your photos will reflect that rushing and will not look professional. I will not be getting into the fine details of editing in this blog post, but I will cover some basics to get you started.

Basic Workflow
If you're going to be blending multiple exposures (focus stacking) in Photoshop you should make basic edits in Lightroom (or Camera Raw) first. At a minimum you should correct white balance, adjust sharpening (see below for how to not sharpen the noise), remove chromatic aberration and any other lens corrections. You may want to check "Enable Profile Corrections" to fix distortion and vignetting, but I often only fix vignetting. You may want to add vignetting back to the photo later as a creative effect, but getting rid of the lens vignetting first will allow you the greatest room for editing.

After making the basic edits, you can then export the exposures into Photoshop and blend them together to create your single image. Once blended, you can then continue editing in Photoshop, or edit the blended photo in Lightroom (and again in Photoshop if you want!) to craft your final image.

White Balance
Chances are you'll need to adjust the white balance of your photos. I usually put my camera in auto white balance mode and then correct it all in post. But even if you did chose a particular setting you'll likely want to change the white balance anyways. You can use the white balance to make the colors look more natural, but you can also use it for creative effect to shift the mood of the photo. Remember, when you shoot RAW you can completely correct the white balance in software, you don't have to worry about the adjustment causing artifacts in your photos.

Sharpening
Sharpening is one of the most important steps in digital photography that is often overlooked. For night photography you can use it to sharpen up the stars a little bit and sharpen the foreground details, but the most important thing is make sure you're not sharpening the noise in the photo.

By default, Lightroom (or Camera Raw) will sharpen the entire image. You will want to adjust the Masking slider in the Sharpening section of the Detail panel so that blank parts of the sky are not being sharpened. If you don't do this, then the noise in the sky will be sharpened, which will make it more prominent. Hold down the option key (Mac) or alt key (Windows) while dragging the Masking slider to see a mask overlay on your image showing where the sharpening will be applied. The white parts of the overlay are the areas that will be sharpened. So you want the blank parts of the sky to be black so that the noise in the sky isn't being sharpened. You can also do this while zoomed into your image to see the full detail of the mask, which will let you fine tune it.

Hold down opt (Mac) or alt (Windows) when dragging the Masking slider in Lightroom
to see where the sharpening will be applied.  White areas will be sharpened.


Clarity
The clarity slider in Lightroom (or Camera Raw) is one of my favorite tools. When used on the sky exposure, positive clarity will really make the stars pop. But be careful when using it, you can easily add too much clarity and cause ugly halo artifacts, particularly around the horizon. If this happens you can just back off on the clarity, or you can only brush in clarity where you want it with a local adjustment brush or gradient. Or use global clarity and brush the clarity away from where you don't want it using negative clarity.

Noise Reduction
With such high ISOs needed to capture the night sky without star tails you'll probably find that your images need some noise reduction. Your RAW editor should provide some noise reduction, but you'll probably get much better noise reduction by using a third party tool, often as a plug-in for Lightroom or Photoshop. I personally use a little bit of noise reduction in Lightroom before exporting the photos to Photoshop, where I can then apply much better noise reduction using Nik Dfine. You will want to practice and find the right balance between smoothing out noise in the sky without smoothing out the stars.

Nikon D800E, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14/2.8.
Sky exposure: ISO 3200, 30 sec.
Foreground: ISO 1000, 5 minutes.


Go Shoot!

Now that you've learned all the basics to landscape astrophotograhy it's time to find a dark sky and practice! Good luck and have a blast!

Monday, August 26, 2013

Compose For The Night

Nubble Lighthouse, York, Maine

I get lots of questions about how to take night photographs, and there are many questions about camera settings, and I will be writing about that in more detail in the future, but the truth is that the way I approach landscape astrophotography is the same way I approach all other landscape photography.  There is a healthy amount of research, planning, technical proficiency and patience involved, but what I want to talk about here is using a strong foreground in your photos.  Daytime landscape photography lives and dies by composition, and so does night photography.

Don't focus on just shooting the Milky Way, that's like just shooting the clouds in the sky.  It can work beautifully but anyone can take a photo of just the clouds or just the Milky Way.  Why not show an interesting location to go with it?  A strong foreground is they key to wide angle landscape photography.  Use the Milky Way as an element of your composition.  Find a location where you can place the Milky Way in the frame in a pleasing way.  Consider the angle of the Milky Way and how much of it you want in the frame.  You don't always need to capture a large part of the Milky Way.  The Milky Way looks the same every night, so you're not really missing much by only using part of it for a composition.

You can practice technical aspects of night photography by photographing simple compositions, such as the stars over tree tops, but once you figure out your preferred settings for minimal star trails with acceptable noise you can then look for framing opportunities that use strong foreground elements.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

The Red Glow of The Bold Coast



The Red Glow of The Bold Coast
Cutler Coast, Maine

Buy print: http://www.adamwoodworth.com/Night/i-g6pBrjN

While this is definitely one of the darkest sky places I've ever been it does have one big drawback for night photography, and that is the Naval Computer & Telecommunication Station (NCTS) in Cutler, 7.5 miles to the southwest of where this photo was taken.  The NCTS consists of 26 towers with antennas, the largest towers being nearly 1000 feet tall.  Each tower has a red light on top that slowly blinks.  With so many red lights so high in the air, they easily create a red glow for any long exposure photo taken at night looking towards the west.

The NCTS was used by the US Navy as a radio transmission station for communicating with submarines, and went into operation in 1961.  Uniformed Navy personnel left the base in 2000 and the site is undergoing conversion to civilian use.  There are two giant antenna arrays covering an entire peninsula.  Each array consists of 13 antenna towers and spans over a mile across.

#maine #milkyway #boldcoast

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Milky Way Over Head Harbor Lighthouse



Milky Way Over Head Harbor Lighthouse
Campobello Island, New Brunswick, Canada

Buy print: http://www.adamwoodworth.com/Night/i-CLPxsj9

Overlooking the Bay of Fundy at the tip of Campobello Island (next to the end of the coast of Maine) is the East Quoddy Lighthouse, which is often called the Head Harbor Lighthouse.  This is a constant on red light, which is why the foreground is bathed in red.

So this isn't a particularly amazing composition, but it's the best I came up with during the very short amount of time I had before sunrise.  Shooting the Milky Way at this location (at least for the way I had in mind) requires many conditions to align: clear skies, the earth rotating far enough for the Milky Way to be very far into the west so it appears behind the lighthouse, low tide, and clam enough conditions to want to be out on the tip of this island.  You can only reach this lighthouse at low tide, requiring walks across slippery rocks and up and down very steep and precarious stair cases.  The tide comes in very fast in the Bay of Fundy (at this location 5 feet an hour is normal), so you really have to make sure you're giving yourself enough time before the tide comes in too far, stranding yourself until the next low tide.

#campobello #newbrunswick #canada #bayoffundy #milkyway #eastquoddy #headharbor #lighthouse

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Quoddy Head Sunset



Quoddy Head Sunset
Lubec, Maine

Buy print: http://www.adamwoodworth.com/Day/i-V3CGRN7

Another shot from the road trip last week, this is from the first night that I was in Lubec, Maine.

Sunrise From Cadillac Mountain



Sunrise From Cadillac Mountain
Acadia National Park, Maine

Buy print: http://www.adamwoodworth.com/Day/i-GCC8xKM

The first stop on my road trip last week was Acadia, we arrived late in the night in dense fog, which hung around for the morning and made for a beautiful undercast sunrise from the top of Cadillac Mountain.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Milky Way On The Rocks


Milky Way On The Rocks
Hopewell Rocks
The Rocks Provincial Park, Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick, Canada

Buy print: www.adamwoodworth.com/Night/i-5Z3vBhd

While sitting in a cafe in Lubec, Maine, my friend was searching online and discovered Hopewell Rocks in New Brunswick.  Neither of us had heard of it before but we knew we had to go as soon as we saw the photos from there.  The next day we were in Machias, Maine, after a night on the Cutler Coast, and after breakfast we headed up to Hopewell Rocks, about a 4 hour drive away (if you don't stop).

The Hopewell Rocks are at the top of the Bay of Fundy, and can see tide swings as much as 50 feet.  They consist of dark sedimentary conglomerate and standstone rock.  The tides are eroding the bottoms of the rocks faster than rain and wind erode the tops, giving them their top heavy shapes.

Milky Way Cove


Milky Way Cove
Lubec, Maine

Buy print: www.adamwoodworth.com/Night/i-Lg39RQ9

This shot is from the rugged coast of Quoddy Head State Park in Lubec, part of the Bold Coast of Maine. This area has the lowest amount of light pollution that I've ever experienced. There is virtually no light pollution except for the on/off beam of West Quoddy Head Lighthouse (which is lighting up the cliff on the right of this image) and a lighthouse on Grand Manan island (the white dot left of center next to the tree in this image). The Milky Way was so intensely bright that you could see it reflected in the ocean with the naked eye. You can also see airglow in this image, the green and magenta stripes in the sky.

Did you know that we can bring back dark skies to populated areas? One of the easiest things we can do is to use less light at night outside our homes, use properly shielded lamps that direct the light downward to where it is needed, and use motion detectors instead of having lights on all night. To learn more about light pollution and how we can all make a difference check out the International Dark-Sky Association and www.darksky.org.

West Quoddy Head Light


West Quoddy Head Light
Lubec, Maine

Buy print: www.adamwoodworth.com/Night/i-RXQJscT

I just got back from a week long road trip exploring a few parts of the western side of the Bay of Fundy, starting on the northern coast of Maine and going into New Brunswick. We had clear skies every night! Lots of photos to come, but I thought I'd start with one of our first stops. This shot is from West Quoddy Head Light, in Lubec, the last town on the Maine coast before Canada. The light beams from the lighthouse are so visible in this photo because of the heavy moisture in the air. The light appears as beams because of the window frames in the lighthouse. In fact my lens kept fogging over and I had a hard time getting any clean shots.