What a fabulous night for some nightscapes at Arches National Park, Utah.
I’m at Arches National Park for two nights, to shoot the stars over its amazing eroded sandstone landscape.
I started the night last night, April 6, shooting Orion over Turret Arch while the sky was still lit by deep twilight. That image is below. It shows Orion and the winter sky, with bright Venus at right, setting over the aptly-named Turret Arch.
I scouted the location earlier in the day and measured in person, as expected from maps, that the angles would be perfect for capturing Orion over the Arch.
But better still would be getting Orion setting through the Arch. That’s the lead photo at top.
I shot the star trail image later in the evening, over half an hour. It uses a stack of 5 exposures: a single, short 30-second one for the initial point-like stars, followed by a series of four 8-minute exposures to create the long star trails. The short exposure was at ISO 4000; the long exposures at ISO 250. All are with the Rokinon 14mm lens.
Arches is a popular and iconic place for nightscape photography.
I thought I’d likely not be alone, and sure enough another pair of photographers showed up, though they were armed with lights to illuminate the Arches, as many photographers like to do.
I shot this from afar, as they lit up the inside of Turret Arch where I had been earlier in the night.
I prefer not to artificially illuminate natural landscapes, or do so only mildly, not with bright spotlights. We traded arches! – while I shot Turret, the other photography couple shot next door at the North and South Window Arches, and vice versa. It all worked out fine.
Later in the night, after moonrise, I shot next door at the famous Double Arch. Those moonlit photos will be in tomorrow’s blog.
It was a very productive night, and a remarkable experience shooting at such a location on a warm and quiet night, with only a fellow photographer or two for company.
– Alan, April 7, 2015 / © 2015 Alan Dyer / www.amazingsky.com
Thanks so much for the info!
Really nice images – thanks Alan! I was also wondering if those images were shot with a modified camera…and would a non-modified camera could produce a close to similar effect such as the ones shown above. Thanks again.
Hi – none of the recent shots were done with a filter modified camera. One would be useful only for long exposures of the Milky Way.