Amateur Photographer

Shoot for the moon

After the sun has set and you’ve taken your final image during twilight, packing away and beginning the long trek back to your car is the typical order of events for landscape photographers. But once darkness has set in, depending on the moon phase and how clear the sky is, a whole new view of the world can reveal itself; one where nighttime scenes can be captured in such a way that they look as if they were taken in daylight. The main giveaway that something else is afoot is the stars nestled in the bright blue sky.

For this effect to work, you ideally need to shoot on or within a few days of a full moon. However, you can shoot during first quarter or third quarter moon phases (a half-illuminated moon as seen from Earth). The only downside here is that you have to roughly double the ISO compared to a full moon, but modern cameras, even entry-level models, are excellent

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