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I’m thinking they had to do some kind of setup where the camera moves with the stars and then they layered it to the foreground. Some artistry and technology working together there, I think.has anyone ever been anywhere where they saw they sky like this?
This has got to be a giant Fstop with a VERY slow sheetter speed. There is a lot of light hat has to be let in to see the sky look like that, you can tell the slow shutter speed by how the water looks, like smoky, the water was flowing and the low shutter speed helped collect lots of light reflecting from the water at various spots.has anyone ever been anywhere where they saw they sky like this?
Here's a map to find places that apparently give a naked eye view of the Milky Way. We'll never see it in Louisiana unless it's a really good night between Alexandria and Natchez.has anyone ever been anywhere where they saw they sky like this?
I've lived on or near to the highway from Alex to Natchez for nearly my entire life and I've never seen the sky as clear as I have in the desert or out at sea.Here's a map to find places that apparently give a naked eye view of the Milky Way. We'll never see it in Louisiana unless it's a really good night between Alexandria and Natchez.
And an article on seeing the Milky Way: https://darksitefinder.com/how-to-see-the-milky-way/