Acquisition: Canon 6d, Sigma 20mm 1,4, @f1.4, iso 3200, 20 seconds, interval between shots was either 5 or 10 seconds. On a manfrotto 055x proB (or something). Settings changed during the sunrise obviously Minimal light pollution excepting the occasional trucker Ended up in the river slightly, so a bit of fog enveloping the foreground around dawn. There’s a bump in the cloud movement during the sunrise, due to fumbling a setting change and having to reset the camera, so a gap of 1-2 shots but otherwise went smoothly
Also, ISS is the streak from left to right, just before the milkyway disappears
Acquisition: Canon 6d, Sigma 20mm 1,4, @f1.4, iso 3200, 20 seconds, interval between shots was either 5 or 10 seconds. On a manfrotto 055x proB (or something). Settings changed during the sunrise obviously Minimal light pollution excepting the occasional trucker Ended up in the river slightly, so a bit of fog enveloping the foreground around dawn. There’s a bump in the cloud movement during the sunrise, due to fumbling a setting change and having to reset the camera, so a gap of 1-2 shots but otherwise went smoothly
Also, ISS is the streak from left to right, just before the milkyway disappears
With no light pollution, is it possible to see the Milky Way like that with the naked eye?