
Those stars we can see through the haze of pollution and wash of city lights look white for the most part. But get up to altitude, to clear, dark air and you can see that stars come in many colors. I drove to Yosemite on Tuesday night and as I was descending into the valley stopped to admire the sky and the show the Milky Way was putting on away from the cluttered, confused sky above my home town.
I tried to photograph it but found myself in the dark, literally, just trying different settings on my camera to record something like what I was seeing. That’s what I got, something like what I saw, but not very much like, sadly. It was, in a word, amazing.

The next evening as I was leaving the park, I stopped at the Wawona Tunnel parking lot to try to catch the silhouette of El Capitan with the amazing stars in the background. El Cap was covered with its own kind of stars, brave mountain climbers settling into their bivvies for the night. There was even one on the face of Half Dome in the distance.
I must find a technique for taking better photos in pitch black night, because what I eyes could see was inspiring…
Info: The first photograph was made with a Nikon D700 Digital SLR Camera, Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens
, on a Manfrotto 055XPROB Pro Tripod
with a Manfrotto 488RC2 Midi Ball Head(3157N)
and a Nikon MC30 Remote Cable Release
in Mirror Up mode. Exposure at 30 seconds, f/2.8, ISO 6400, 16mm, processed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2
, Adobe Photoshop CS4
and Noise Ninja Pro
. The second image was the same except that I used a Nikon 70-200mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S VR
, and the exposure was 10 seconds at 70mm.

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