How can I photograph moon craters without blowing out the moon?
Asked 12/12/2011
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I’m using a Canon EOS 550D (T2i) and when I try to photograph the moon in automatic modes like P or Creative Auto, the moon turns into a completely white circle with no visible crater detail. What camera settings and technique should I use to capture the moon with visible surface detail?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
14y ago
2 Answers
31
I had exactly the same problem when I first tried to photograph the moon: all I ever got was an overexposed white circle.
The answer is that the moon is much brighter than you realise. Also, unless you have a very telescopic lens, it's going to be pretty small in your photo. If you use one of the camera's automatic modes, the camera will try to get the "right" exposure for a scene made up of lots of black sky and a tiny bit of moon. The "lots of black sky" wins out, the camera brightens the exposure, and you lose the detail in the moon.
The best way to capture the moon is therefore to use Manual mode. This isn't as difficult as it sounds:
- Switch the mode dial to M.
- Set the ISO setting to something quite low: between 100 and 400 should do it.
- Set your aperture setting to somewhere round f/5.6.
- Set your shutter speed to around 1/100s.
Now try a shot and see how it looks. If it's too bright, try a faster shutter speed until you start to see the detail of the craters. If you've somehow under-exposed it, just do the opposite: try a slower shutter speed, a larger aperture or a higher ISO setting.
The main thing is ignore what the camera is telling you! It'll be flashing away like crazy saying your shot is going to be too dark, but just ignore it. We know the sky will be "too dark", but it's the moon we're after. Fold away your targeting computer, Luke. Use the Force.
Good luck!
Originally by user3644. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user3644
14y ago
0
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Use manual exposure, not auto modes. The moon is much brighter than the surrounding black sky, so automatic metering overexposes it and turns it into a white blob.
A good starting approach:
- Switch to Manual mode
- Use a low ISO: 100–400
- Start around f/8 to f/11
- Try a shutter speed around 1/125 sec and adjust from there
- Shoot in RAW so you can fine-tune highlights later
For sharper results:
- Use a long lens if possible; otherwise the moon will look very small and you’ll need to crop heavily
- Use a sturdy tripod
- Use a cable release or the self-timer to avoid camera shake
The key is to expose for the moon itself, not for the sky. Once the moon’s highlights are preserved, crater and surface detail should appear. You can do some post-processing on the RAW file to refine contrast and recover detail, but getting a proper exposure in-camera is the most important step.
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