Shooting stars (and comets)
I headed out to Rocky Mountain National Park on Monday evening for a long overdue photography shoot, in the hopes of catching a good view of comet Neowise.
News, tutorials and photography tips from The Photographer's Ephemeris
I headed out to Rocky Mountain National Park on Monday evening for a long overdue photography shoot, in the hopes of catching a good view of comet Neowise.
If you like to stay ahead of the curve, you might be interested in checking out the upcoming 2.0 version of the TPE Web App, which we’re calling Photo Ephemeris Web.
Landscape and outdoor photographers love to get off the well-trodden path and explore the more remote corners of the world. Often, these places don’t have well-defined names. Or the named area covers many thousands of acres, such as a national park or wilderness area.
We’ve made some improvements to the options for direct coordinate (latitude/longitude) entry in both TPE 4.8 for iOS and TPE 1.7.5 for Android. Previously, in the iOS app you could enter coordinates directly by adding a new location and then editing the latitude/longitude fields.
TPE for iOS was updated to version 4.7 last month, in readiness for the release of iOS 13. Here’s a quick run down of what’s new.
An excerpt from the release notes of a sun‑tracking app caught my eye: “ Details view now shows Magic Hours for photography — Golden Hour and Blue Hour. ” It made me question the meaning.