beewee Posted May 11, 2024 Share #1  Posted May 11, 2024 Advertisement (gone after registration) With the biggest geomagnetic storm to hit earth in 20 years yesterday, I headed out with the Q3 and SL2-S to capture the aurora. While shooting, it was abundantly clear how useful Enhanced Live View (ELV) is for astrophotography as it is available on the SL2-S but not the Q3. The aurora was very strong and bright enough to drown out most of the stairs last night and with ELV enabled on the SL2-S, I was able to compose/frame like it was daytime which was a joy. The shooting experience was better than having an optical viewfinder. In contrast, the Q3 which lacked ELV was definitely much harder to compose and I had to fall back to more traditional ways to frame by taking a long exposure, adjusting the camera angle, taking another long exposure. I’m really now wishing that Leica would add ELV to the Q3. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted May 11, 2024 Posted May 11, 2024 Hi beewee, Take a look here Enhanced Live View for Astrophotography. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
LeicaR10 Posted May 12, 2024 Share #2 Â Posted May 12, 2024 Beewee, Â i use the ELV often on the SL2-S and its a great feature. Â If enough people email Leica Customer Care the company will often add the feature to the firmware. Â Last, did you get any good photographs of the aurora the other night? Â If you did, maybe you will post a few on the SL2-S image thread and let us know what lens you found best for that night event. Â Thank you in advance. Â r/ Mark 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
beewee Posted May 12, 2024 Author Share #3  Posted May 12, 2024 (edited) 12 hours ago, LeicaR10 said: Last, did you get any good photographs of the aurora the other night?  If you did, maybe you will post a few on the SL2-S image thread and let us know what lens you found best for that night event. I was mainly taking frames for timelapse’s but here’s a DNG export from Lightroom SOOC without any edits. SL2-S + Sigma 14/1.4 DG DN (Linked to the Sigma 14/1.4 thread on this forum) @ f1/4, 1s, ISO6400. This setting works amazingly well for time-lapse since there’s no in-camera noise reduction required which means no time gap between frames, ISO is low enough to get some really clean images off the SL2-S, and by keeping the exposure time low, you can capture all the finer details in the aurora which can change and move quite rapidly. With longer exposure times of 2-5+ seconds, it can start to smear the finer rays within the aurora. Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here… Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! Edited May 12, 2024 by beewee Added link to the Sigma 14/1.4 thread 11 3 Link to post Share on other sites Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members! ' data-webShareUrl='https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/394358-enhanced-live-view-for-astrophotography/?do=findComment&comment=5274054'>More sharing options...
beewee Posted May 12, 2024 Author Share #4  Posted May 12, 2024 With the Sigma 14/1.4 being somewhat ‘reasonably priced’ by Leica standards and the SL2-S used prices dropping as well as the OG Panasonic S5 prices also pretty low, it’s now got me thinking about building a rig similar to this: https://www.digitalcameraworld.com/features/how-i-use-my-unique-camera-rigs-to-take-spectacular-aurora-images 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeicaR10 Posted May 13, 2024 Share #5 Â Posted May 13, 2024 Peewee, Â Thank you for taking time to post your photograph and links. Â I am would think being there to see the event was spectacular. Â r/ Mark Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
beewee Posted May 14, 2024 Author Share #6  Posted May 14, 2024 5 hours ago, LeicaR10 said: Peewee,  Thank you for taking time to post your photograph and links.  I am would think being there to see the event was spectacular.  r/ Mark Yeah, it was by far the strongest show I’ve seen in real-life. At one point the entire sky was lit up in all 360 degrees. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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