![]() ![]() ![]() *If you live in a county that blocks Paypal contact me for an alternative payment gateway. I’m getting a lot of requests for other languages, I only speak English so there is no chance of this being released in other languages, sorry. The tutorial is in English, with English subs for keyboard shortcuts, tools, layers etc. I don’t include my RAW images due to the download size (36GB), but I do include 3000px wide JPG versions so you can use these to follow along with the videos or just examine the camera settings I used. The tutorial is recorded on a Windows PC, if you are a Mac user substitute the Control and Alt keys for Command and Option. ![]() The download is 4 video files in MP4 format with a resolution of 3440x1440 (this will be difficult to see on a small laptop screen - you will need to link to an external desktop monitor). Photoshop CC/CS is required, Tony Kuyper’s TK Actions Panel is recommended. Mac McClung of the Delaware Blue Coats, the G League affiliate of the Philadelphia 76ers, seals the victory at the NBA Slam Dunk contest with an impressive 540. It covers cleaning and stacking the images, applying the ‘comet fade’ effect to the trails, blending the stacked star images with a twilight foreground image, color processing and finishing touches. Created by Markus Enzweiler, you can download Starstax here. StarStax is user friendly, free and multiplatform software you can use to make your star trail photography easier. This tutorial covers my complete startrails processing workflow, starting out with 760 RAW images straight out of the camera and combining them into a single finished startrail image (below). StarStax Review and Beginner’s Guide Star Trails Made Easy. **You will receive a download link via email immediately after completing checkout, if you don’t see it in your inbox check your junk folder, some ISPs flag this email as spam.** ![]()
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