Quote (Virtue @ Dec 20 2010 09:41pm)
Oh ok.
So will I need a really fast shutter speed, wide aperature, and low ISO?
Or a medium aperature with a 200-400 ISO?
Also, am I wasting my time even trying this with a 55mm lens?
If so I won't bother worrying about staying up to 3-4am tonite

Yes, sorry to not get back to this thread last night.
I would use iso 400-800 personally unless the moon was taking up the full frame in which case I'd probably still use 400.
Oh you may have stayed up for nothing because 55mm will make the moon a bright spot in a vast ocean of darkness. The result will be very boring. You may have discovered this.
Too bad THAT eclipse wont happen for another 400 years or so. But don't fret because other eclipses will. And for them I'd use a 500mm+ lens or such a lens with a teleconverter or a converted telescope.
I'd mount it on a sturdy tripod, I'd use a shutter release cable, I'd put it into manual exposure. Iso about 800 or so, give or take. I'd use an aperture of say f8 f/11 f/16 and start at around 1/100 or so a second, perhaps more if the moon is taking up more of the frame in which case I'd shoot for around f16 and 1/400 or so maybe more as a starting point. I'd chimp because that takes a second and you can correct things. You want a moon with good texture not brightly washed out and moving across the frame.
http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse.htmlAccording to NASA, by following the link above you will see there is another full lunar eclipse on June 15th and December 10th of 2011 so you have time to save up for a bigger lens and a good tripod.
This post was edited by Solarves on Dec 21 2010 09:44am