Behind the Frame

Long Exposure and Stacking: A Starry Sky Guide

Long exposure under the Milky Way

Whoever sees the starry frames in my portfolio asks the same first question: "Is this a single exposure?" The answer is no — and this article is the guide to why "no" is the better answer. Our subject: long exposure and the stacking technique.

The problem with a single long exposure

The classic approach is simple: tripod, 20-30 second exposure, stars in frame. But it has three enemies: noise (the sensor heats up, shadows fill with speckle), star trailing (past ~25 seconds stars turn from points to lines — the 500 rule) and single-frame risk (a plane crosses, wind hits → the exposure is garbage).

Stacking: many frames, one sky

The logic: instead of one 4-minute exposure, you shoot 10-16 frames of 15-20 seconds. Then you align and average them in Photoshop (or tools like Sequator / Starry Landscape Stacker). The result:

The Photoshop workflow

  1. Load frames as layers (File → Scripts → Load Files into Stack, with "Attempt to Automatically Align" checked).
  2. Select all layers and convert to a Smart Object.
  3. Layer → Smart Objects → Stack Mode → Mean (or Maximum if you want star trails).
  4. Shoot a separate long exposure for the foreground and blend with a mask — sky and landscape give their best with different recipes.
Instead of one heroic exposure, the mathematics of sixteen: stacking is the night photographer's insurance.

Field notes

The Milky Way frames on this page — including the starry skies in my wedding series — are all products of this recipe. Try it; once you see the clean shadows of your first stack, there's no going back.

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