ANNOUNCEMENT 7/4/24: JBOTV is proud to announce that our short Milky Way film has been selected for the Wide Screen Film and Music Video Film Festival
ANNOUNCEMENT 5/21/22: JBOTV is proud to announce that our short Milky Way film has been selected for the Panama Series Festival 2022
ANNOUNCEMENT 2/4/21: JBOTV is proud to announce that the
Milky Way Galaxy Our Home As Seen From The Eastern Shore has now been selected
for the NAFCo Short Film Festival. The North Appalachian Film Collective for
this winter festival had over 1,800 film entries, those selected represented around
15%, of which these selected films will be shown during the festival from Feb
26-28th. This is a special selection for our film and our production
company, marking now the 8th film festival our short has been
featured in. Today with this announcement the Milky Way Galaxy Our Home has now
been playing in festivals coast to coast for it’s 3d year and has so far won
awards in Cinematography, Editing, best Soundtrack, and Best Experimental Film.
This selection has also made the Milky Way Galaxy Our Home
one of the most selected films on FilmFreeway. We have more announcements out
soon regarding our short film as well as our Astrophotography plans and goals for
2021 out soon.
Thank you and Godspeed.
Jim Baugh
JBOTV
Announcement 6/10/20 We just got notice; our little Milky Way Film on the Eastern
Shore has won the best in Experimental Film Category in the Madras Independent Film
Festival in India. Many thanks! This is now the 4th award the film
has received, the other three were from the Southern Shorts Film Festival USA
for Cinematography, Editing, and Music. This has all been such an honor and
look forward to the festivals over the summer. Now off to Wachapreague next
week to film the last of the New Moon for prime Milky Way Season. Cheers. JB
Announcement 6/6/20 We are pleased our short film has been selected for film
festivals from coast to coast and garnished awards in Cinematography, Music,
and Editing. Now our little Milky Way film from the Eastern Shore of Virginia
has been selected in the Madras Independent Film Festival in India. WOW!
Submitted to Sundance Film Festival
Submitted Timelapse Film Festival LA 2020
Announcement 5/11/20 “The Milky Way Galaxy Our Home as seen from the Eastern
Shore” has been selected for the Si-Fi Film Festival in Oregon and will play at
the Moonlight Theater September 18-19th 2020. This will be the fifth
film festival this short film has been selected for and has won three awards
for Cinematography, Editing, and Music. Much appreciate all the kind comments
and wonderful response this short film has received. It also has been very cool
to share these new dark sky sites on the Shore across the USA! It has also been
great meeting all the filmmakers at these various festivals our film has been
selected for. Lots of great talent out there! Godspeed, JB
Announcement 12/17/19“The Milky Way Galaxy Our Home” as seen from the Eastern Shore has been selected to be featured in the 2020 Ocean City Film Festival. This will be the fourth festival for our short film. Very exciting an honored. JB
More pics and video clip at bottom of post
Announcement 10/14/19: JBOTV, Mermaid Bay Productions LLC and Mermaid Bay AIR is proud to announce that our short film “The Milky Way Galaxy Our Home” as seen from the Eastern Shore has won three (3) awards of merit in the Southern Shorts Film Festival Fall 2019. The awards are for the Documentary Category.
Music
Cinematography
Editing
We would like to thank the judges for this honor and looking forward to attending the festival. Godspeed, Jim Baugh.
**** Announcement 9/5/2019: “The Milky Way Galaxy Our Home” as seen from the
Eastern Shore short film has been selected for the First Time Filmmakers
Showcase Film Festival. Finalists will be screened at Pinewood Studios UK and
Raleigh Studios in Hollywood California. The live Lift Off Film Festival will
be seen in 11 major cities worldwide. Festival runs from Oct 13-20 2019 the general public can vote online for their favorite film showcase. Click Here
****
"Milky Way Galaxy, Our Home"
Short film premiered June 29,2019 Experimental Film Virginia Festival Held at the Palace Theater Filmed at 4 dark sky locations on the Eastern Shore of Virginia ranging from bortle class 1-4 Produced by JBOTV, Mermaid Bay Media Productions LLC and Mermaid Bay AIR
“Nicely done Jim. Congrats! I enjoyed the film. The
soundtrack worked perfectly. Great work!”
~ Jae Sinnett
Jazz Radio Host/Producer Sinnett In Session/The R&B
Chronicles WHRV FM - Music Educator/Drummer/Composer at WHRO Public Radio
“It came out really good!!
Congrats on those sweet time lapses.
I like that Redbank spot, I might have to check that out”
~ Mike Eversprill “Milky Way Mike”
National Geographic, Weather.com, Stargazer, Photography
Week digital magazine.
“Are you kidding me! Magnificent! Too cosmic! Humbling!
Powerful and moving. And. I see you are the composer as well! A simply stunning
film. Congratulations on your masterpiece.”
~ Musician Peg Volk
“Wow beautifully done and the music is perfect. Double
congrats!!!”
~ Pianist,
Earnest Mathewson
It was a great evening and film festival!
***
ANNOUNCEMENT:
6/30/19
Jim Baugh Outdoors TV special short film project 2019 titled “The Milky Way Galaxy, Our Home” as seen from the Eastern Shore of Virginia was selected and premiered at the Reel & Raw Film Screening presented by Experimental Film Virginia on June 29th at 7:30 pm in Cape Charles Virginia. This short film features four dark sky locations on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. Each shooting location was carefully selected from satellite maps and was researched to enable the best camera view of the Milky Way path from solar midnight to astronomical twilight. Over 20,000 images were captured to create a total of 4 Milky Way Time-lapse. Aerial film was also produced of the selected locations and produced by Mermaid Bay AIR. The theater sold out, standing room only and the festival was a huge success.
IFO's (Identified flying objects) in the film include:
Fireflies, airplanes, satellites, meteors, and two passes of the International Space Station traveling at 17,500mph.
PRODUCTION GOAL AND DESIGN
GOAL : When I first thought of the possibility of finding
some dark sky sites on the Eastern Shore back in the fall of 2018, my first concern was that I
would not be able to find any. Even though the Eastern Shore of Virginia is rural,
there still is the light pollution of Virginia Beach as well as from small
towns on the Shore. So I studied satellite maps closely on google earth and
covered the coastline of the Eastern Shore of Virginia from the Maryland border
to the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel. I found several locations that looked like
they would be fairly well obscured from light pollution and most of these sites
were sea side facing the Atlantic ocean looking south east. This was VERY good.
After
mapping out the locations, it was then time to hit the road for the next few
months visiting these sites and getting a visual on weather or not there would
be any surprise lighting problems like street lamps, etc. In the end, I settled
on 4 different sites that all had a varied look, feel, composition, and bortle
class ranging from 1 (Wachapreague) to a class 3 or 4 which was Cape Charles.
The sites that we filmed that were extremely dark (Red Bank, Wachapreague, and
Magothy Bay) are probably some of the best newly published dark sky sites on
the East Coast. Fortunately, these sites are also open to the public, easily accessible
and require no hiking or camping. I had many kind people with various park
services and private citizens offer for me to film on their private property or
park during closed hours. Although very much appreciated, I declined this
because I wanted all sites featured in this film to be readily available and
open to the public at any time. So yes, you can come and film in the exact
locations you see in this film.
DESIGN: I spent a lot of time researching astrophotography
for both stills and time lapse. I will say that I have never seen a Milky Way
time lapse I did not like. I just love the look. However from what I could
tell, most of the time lapse available to view at the time had certain similar characteristics
that if I had a choice, we would avoid. The two main items that to me stood out
the most was:
The time lapse image was over exposed with to
high an ISO setting in the field then boost more in post processing. This makes
the Milky Way stand out, but the feel of a nightscape is lost. The sky around
the Milky Way is just way to bright and noisy. Now…This to me still looks cool,
however I thought if there is away to retain the effect of a night sky, that
would be preferable for this film.
Most of the time lapse that I viewed were only
partial, maybe filmed over a couple of hours. I could not find many or any that
had the full sweeping arc of the Milky Way from below the horizon, to
completing its full journey westward overnight. There are a lot of reasons for
this, one of which (at least in the mid Atlantic) There is only the new moon of
May that you can film this. So the window is only maybe 3-5 days so you have to
be extremely lucky with the weather to be able to film all night and also have
ways to beat condensation on the lens. Also considering that filming this way,
one can expect to be maybe awake for 30 hours or so which is a lot harder to do
than filming for a couple of hours in July.
So, these were the two things I wanted to achieve. 1)
Produce time lapse film that exposed the Milky Way however kept the essence of
the night sky without over exposure and high ISO. 2) Be sure to film the Milky
Way in May in order to capture the Milky Way rise from below to over the
horizon and complete it’s path/arc through the night sky. This we accomplished
at the Red Bank dark sky site. The other almost full arc we filmed at
Wachapreague, the Milky Way started just above the horizon and made for a nice
long arc over the night sky.
I could not find anywhere a tutorial on how to NOT to
overexpose these astrophotography time lapse films. So I had to figure it out
in the studio and I came up with a system and technique that worked! It is a
combination of how the film is shot in the field in conjunction with a post
processing technique that is pretty much opposite of what has been done in the
world of Milky Way Astrophotography so far. The result is a Milky Way that is
exposed yet retains the look and feel of the night sky without high in field
ISO settings and utilizing various global exposure and gain controls in
programs like Lightroom.
Sooooooo if all this was not enough to do! Then came my
biggest surprise of all. Really, the biggest hurdle. The WEATHER! Out of 40 potential
days of filming astrophotography around the moon phase, in four months we only
had TWO That’s (2) nights of clear weather. That was it!! Those two nights I
filmed all night at the two darkest sites, Wachapreague and Red Banks. As you
can see from the film, it was an extraordinary sight. These two location are
among the very few on the East Coast that can provide a dark sky view like
this. Plus… the camera view of the Milky Way over the ocean. No light pollution
at all. Incredible.
In the end, due to the bad spring/summer weather of 2019, I
was still filming our last Milky Way time lapse only two days before the
premier at the film festival on June 29th. It was that close folks. I had been
editing the short film for 4 months and was down to only needing 6 seconds out
of the 4:17 minute film. All done, except for those last 6 seconds. I have
never worked so hard for only 6 seconds of film in my life.
If I actually got paid by the hour, I could retire today.
Godspeed,
JB
A few quick facts about the film
·Over 20,000 images were takin to create 4 time
lapse segments.
·Principle filming was done over a 4-month period
and B roll time lapse was produced over a 4-year period.
·Satellite Maps from Google Earth were used to successfully
locate the new dark sky locations.
·The International Space Station flew through our
view of the Milky Way twice in one night and appears so in the film.
·Up to 5 heat packs plus a fan on the lens was
used and necessary to combat lens condensation.
·In order to keep massive flying insects from
hovering on the lens in these remote locations, foggers/bug bombs were set off
just to enable time to set up the gear. Then rags coated with deet were draped
on the tripods plus a battery operated fan with insect replant was dispersed
throughout the overnight filming. This kept the swarms of mosquitos, black &
green flies at bay.
·The squiggly blue light that quickly flashes in
the lower right-hand corner during the Wachapreague Milky Way, is actually
caused by a surf fisherman using glow lights on his rod tip.
·Out of 40 possible production days based on the
moon phase over the 4 month period, because the cloudy spring there was only 2 nights of
clear skies in four months. Those two nights were the result of Red Bank and
Wachapreague Milky Way Time Lapse.
·Magothy Bay was filmed 3 different times, Cape
Charles 5, Wachapreague 2, Oyster 1, Townsend 1, and Red Bank 1.
·This is the first time the featured locations
have ever been published as good dark sky sites.
****
Photo Info & Gear: Cannon SL2 DSLR, Tonika 11 to 16 Lens F2.8 Exposure
15 sec. ISO 1600/800. Intervalometer Magnus Tripod Jaws Grip Hero 4 Aukey 4k Mavic AIR Crystal Sky 5.5 Mavmount OPOLAR fan HotHands for lens condensation prevention WD2 wireless portable hard drive Cannon R800
Software Apps on Galaxy S10e: Stellarium, Star Walk 2, Sky Map, Luna, and My
Radar. Post Processing: Premier CC, Lightroom CC, Photoshop CC, DaVinci Resolve. Post Production Audio: Premier CC, Adobe Audition, Yamaha KX 88, Roland JV1080 Synth with Vintage Synth Expansion and M-Track.
SHOOTING LOG BELOW
6/21/19 Magothy Bay
After reviewing our Milky Way film in post production last
week, I still was not satisfied with one of our locations and that was Magothy
Bay. The weather just has never been quite right the two previous times I shot
there. The location is beautiful and has a wonderful foreground, it also is a very
dark sky. Bottom line was I really wanted this dark site to work with us however
I was running out of time. The “Milky Way Galaxy, Our Home” short film premiers
June 29th at the Palace Theater for the Experimental Film Festival
and unfortunately this last week the moon phase was not really in our favor.
Also clouds have been a major issue… every dam day!
Looking at our film I realized the small section I wanted to
replace in length was only 6 seconds. Six seconds out of a 4:17 length short
film. I made it a mission to figure out how to get a Milky way time lapse shot
that would look great and fill this space. Unfortunately, I can’t control the
moon, or the weather.
So what I did was to monitor the astrophotography weather
sites everyday throughout the day and hope for the best, and pray a lot. But we
were facing some serious issues with the moon and clouds and the next new moon
was the week after the festival. It was last Friday, this 21st that
I found a small window, only about an hour or two and it turned out to be quite
possibly a gold mine of a shot. Here is what I found.
On the 21st, sunset was around 8:30 and clouds
and I mean heavy overcast was happening all day. BUT around sunset, the
prediction was the west winds would subside and there would be a break in the
clouds for only a couple of hours. The moon was not visible but would be rising
around 11:30 or so.
Well, what I thought was that it may be possible to get the
Milky Way Time lapse started as the sun set, and once darkness came, the Milky
Way would pop out of the sky at around a 45 degree angle for about 45 minutes
to an hour, then the clouds would come and the moon would rise over the ocean
all about the same time. If this works as predicted, we are talking one hell of
a beautiful transitional shot for our film. The Milky Way, then the moon would
come into the shot, then the clouds would move in and act as a transition or a “Wipe”.
Now this would all happen over the course of only 1-2 hours. BUT we get 6
seconds of finished time lapse per hour, so that means I would get between 6 to
12 seconds of finished time lapse and that is EXACTLY how much time I needed.
I planned this carefully and did think it was a long shot
that all of this would work. As fate will have it, the sun did set, the Milky
Way appeared right where it was supposed to be, then the moon rose over the Atlantic
ocean, then the clouds came in. The shoot could not have been more perfect. I
edited the shot the next day over about 9 hours, my last edit, and completed
the film.
This was an incredibly narrow window to film, but it was not
the only time I had to plan to film in such a narrow time frame based on the
moon and weather. During a March shoot my window to capture the Milky Way was
only 1 night (due to clouds) and the predicted time we would have clear skies
was only 1 hour. Turns out, that was exactly the window of time I had to film
and that was between 3 and 4 am in the morning.
For the purpose of this short film, I did want to have 1 if
not 2 all night time lapse that would show the Milky Way from below the horizon
to rising and completing its full path over the night sky. We accomplished this;
however it is worth noting that the 2 all clear nights we had to film, were the
only 2 clear nights we had in four months of filming.
The finished film is quite breath taking and look forward to
its debut at the film festival. I am also looking forward to taking a few
nights in July and August and just enjoying the Milky Way leisurely without
worrying about if the dew is going to set in on my lens and if the heat packs
are gonna work.
It has been an incredible journey these past four months
with some stories I will tell for a lifetime. During my 31 years of producing television,
music, and short films, this project is definitely at the top of my favorite
list.
We will post more info about other festivals and in late
June the film will be on the Jim Baugh Outdoors TV Channel on Youtube and
social media.
“The Milky Way Galaxy, Our Home” as seen from the Eastern
Shore of Virginia premiers June 29th at the Experimental Film
Virginia Festival in Cape Charles Virginia. The festival will showcase the
films at the historic Palace Theater as well as remote projection screens along
the waterfront/beach. Tickets are available at the Lemon Tree Art Gallery.
Godspeed,
JB
6/4/2019 Cedar Island Wachapreague VA
Milky Way over Cedar Island, Eastern Shore Virginia.
WOW! Fantastic shoot just north of Wachapreague, this was
our last shoot for our Milky Way film to debut at the film festival in cape Charles
June 29th. These are just a couple of sample stills from the shoot.
I think so far we have captured maybe 20,000 RAW images complied into 4 time
lapse segments. All 4 locations are on the Eastern Shore. This was only the
second clear night in about four months of shooting. Incredible location with
hardly any light pollution at all, basically none.
This shoot went extremely well and we had very clear skies
plus a nice 10 to 15mph wind so the bugs were not bad at all plus very low
humidity. I had prepped the lens with heat packs just in case, but there was no
condensation at all. Total exposures was around 2000, iso 1600, 15 sec
exposure, 20 sec interval. I burned through two batteries on the SL2, actually
had more jucie in the second battery but had filmed for some 6 hours so had 35
seconds of finished timelapse which is more than I needed.
If you plan on coming to Wachapreague and need accommodations
we stayed at the artist apartment above the Current Reflections Art Gallery
located right in Wachapreague, this is only minutes away from our dark sky site
where we filmed, here is the web site go check them out. Awesome place with two
rooms, full kitchen, living room, bath, great place to stay either while doing
photography, fishing, or even bird watching!
Milky Way over Cedar Island Wachapreague Eastern Shore of Virginia
5/7/2019 Red Bank
Meteor during filming of Red Bank
WOW! This overnight shoot was certainly our best weather
wise as well as our best dark sky site. The south east rise of the Milky Way
was over the pitch black Atlantic ocean and had clean visibility through most
of the night. The light pollution you see in the lower right is Virginia Beach (approx.
50 mi away) and the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel.I had picked out this location several months
ago and have been anxiously waiting for the right opportunity to film it. The
location is called Red Banks on the sea side of the Eastern Shore of Virginia.
Although the skies were super clear, the big fear I had was
dew. The relative humidity was I think 93% and the temp was gong to be around
56, so I knew I was headed for possible problems. So this was the first night I
pulled out all the stops, in an effort to film all night without ANY
condensation on the lens. The good news is because of these things we did to
prep the camera, although we had dew almost immediately on everything early in
the evening including tripods, chairs, etc, not one drop of moisture was on our
lens. It amazed me! Here is what we did and without taking these measures, we
would have never been able to film and we ran the camera from around 11pm until
4am the next morning with not a drop of dew. Here is what we did.
1 Climatize:
I took the camera and put it in it’s camera bag and set it
outside for 4 hours. Once on location, I put the camera bag outside near the
tripod this was around 7pm, filming would start around 11. At about 10pm I took
the camera out of the bag and velcrowed 4 heating paks (hand warmers) that I
had attached to a sock with rubber bands, this was wrapped tightly around the
lens. I also used gaffers tape prior to lock down both the focus ring on
infinity and zoom so the settings could not be accidentally knocked out of
wack. This works very well. Once the heat packs were on the camera went back
into the bag and again set outside next to the tripod.
2 Heat Packs:
The hand warmer heat packs are the disposable ones you can
find anywhere. I attach then to a sock which adds more insulation to the lens
and camera. The four heat packs kept the camera completely dry while everything
else, and I mean everything, was covered in dew.
3 Battery operated fan:
I bought a battery operated fan from amazon for 13 bucks
that would run all night off AA batteries. This fan was mounted close the lens
and pointed directly at it. This did 2 things, kept the millions of bugs off
the lens and moving air across the glass continually will greatly reduce the
chance of condensation.
Combating the bugs!
This is a biggie. Here on the Eastern Shore the flies when
they bite (and they do non stop) will actually draw blood. These insects not
only make it impossible to film, but they can play havoc on your lens. I
thought about experimenting with a couple of things and all I can say is I only
got bit once all night. Never had flies around me for the most part, and no
flying insects ever touched my lens. Here is what I did.
1 Clothes:
Cover your body with clothes, I wore sweat pants, hoodie,
socks, etc. Then spray anything exposed with your fav bug spray. Next, spray
your clothes.
2 Deet Rag:
Get a rag and place it on your tripod and spray it liberally
with your bug spray. Get it good and soaking and leave it on your tripod.
3 Off Clip On Battery Operated Mosquito Device:
This is something I was looking for, not sure it would work,
but it seemed to help. I mounted it under the tripod to cover the small area I
was filming. The fan kept running all night and never ran out of power. This is
an ideal set up if you are sitting still like filming timelapse.
Between doing all these things, I had zero issues with bugs
in one of the worst buggy areas I have ever been. I will continue to use this
when ever doing overnight timelapse. The fan we mounted pointed at the lens
also helped.
The camera I used is our SL2 with Tonika 11-16 lens. This
evening we shot close to 2000 RAW and Jpeg images. I did have to swap out a
battery once during the overnight shoot, but that was it. I also used our intervalometer
set to 15 sec exposure with a 20 sec interval and set to continuous. The intervalometer
was totally soaked starting early in the evening but worked fine all night.
At this point we have only one more location to film before
we complete our Milky Way Madness 2019 short film of locations featured from
the Eastern Shore of Virginia. We have been editing as we go along filming and
the project is turning out very nice. I was mostly worried we may not ever get
a chance with the weather to produce a very clean and complete Milky Way time lapse.
However fortunately, we did accomplish this last night.
Godspeed,
JB
5/2/2019 Cape Charles
Success! JBOTV filmed last night from 11 to 5 this am in
Cape Charles. We had a lot of moving clouds but was able to shoot around 2000
RAW exposures for a time lapse to be in our upcoming Milky Way film featuring
Eastern Shore locations. Here is the finished image. From here we film north up
the Shore through July. New moon is coming up this weekend so as long as it is
a clear night good time to do a little star gazing. Will be reporting on our
drum show as soon as it is finished hopefully over the weekend. Tight Lines,
Cheers. JB
Filming Notes for this shoot:
Since our last time lapse was plagued by dew, on this shoot
again we were set up only a few feet from the water of the Chesapeake Bay with
changing temps as the night cooled. Before leaving for the shoot we climatized
the camera outside for five hours and before heading out, wrapped 3 warming
packs around the lens and secured them with Velcro straps. Prior to this we
also anchored down both infinity and aperture with gaffing tape. Once again on
location tested out iso and shutter speed and captured several foreground shots.
Once on location plans changed a little due to some street lights that were on
timers so our location changed for the time lapse by about 70 feet. Once ready
to time lapse, we again used an intervalometer set to 15 sec exposure, 20
second interval with a 10 second drive mode to start. I also took a battery fan
for the lens but it was not necessary due to a pretty good 10 to 15ph wind all
night long.
Although we did experience some dew on the tripods and our
clothes, the lens was 100% clean of any moisture. The heat packs worked
extremely well and lasted from around midnight to 5am. The entire shoot of the
Milky Way passing.
4/11/2019 Mermaid Bay
First clear night in
quite a while and the moon set before midnight, sooo, set up time lapse cameras
between 2 and 4 am to catch the Milky Way. This was shot at Mermaid Bay on the
Shore. The next shoot in May will be quite further north on the sea side, much
less light pollution. We did catch some meteors in the time lapse, very nice
night. This image was a 4 exposure stack out of 300 RAW images. 15 sec
exposure, 1600 ISO F 2.8. Foreground light painted at 200 ISO 15 sec exposure. Next
shoot is May 4th on the next new moon. Cheers.
4/4/2019 Oyster & Townsend
We are on new moon eve however the overnight weather forecast
has given us almost no window to film astrophotography. Early this am there was
a small window of only partial clouds. So, at 3 am this morning we had our
cameras set up at two new fairly dark sky locations on the Eastern Shore,
Oyster and Townsend. Both locations had partial clouds however it made for some
pretty cool images. We will shoot again on the next new moon in May 2019. In September
we will produce a short film featuring all the Milky Ways we filmed both in photo
and time lapse. Cheers. Below is Oyster and Townsend this morning.
Oyster Virginia
Townsend
Photo Info:
Because of the clouds in Oyster we did not take but a few exposures. The final image here is taken from only one exposure, no stacking.
The image from Townsend was an 8 image stack taken from about 30 exposures. Included was calibration dark slate. Townsend is closer to the light pollution of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel and we were butting up against twilight, however the image has a pretty good signal to noise ratio. All post processing was done RAW in Lightroom and Photoshop and downresed to these jpegs. JB
3/31/2019 Chesapeake Bay
Tonight’s Milky Way over the Eastern Shore! Our first photo
kicking off Milky Way Madness 2019. Had been trying to get in some shots of the
Milky Way but the weather and moon have not been on our side for a few weeks.
Tonight we had a VERY narrow window from 3am to 4 am to catch the Milky Way.
I checked two different weather services both reporting a clearing between fronts but only for a couple of hours and our Milky Way window was only from around 3:30 to 4:10am. This was also the only time we had a break in the clouds for days. The Milky Way rose high enough to film around 3:30, and twilight was starting around 4:30am, plus a front with lots of rain heading our way in a matter of a couple of hours. So... we really did have a very narrow window to get this shot. I got to say, the weather folks called this one perfect. We did get that window of clearing, and just long enough for us to get the right shot. The new moon will be this
coming Friday and weather permitting we will film it again. Camera settings and technique: SL2 11to16 F 2.8
ISO1600 15 sec exposure 40 images captured RAW Edited in Lightroom and image
stacked 4 exposures in Photoshop.
Picture taken 3:30am in Cape Charles on the Eastern Shore of Virginia approx. 5 miles north of Kiptopeke State Park. The pic below is the exact camera location during day light,
***
7/30/2019
Timelapse, approaching new moon
8/31/2019
JBOTV Final milky Way timelapse for 2019. This completes our filming season for the milky Way. Nice night, clear skies. Only a couple hours of MW visibility and it is setting west under Va Beach light pouleted skies. But...Still a nice shot.
8/13/2019
Perseids Meteor Shower
We filmed last night for the peak Perseids Meteor Shower from midnight until 5am this morning. Due to the full moon and heavy cloud cover we only had a window from 4 to almost 5am. We did see a lot of meteors and caught a few on camera. The biggest with a fireball was incredible but missed the shot by about 2 seconds. A beautiful night, and the moon looked awesome peeking through the cloud cover. Here is the info on the Shoot. Location, USA/Chesapeake Bay facing north, meteors were filmed coming down over the Cape Charles town area between 4-5am. This location was one of the dark sky sites we found filming the Milky Way Galaxy is our Home Short Film. Camera/SL2 lens 11-16 F2.80- ISO both 1600 also filmed at 800 due to the moonlight. Intervalometer set to 15 sec exposure, 20 second interval. We filmed a total of 1,650 images over 5 hours. Cheers. JB NOTE: The pic with 4 meteors is a compost of two images. Both images had 2 meteors in the shot.
7/28/2019
Approaching new moon, however had a moonless night plus meteor shower
Location: Cape Charles, Eastern Shore of Virginia (Mermaid
Bay) Camera: SL2 Tonika 11-16 lens ISO 1600 15sec exposure. Single.
Well….Sometimes ya get lucky! After spending 4 months
filming the Milky Way with only getting two clear nights, finding a clear night
sky to film has been a challenge this year. BUT!!! Last night was an
exceptionally clear crisp night and the Milky Way was almost vertical when we
started filming. I was unaware that there was a meteor shower predicted and we
really got a great show. I saw the largest and brightest meteor I had ever seen
and it was very low to the horizon. Fortunately, I did get one on camera as
seen here. It was in a perfect position to see with the Milky Way in the
backdrop. We don’t get many of these on camera in a lifetime. Awesome evening!
7/1/2019
NEW MOON July 1 2018
We wanted to shoot some stills of the Milky Way in July and August for this post. Last night it was another cloudy night as it has been for the last four months. However we did manage to pull this one off filmed at Mermaid Bay in Cape Charles.
The dune grass was light painted for approx 4 seconds of a 15 sec exposure and 4 exposures were takin, then stacked and medan merged.
This shot of the Milky Way was only two days after the Film Festival our our short film premiered.
Below are a few pics from the Ocean City Film Festival 2020, Great event! Also a short video takin during the Q and A after the screening of The Milky Way Galaxy Our Home as seen from the Eastern Shore of Virginia, to a packed theater.
Festival director ask Jim "The Cinematography, editing, just wonderful. How do you go about, the process, of writing music for such a beautiful film?" Answer below.