That is an option or else I was thinking of making 2 separate
pictures, both showing the watch and the moon at the same time.
Then 1 picture has the moon in focus and the other has the watch in
focus, just to show the true brightness of the tubes when it's dark
outside and the drawn battery current is only between 6 and 7mA.

Michel





On May 19, 3:40 pm, Adam Jacobs <[email protected]> wrote:
> Just super-impose the two pictures, that is the best solution. Getting a
> shot where the watch (a small & near object) and the moon (a very very far
> away object) are anything close to similar in size on the final image are
> going to be nearly impossible. You could try it with focus-stacking, but
> even then, you still have the problem that the normal lens that was needed
> for the watch is a totally different focal length than the super-zoom (or
> even telescope) lens that is needed for the moon.. and then, of course,
> there is the issue of exposure, but that one is easily solved with HDR.
>
> -Adam
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, May 18, 2012 at 10:11 PM, Cobra007 <[email protected]> wrote:
> > time. Just what I had in mind during my eureka moment! I also want to
> > take a picture with full moon and the nixie watch beside it, that's
> > going to be a bit tricky so I am still thinking about how to get that
> > done.
>
> > Michel

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