:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Light pollution is the enemy. Distance from a city is the cure. :INFO Milky Way Photography from Home Photographing the Milky Way from a dark backyard requires a DSLR or mirrorless camera, a fast wide-angle lens, and a moonless night. Light pollution maps help find the darkest patch of sky above your location. :COUNTER.half ISO 3200 | :COUNTER.half 20 Seconds :PATH Plan the Shoot Description: Use Light Pollution Map or Dark Sky Finder to assess your backyard. Check for new moon nights and the Milky Way core's position using Photopills or Stellarium. The core is best visible from April through September in the northern hemisphere. :PATH Shoot the Milky Way Description: Set your lens to its widest aperture (f/1.8 to f/2.8), ISO 1600 to 6400, and exposure using the 500 rule (500 divided by focal length). Focus on a bright star manually. Shoot RAW. :PATH Stack and Process Description: Capture 10 to 20 frames for stacking. Use Sequator (Windows, free) or StarStaX to stack images and reduce noise. Process in Lightroom or RawTherapee for color and contrast. :CHECKLIST Milky Way Shoot Checklist [ ] Confirm new moon window (within 5 days of new moon) [ ] Check weather for clear skies and low humidity [ ] Charge batteries and format memory cards [ ] Enable live view and zoom to focus manually on a star [ ] Use a remote shutter or 2 second timer to avoid camera shake [ ] Shoot a test frame and check for star trailing :NOTE Even a Bortle 5 or 6 backyard can yield a visible Milky Way arch. Shoot toward the darkest part of your horizon and process aggressively in post. :LINK https://www.lightpollutionmap.info Light Pollution Map: check the Bortle class of your location