My comments as a participant/trainee who benefited from the workshop:
In any training or workshop the participants will have a wide range of knowledge, skills, and experience. The challenge for the organizers and speakers is to meet most of the needs of most participants. In this aspect, I think BAS nailed it pretty well.
- The selection of topics was comprehensive - it covered variances in each aspect of astrophotography through all speakers:
- equipment and technique (Sathya and other speakers)
- tripod, AstroTrac, and mount based (Keerthi, Sragdhara, Dilip and Doc)
- variations in the capture devices and optics (Sathya)
- planets, wide field, deep space, or events (Keerthi)
- day and night (Keerthi)
- photographing and post processing (all speakers)
- manual and "auto" guided (Mr Dilip Kumar and Doc)
- All the speakers were hands-on folks, very knowledgeable, experienced, passionate about what they are doing, and good communicators and trainers too.
- The sessions by Doctor Suresh and Mr Dilip Kumar inspired me the most.
- I benefited the most from the two sessions by Dr Suresh:
- In the first session the logical progression of topics where one builds upon the previous was very useful.
- The videos and animations helped me understand the concepts well.
- A core set of ingredients affecting the image quality was given which one needs to tackle. This is something I have not found anywhere in this form. This comes from Doctor's experience and is as valuable as the amritam churned out from the ocean. I think this was the best take away from the first session. (I have to do the home work of doing the calculations myself and internalizing the principles.)
- I didn't have a clue about post processing and was lost earlier. Doctor's session has taught me the essential techniques which I can go back and try.
- I liked the idea that some TIFF images were distributed which we could work on during the session. Though I got lost during the session I know what I need to try out.
- The college hall was pretty nice. Temperature controlled; no outside noise as well.
I have some suggestions for the future sessions in astro-photography. I know it would be difficult since all BAS organizers are volunteering their precious time. But wanted to share some ideas anyways:
- It might be a good idea to have distinct tutorial sessions / tracks on the techniques. If the facility allows it, basic and advanced tutorial sessions can be run in parallel so that attendees can choose to attend a specific session based on their need.
- If live sessions are difficult/impossible, video tutorials could be made and shown.
- A list of suggested resources can be mailed out earlier. (Though Google searches are a good substitute, nothing can beat a canned list from experienced practitioners.)
- This hobby is huge money pit. Perhaps a session on what could be achieved with limited resources would help many such as students or those who haven't saved enough dough for this hobby yet.
- The session on equipment was good - but IMHO it would benefit if it focused a bit more on aspects related to astrophotography compared to visual observations. For instance, an extended session covering expanded content from the sessions by Sathya and Subhankar together would be ideal.
- Many of the posts in this forum ask for where something can be purchased from. A short guide in purchasing stuff whether in India or from abroad, getting it shipped, etc. would help. I came across BorderLinx through this forum.
- Now, from a personal PoV, I would like to have longer/deeper sessions in post processing as well as a session covering software tools used in the setup-camera control-focusing-tracking-guiding- chain.
Finally, I thank BAS for giving an opportunity to beginners like me to share their experiences. I thoroughly enjoyed the experience.
Overall, the workshop was awesome and I would recommend this to anybody interested.
Regards
Sankar