Settings guides · night & astrophotography · Fujifilm X-T30 II
Best Fujifilm X-T30 II settings for night & astrophotography
Night photography is about gathering scarce light without ruining the shot. On a tripod you can use a long shutter and low ISO; for stars you balance a wide aperture, a high ISO, and a shutter short enough that the stars stay points. Here it's tuned to the Fujifilm X-T30 II.
Recommended Fujifilm X-T30 II settings for night & astrophotography
Tuned for your Fujifilm X-T30 II
- Reach: its 1.5× APS-C crop turns a 300mm lens into about 450mm of reach — a real advantage for night & astrophotography, though it narrows your wide end.
- Clean ISO: modern APS-C bodies like the Fujifilm X-T30 II stay usable up to about ISO 6400 — cap Auto ISO there so your shutter stays fast without over-cooking noise.
- Autofocus: use AF-C with a zone or tracking area, and drop to a single point when it keeps grabbing the background.
Set up your Fujifilm X-T30 II for night & astrophotography
- Back-button focus: set the AF-L button to AF-ON and turn shutter AF Off.
- For action: use AF-C with Zone or Wide/Tracking.
- Eyes & animals: enable Face/Eye detection (and Subject detection on newer bodies).
- Burst: set the drive to CH (high-speed continuous).
Exact menu wording can vary by firmware.
Why these settings
There's very little light, so you spend a tripod and a long shutter first, keeping ISO low for a clean file. Stars are the exception: they move, so the shutter is capped (the '500 rule' — 500 ÷ focal length ≈ max seconds), which forces a wide aperture and high ISO to make up the light.
Common mistakes
- Leaving autofocus on and getting a whole card of soft frames.
- Too long a star exposure, turning pin-point stars into trails.
FAQ
What is the 500 rule?
Divide 500 by your full-frame-equivalent focal length to get the longest shutter (in seconds) that keeps stars as points. At 20mm that's about 25 seconds.
What ISO for the Milky Way?
Usually ISO 3200–6400, paired with the widest aperture your lens has and a shutter set by the 500 rule. Stacking frames later cleans up the noise.
Does the Fujifilm X-T30 II have good autofocus for night & astrophotography?
The Fujifilm X-T30 II can handle night & astrophotography well if you use AF-C (continuous AF) with a tracking or zone area and keep your shutter speed high.
Is the Fujifilm X-T30 II good for night & astrophotography?
Yes. With the settings above and its APS-C sensor (1.5× crop for extra reach), the Fujifilm X-T30 II is well suited to night & astrophotography. Dial the settings in for your exact lens with the coach.