Star trails are a common subject amongst astrophotographers. When they’re not trying to capture the milky way, they’re showing the path that our stars take in the night sky. The process for creating these isn’t dissimilar from shooting timelapse with digital. You take a lot of photos over a period of time and then stack them on top of each other in Photoshop. But this technique from Nemanja Sekulic shows you a way to do this with just a single image. It’s not going to be a perfect recreation of how the stars move through the sky, but it will let you achieve a similar effect. Nemanja demonstrates how to (mostly) automate the process using Photoshop actions that you create yourself.

The basic principle is quite simple.

Duplicate your image layerSet the blending mode of the duplicate to lightenUse the transform tool to rotate your image just slightly

But doing this once just creates a slight blur in your shot. What you need to do is to start recording an action before you perform the above tasks. Then you can just tell it to play over and over until you get a star trail length that you’re happy with.

Often, you’ll end up with a blurred environment on the ground with this method. So, Nemanja takes his original layer and cuts out the ground so that he can add it back on top of the layers created by the action.

Overall, it’s a pretty cool result and it offers a lot of possibilities to get some unique looks – looks that obviously couldn’t happen in the real world. Of course, even just getting that one shot to start with means you still have to head out at night into the freezing cold dark.