How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars

You may have already noticed that in some of your pictures the sun looks like a star. This can be a stylish, sought-after effect. You also may have noticed that at other times, sunstars don’t appear in your photos. On another day, you might get a sun star with a different shape or length of its rays. There are several factors at play that affect how sunstars are made. Read how to create sunstars when shooting against the sun and other light sources. 

In order for a sunstar to appear, several factors must coincide. These include the right choice of scene, photography equipment, and camera settings. Let’s take a look at them one by one.

Light source in the frame

In order for sunstars to appear, you must have a single-point light source in the frame that is significantly brighter than the surrounding areas

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Sunrise in the Alps Canon 5D Mark IV, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L III, 1/1250s, f/16, ISO 100, focal length 20mm

Sunstars are also common in night photography. Street lighting doesn’t come close in comparison to the sun, but sunstars appear when street lighting is contrasted by very dark surroundings.

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Street lighting at night also makes sunstars Canon 5D Mark III, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L II, 2s, f/11, ISO 100, focal length 17mm

How sunstars are formed

Sunstars are actually a type of optical aberration – diffraction. This means the light bends at the edge of an object. That object is the actual aperture blades inside the lens. 

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Inside view of the Pentacon 135/2.8 lens with a partially closed aperture

The aperture does not form a perfect circle, but rather a polygon. Because of this shape, the light is diffused to form distinctive star shapes. The movement of light over the edges is usually negligible, but with extremely bright light sources, it is detectable.   

The f-number determines how noticeable the effect is

The more closed the aperture is (i.e. smaller opening), the higher percentage of photons pass through the edge and create more noticeable sunstars. To get the most dramatic sunstars, you must use a high aperture

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Again the Pentacon 135/2.8, this time with aperture set to the maximum f/22

On the contrary, with the lowest possible aperture, the diaphragm is retracted out of the light’s path. Only the basic aperture opening remains, which is perfectly round, meaning sunstars won’t appear. The light is refracted, but evenly in all directions.

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
The final example of the Pentacon 135/2.8, with an f-number of f/2.8 and with the entire aperture diaphragm concealed

The aperture diaphragm determines the sunstar’s shape

Sunstars are not always the same. The number of blades in the aperture diaphragm determines the shape of the sunstar. The number of blades is unable to be changed because each type of lens has a set number. More expensive lenses tend to have more aperture blades.

An even number of blades gives a sunstar with the same number of points as blades, while an odd number of blades creates sunstars with double the number of points as blades

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Left, taken with a lens with eight aperture blades (Canon EF 70-200/2.8L IS II) Right, lens with nine aperture blades (Canon EF 16-36/2.8L III) Disregard the clouds in the sky

The shutter adds undesired points

In some situations, vertical lines appear that don’t belong to the sunstar (if you are shooting vertically, these lines will be horizontal).

These are reflections of the shutter blades. When the light is extremely bright, it reflects in the shutter as it travels to the sensor.  

If your camera has the option, you can test out using mechanical shutter, electronic shutter, and electronic front-curtain shutter to see how it changes the shape. 

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Left, full electronic shutter. Center, electronic front-curtain shutter. Right, mechanical shutter. All tested on the Canon R5.

It is clear what shutter type you should use. Unfortunately, even electronic shutters have their drawbacks. With landscapes, there is potentially higher digital noise and therefore, lower dynamic range. So it’s worth considering whether to use it on a case-by-case basis. 

Changes to focal length

At the beginning of this article, we mentioned single-point light sources, but the sun is certainly larger than a single point. It is actually a ring of light that gets bigger or smaller as you zoom in or out. Sunstars will still appear when zooming in, but the smaller the light source, the sharper the effect.  On the contrary, with a large light source, the sunstar is the least defined and begins to dominate the scene more and more, which may or may not be desirable.  

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Ultra-wide shot shows a small sun star with sharp edges Canon R5, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L III, 1/2500s, f/16, ISO 100, focal length 16mm
How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Sometime later, with the zoom ring turned to 35mm (and slightly different composition) – the sunstar is bigger and has softer edges Canon R5, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L III, 1/2500s, f/16, ISO 100, focal length 35mm

Play peekaboo with the sun

Another method for achieving sharper-edged sunstars consists of partially hiding the sun behind an object. 

In addition to reducing the light source, there is another advantage to playing peekaboo with the sun: the object is turned away from the sun, so it is very dark, making the effect very visible. 

Furthermore, the camera isn’t blinded by the sun, so it can handle longer exposure times, which now stretches the points of the tiny light source to its limits and makes the image much easier to edit overall.

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Again 35mm, but with the sun hidden. This time I used a much longer exposure time (1/320s versus 1/2500s from before), making the image much easier to edit. Canon R5, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L III, 1/320s, f/16, ISO 100, focal length 35mm
How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Telephoto lenses make less obvious sunstars, but I tried to help by hiding them behind the lighthouse. Notice how visible the points are on a dark background as opposed to virtually invisible against a bright sky.  Canon 5D Mark IV, Canon EF 70-300/4-5.6L IS, 1/3200s, f/14, ISO 100, focal length 100mm

Avoiding lens flare

When shooting landscapes with the sun, there is one more trick to deal with another issue. You’ll often find that besides making beautiful sunstars, the sun also creates lens flare, usually caused by reflections from inside the lens. The number, size, and color of these defects depend on the specific lens and they can sometimes be impossible to avoid completely.  

Smaller lens flares, especially those in the sky, can be easily removed with retouching while editing. However, when there are multiple lens flares or they cover complex terrain, or even your subject, this makes retouching complicated. There’s something you can do while shooting to avoid this.

All you need to do is take the same picture two times, ideally using a tripod. The first time, normally, and the second with the sun covered (your finger works great). You will have two images. One, with the sun and additional lens flare. The second, without the sun or visible flare. The two images are then joined using a mask in  Zoner Photo Studio X, resulting in a photo with the sun but without any lens flare.

How to Brighten Your Photography with Sunstars
Combination of two images, one with a finger covering the sun Canon R5, Canon EF 16-35/2.8L III, various exposure times, f/13, ISO 100, focal length 24mm

Sunstars basically make themselves

Now you know how it’s done. The last section admittedly gets a bit more complicated, but the ones preceding it consist of quick and easy settings changes. In the majority of cases, choosing a wider angle and higher aperture is enough for you to find your sunstars and add some sparkle to your photography. 

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AuthorVit Kovalcik

I’ve been a freelancer since early 2012; photography is my living. I acquired my photography experience, both inside and outside the studio, during the previous years—when I was working all day and taking pictures every evening and weekend. I don’t have just one clearly defined topic; I like photographing people, but also cityscapes and landscapes.

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