For the last 3 weeks, I've spent hours each day working on scanning all of my vacation film and I'm about to give up on trying to scan starry sky shots! (much less shoot them).
First of all, after drying my negatives, I couldn't figure out where to cut them! I was shooting straight up - so no other landmarks to help with identification, though I can see a very crappy bit of milky way in each shot. My sister mentioned that she just puts them flat on the scanner bed, prescans, makes note of where the frames are, takes them out and cuts that way. I'm not having any luck seeing anything.
In fact, I am absolutely unable to discern image frames at all! There seems to be no delineation between the 'non-image' parts and the 'image' parts. So yeah, I'm really lightening up the tones so I can try to 'see' what's what, and sure, that's going to make dark skies look very grainy (right??), but it looks to be so 'starry' (dust? grain?) EVERYWHERE, even in the borders.
So for the last hour, I've been trying to change my scanning settings so that I can see where I'm supposed to draw my marquee and feeling a bit bummed that I may have to just put them away, never to scan.
Anyone else have luck shooting the milky way? Can you only do it with an extremely sharp lens? I'm quite certain I did not have anything that was up to par. I'd love to see examples, find out what film, lens you've gotten results with. And most of all, if you scan your own negatives, toss me a crumb and tell me how you did it. It just might save me from impending insanity!