The night when the stars fell from the sky

It happened during a cold June night at about 3000 meters above sea level in the Swiss mountains. Between 10pm and 4 am when suddenly the stars fell from the sky. What a night...freeze to death, sleepless, breathless - what an experience, just fantastic.

Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau below Milky Way, Switzerland, 12.6.2020, 23:49 PM, Fujifilm GFX100, GF 23mm - Roland Steffen - Visual Storyteller

Tschingelhorn, Gpsaltenhorn, Bütlasse, Switzerland, 13.6.2020, 00:05 AM, Fujifilm GFX100, GF 23mm - Roland Steffen - Visual Storyteller

Tschingelhorn, Gpsaltenhorn, Bütlasse, Switzerland, 13.6.2020, 00:05 AM, Fujifilm GFX100, GF 23mm - Roland Steffen - Visual Storyteller

Do you really need 100 megapixels to capture 1000 stars?
Short answer: No
But Fujifilm Switzerland forced me to give it a try and it was fun...
— Roland Steffen
In the moonlight with Milky Way: Breithorn, Breitlauihorn, Tschingelhorn, Gpsaltenhorn, Bütlasse, Switzerland, 13.6.2020, 02:59 AM, Fujifilm GFX100, GF 23mm - Roland Steffen - Visual Storyteller

In the moonlight with Milky Way: Breithorn, Breitlauihorn, Tschingelhorn, Gpsaltenhorn, Bütlasse, Switzerland, 13.6.2020, 02:59 AM, Fujifilm GFX100, GF 23mm - Roland Steffen - Visual Storyteller

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Timelapse - Making of "The night when the stars fell from the sky"

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