>>3801830Actually you don't use regular eyepieces at all if you're shooting pictures. You only use eyepieces to look through. They make adapters to mount pretty much any DSLR to a telescope, they all take standard 1.25" or 2" eyepieces, so you can get an adapter for your model camera. I heard you need to do something or modify your camera in some way to get really really good photographs of space, but I don't know anything about that. Astrobackyard on youtube has good tutorial videos
I just started out, and surely you'll be able to spend tons of money on special setups, ultra fast ratio optics, motorized computerized trackers and guidescopes, dew heaters, etc etc. The pic I took above is out of a telescope I bought on craigslist for 100 dollars that is at least 30 years old or more, on a wooden tripod that is broken, and a german equatorial mount. I live in a big east coast city so light pollution is awful here to make things even more fun. The moon is literally so bright light pollution doesn't really matter.
The camera I used is
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BKSHH3H/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_wTocGbQ7P1YCD which is basically a cheap chinese repurposed cell phone camera in a special case that I usb to my shitty laptop. The software I use to take and process the images is freeware. You don't need a lot of money to get started, and don't be afraid to buy from craigslist and get chinese eyepieces, they work fine enough for looking around at planets and orion and stuff.
pic related is my telescope.