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blog:photography:night:2021_10_25 [2021/10/30 21:40] – [Images] john | blog:photography:night:2021_10_25 [2021/11/06 10:11] (current) – [Images] john | ||
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First image was taken from a sequence of 5x 30 second exposures at ISO 1600. This was my usual 'at the tree tops' image composition for the garden. | First image was taken from a sequence of 5x 30 second exposures at ISO 1600. This was my usual 'at the tree tops' image composition for the garden. | ||
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The second image is comprised of 6x 120 second exposures at ISO 3200. Something that I could have technically done without the shutter release cable, but not something I'd want to stand around counting down and pressing the button for; the app for the tracker did it all brilliantly. | The second image is comprised of 6x 120 second exposures at ISO 3200. Something that I could have technically done without the shutter release cable, but not something I'd want to stand around counting down and pressing the button for; the app for the tracker did it all brilliantly. | ||
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+ | There was a fairly lurid coloured moon this night, so I also switched out to my only other lens available my 105mm Sigma macro: | ||
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+ | ==== Image Processing Notes ==== | ||
+ | Since this was my first time stacking and processing multiple images, it took a while until I found a solution that **(a)** worked properly on Linux, **(b)** I was comfortable with and **(c)**, was happy with the output from. | ||
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+ | First I tried [[https:// | ||
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+ | Then I tried [[http:// | ||
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+ | Eventually I looked at [[https:// | ||
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+ | I tried loading images into the applications as the came from the camera, but all of my results were over-exposed, | ||
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+ | Eventually I settled on the following routine (which works well for me, in my fairly light-polluted garden): | ||
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+ | **1. Load RAW files into Rawtherapee and adjust as below** | ||
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+ | //The chromatic aberration settings are likely particular to my lens which is of course in this case is the ultra-wide 11mm Tokina. At 11mm and f/2.8 it has quite bad chroma in the corners of the image. It would likely not need such aggressive settings stopped down, or at the other end of it's focal length (16mm).// | ||
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+ | **2. Save as TIFF, 16bit. Load into GIMP and apply gradient as below in the direction of any light pollution** | ||
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+ | //Depending on the level of light pollution, increase/ | ||
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+ | **3. Load all of the processed TIFF files into ASTAP as your light files. There will be some warnings about missing metadata, but this doesn' | ||
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+ | **4. Let ASTAP do the stacking, along with any dark, flat and bias images.** | ||
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+ | //For me, the best results were with the AstroSimple option and Sigma Clip stacking options as above.// | ||
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+ | **5. In the resulting stacked image, if the star colours look //off//, try another stacking/ | ||
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+ | **6. Export as TIFF from ASTAP and load back into your image editor of choice. I used Rawtherapee to do final image/ | ||
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+ | {{: |