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Showing results for tags 'Astrophotography'.
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Hi all, I' reasonably new to imageprocessing, but have gained a little experience in Nebulosity and GIMP for creating and retouching astrophotography images. In astrophotography you typically and up with 4 separate greyscale images; one for each RGB channel and one for luminosity. To create an RGB images in Nebulosity you select the function "composite RGB", assign the right greyscale image to the right channel and press "apply"... and there it is :-) I've been trying this in Affinity, but can not find/comprehend a way to do this. Can anyone point me out were to start and how to accomplish this? Thanks! Johan
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Hello, In doing astrophotography, these two features are really essential. I really love using AP for editing, but it becomes nearly impossible to with astrophotography because it's missing these two features. Especially because AP has features like LAB, it could be a really great tool potentially - and I don't think (at least the median mode) is very difficult to implement. They're useful for stacking photos - when taking pictures of the night sky without a tracker, you're limited in the exposure length you can use, because the Earth is rotating. To get a useful picture, you really need an exposure with at least ISO 3200, making very noisy images. The solution is to take multiple pictures and align them in post, and then use a median filter to remove the noise (which is incredibly effective). It's useful for other things as well - basically any noise reduction. There are perfectly clear stacks of images taken at ISO 25,600 or higher - and the median filter can get rid of people walking in front of a landscape, for example. My point is, these are really useful features for everyone and could add a lot to the abilities of AP and make it a very appealing software for another group of photographers.
- 7 replies
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- astrophotography
- stars
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Will Affinity Photo stack images? A typical shot for me is between 30 and 60 images. I'm using a Canon 5Ds and macro lens. Thanks, James
- 5 replies
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- image stacking
- photomacrography
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