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Old 07-07-2009, 08:47 PM
jase (Jason)
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Craig_L View Post
I did increase the size of the cropped RGB image to the size of the Ha before combining for a L(Ha)RGB. And less time in the oven.

Craig
Craig,
As per my previous post, to improve on the result you should try downsizing the luminance to match the RGB first. This is to create a so called "superRGB" layer. Blur and saturate this layer as its technically now the new RGB! You can then upscale this superRGB layer to the full resolution of the luminance again. You'll find the superRGB layer is a much better match than the conventional RGB alone. Give it a try. Don't be afraid to blur the superRGB layer hard to deal with noise. Upscaling any data requires a good quality S/N so keep this in mind. Skimping on the RGB will make it difficult.

The Ha data looks on the money IMO.
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