Quote:
Originally Posted by h0ughy
Al it looks a little too processed or clipped?
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Actually David, that's most likely StarWipe's doing.
Allan mentions there was a gradient present before he put it through StarWipe as a last step, so that means that the image can't have been clipped before it was put through StarWipe.
StarWipe maximizes contrast, removing any background light such as natural skyglow, Gegenschein etc. StarWipe does not clip however; it will never subtract a bigger value from a pixel than is the background light level (unless some extremely aggressive settings are used).
It will make images appear unnatural to some, but that is easily corrected by adding back a baseline level. The consensus for natural skyglow seems to be between 8-10 for red, green and blue. Personally, I think doing so is a waste of dynamic range as it defacto reduces contrast, making intricate detail harder to see. When it comes to aesthetics however, the debate's been going as long as there have been 'submit' buttons...
Looking at the final result (which is pretty damn detailed!), and taking into account the sub-optimal conditions, I can't really fault Allan's processing.