When you stretch you have a black, mid and white point.
My understanding is you never touch the white slider but only move the middle slider towards the curve.
When you have done this you can at the end move the black slider to just before the curve starts. Leave a little nose on the edge of the curve.
If you push the slider to far you start losing the darker parts of the image and it can look fake as the background disappears to black. This is my understanding of black clipping.
Clipping occurs any time you truncate your data dynamic range. Black if the left of the histogram is clipped, white if the right of your histogram is clipped. In either case you lose data. Highlights or dark neb. The histogram is different for each channel. Your first step is to set the left of each channel histogram to the same black point then you balance your color.
First of all, you've gathered some great data to work with. Seeing must have been pretty good. My understanding by your file name, these might be created using your Ha filter, or are they UVIR cut filtered shots? If they're Ha filtered it means it represents the amount of hydrogen alpha present in the galaxy. Using these as luminance won't represent all the detail available in RGB that you get using a luminance filter. If they are UVIR cut filtered shots, I'd be using the middle version as it has the best dynamic range.
Peter,
Super M83 images !!!!
Should be in Deep Space section
I’ve never black clipped as Startools won’t let you black clip your image
It doesn’t rely on levels curves and histograms by the operator like the commonly used processing software. You stretch your image by selecting a region of interest ( ROI ) and Startools automatically does the rest , brilliant !!
One of the reasons I chose Startools, I hate levels , curves and histograms
My 2 cents ....
M.
Clipping occurs any time you truncate your data dynamic range. Black if the left of the histogram is clipped, white if the right of your histogram is clipped. In either case you lose data. Highlights or dark neb. The histogram is different for each channel. Your first step is to set the left of each channel histogram to the same black point then you balance your color.
thanks Marc. This will take time to take on board. I'm getting a headache
When you stretch you have a black, mid and white point.
My understanding is you never touch the white slider but only move the middle slider towards the curve.
When you have done this you can at the end move the black slider to just before the curve starts. Leave a little nose on the edge of the curve.
If you push the slider to far you start losing the darker parts of the image and it can look fake as the background disappears to black. This is my understanding of black clipping.
By the way lovely images and heaps of details.
Eureka! You nailed it Paul.
And Marc, yeh I get it now!
Thanks you lot!
After what Paul and others had to say, I used the 'Histogram Transformation' process doing it manually, instead of using the Auto 'Screen Transfer Function' which decides for you.
The first image (below) was the result of Auto, and a little over stretched.
After doing it manually, it came out same as the second image!