Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Ward
Being an urban imager myself, I totally understand how NB is so much easier to obtain under glowing urban light domes. But I prefer to make palette choices that map emissions in a meaningful way, i.e running up or down the
spectrum such as SHO to RGB....tricky as Ha tends to dominate the scene but there are well worn solutions to this.
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With the help of Ivo the developer of Startools he’s given me a option to create an image closest to the spectrum bands whilst utilising my SHO data set as follows -
“SHO data set to Visual Spectrum RGB using Startools
Open Compose
Set Luminance Color to L + Synthetic L from RGB, Mono
Create a Luminance channel by loading Sii into R , Ha into G and Oiii into B
Press Keep then Linear then Save into your nominated location and save as a tiff file ( eg: SHO Luminance.tiff )
Close Compose
Open Compose
Set Luminance Color to L + Synthetic L from RGB, Mono
Create a Red channel ( Sii + Ha ) by loading Sii into R, load Ha into G
Press Keep then Linear then Save into your nominated location and save as tiff file ( eg: Red Sii +Ha.tiff )
Close Compose
Open Compose
Set Luminance Color to L, RGB
Load saved SHO Luminance file into Luminance channel
Load saved Red Sii + Ha file into Red channel
Load existing Oiii file into Green channel
Load existing Oiii into Blue channel
Press Keep then Linear
Open AutoDev or Film Dev and process as normal
When you hit the Colour module select the following -
Style - Artistic Not Detail Aware
LRGB Method Emulation - RGB Ratio CieLab Luminance Retention
Adjust saturation and colour bias to taste
Leave Matrix identity Off
Save then move onto final modules or Tracking Noise Reduction”
It’s not exactly LRGB or LRGBHa but it worth a try if you have a quality data set.
If the weather is kind and we get at least 4 to 6 clear nights over a 2 week period during new moon, I do try and shoot LRGB using 30 sec subs but I need loads of good data to expose any detail above the noise floor.
It’s definitely challenging and frustrating , the folk who image consistently from B3 to B1 skies don’t realise what they have unless they image from a City of 5.5 million people.
We do what we can…… and most importantly enjoy it.