Very cool. IMO I think you went a bit too aggressive with your chromatic aberration subtraction since it left many of the white stars yellow. I'd dial it slightly back so that instead of eliminating it entirely, you find a middle ground that helps preserve the star's color better. I'd be interested to see how a compromise setting looked.
Pardon my language but HOLY SHIT. HOLY SHIT. There is a H U G E difference in my first astro image now. Thank you, thank you, thank you for sharing this. I really appreciate it. I'm going to subscribe to your channel now. You're a legend mate.
Very cool. IMO I think you went a bit too aggressive with your chromatic aberration subtraction since it left many of the white stars yellow. I'd dial it slightly back so that instead of eliminating it entirely, you find a middle ground that helps preserve the star's color better. I'd be interested to see how a compromise setting looked.
Possibly. If shot the area this year with my SCT and still had a ton of yellow stars. May just be that part of the galaxy or my color calibration too.
@@lazyastronomy3348 it's worth investigating and possibly checking out APO examples on astrobin for reference. Good info though, thanks.
It works so well
Pardon my language but HOLY SHIT. HOLY SHIT.
There is a H U G E difference in my first astro image now. Thank you, thank you, thank you for sharing this. I really appreciate it. I'm going to subscribe to your channel now. You're a legend mate.
Really glad it helps! Sure made my life easier
Thanks
Fantastic tip. Thanks.
Great info ☺👍