![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have just posted my first through-a-telescope deep-sky astrophotos to
my web site. Excerpts from my caption: "These two regions‹The Orion Nebula (M42) and the Pleiades Open Star Cluster (M45) are so often photographed by amateurs that it is hard to add anything new to them. What makes these two images special‹to me‹is that they are my very first such images through an astronomical telescope..." " These images also represent first light for my new TeleVue 76 Apochromatic Refractor..." "...These images are confidence builders for me; I have had doubts about the feasability of making good astrophotographs under Maryland skies, particularly because my home is half-way between Baltimore and Washington, D.C..." Don't expect these images to blow your socks off, though I will say that I believe that my shoelace became untied while I was processing M42. http://www.davidillig.com/ast-m42m45050127.shtml Davoud -- usenet *at* davidillig dawt com |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Davoud wrote: I have just posted my first through-a-telescope deep-sky "These two regions=8BThe Orion Nebula (M42) and the Pleiades Open Star Cluster (M45) are so often photographed by amateurs that it is hard to add anything new to them. What makes these two images special=8Bto me=8Bis that they are my very first such images through an astronomical telescope..." Bravo! I wish my first deep sky photos (circa 1966) had looked this good! Peace, Rod |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
WOW! These are just terrific, Davoud, especially for first attempts. Can
you tell me how precisely you were able to remove the sky glow from the shots? I use photoshop, too, but haven't found the trick to getting decent dark backgrounds. Whenever I leave my shutter open I record increasingly gray background sky after a minute or so, as my conditions are suburban. Any advice on how to get rid of it? Nicely done, again. Congrats- Chris Davoud wrote: I have just posted my first through-a-telescope deep-sky astrophotos to my web site. Excerpts from my caption: "These two regions‹The Orion Nebula (M42) and the Pleiades Open Star Cluster (M45) are so often photographed by amateurs that it is hard to add anything new to them. What makes these two images special‹to me‹is that they are my very first such images through an astronomical telescope..." " These images also represent first light for my new TeleVue 76 Apochromatic Refractor..." "...These images are confidence builders for me; I have had doubts about the feasability of making good astrophotographs under Maryland skies, particularly because my home is half-way between Baltimore and Washington, D.C..." Don't expect these images to blow your socks off, though I will say that I believe that my shoelace became untied while I was processing M42. http://www.davidillig.com/ast-m42m45050127.shtml Davoud |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi,
WOW! These are just terrific, Davoud, especially for first attempts. Can you tell me how precisely you were able to remove the sky glow from the shots? I use photoshop, too, but haven't found the trick to getting decent dark backgrounds. Whenever I leave my shutter open I record increasingly gray background sky after a minute or so, as my conditions are suburban. Any advice on how to get rid of it? Hmm, I am not Davoud, but, well, since he did not answer yet... If you have access to a Unix/Linux box, you may be interested in the darksky shellscript I have written: http://www.bnhof.de/~ho4463/astro-scripts.html It is not really a work of art, but it works for me (and I would be pleased to hear your opinion if you try it out). I am currently learning Tcl/Tk, so there will probably be a cross-platform version of this (also with a GUI) in the future. Greetings & Best regards, Jan -- My From: address is valid, but for email please use Reply To: The Reply To: is valid without modification. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Craig M. Bobchin:
Congrats those are very nice. I wish I could get that good with my 20d. How did you get such good focus? Also was this via eyepiece projection if so what magnification were you using? What filter did you use? Did you do one exposure for the bright stuff? I'd love to know your post processing steps. Hello, Craig, Thanks for visiting my miserable little web site and for taking time to post your kind remarks. You can get "that good" with your 20D. As I noted on the web page http://www.davidillig.com/ast-m42m45050127.shtml, I am a beginner at deep-sky astrophotography. I didn't mention that I have considerable experience with Photoshop. Both M42 and M45 put a good mix of bright and dim stars in my camera viewfinder, which I find convenient for focusing. I used a Canon Angle Finder C at 2.5x magnification and focused for sharpness and contrast. Using averted vision helped me focus. Then I checked focus at the computer. A lot of folks like DSLR Focus http://www.dslrfocus.com/, but 20D support is still in beta, and I haven't been able to make it work. I used Canon's "Digital Photo Professional" software to download the images as soon as they were made in order to check focus. That means making a couple of short (underexposed) images to start with to check focus. I did this on a Mac PowerBook, but I'm sure it would work on my Windows laptop. The last short exposure -- the one with good focus -- may be saved and the region around the Trapezium used to paste into the final image to compensate for overexposure in the stacked image. After I capture all of my images on the PowerBook at the 'scope I move them via my 802.11g wireless network to a more powerful Mac for processing. Keeps the pixels from freezing out there in the cold observatory... Other details are on the web page: camera at prime focus, and I used a 2" Lumicon Deep Sky filter. Eyepiece projection is incompatible with wide-field photography. I stacked the M42 image using Keith's Image Stacker on a Mac; Registax under Windows would also work. For some reason, Keith's didn't do as good a job for M45, so I used another Mac image stacker, Lynkeos, for that target. Then I went to work in Photoshop. I manage color, contrast and noise exclusively with the curves control. It's important to note that my aim is to produce pretty pictures that will look good on the web and in print; I'm not a researcher and I'm not aiming to make research-grade images. I work with Curves on the red, green, and blue channels individually until I get an image that pleases me. I don't know a magic formula for doing this, but in general, I reduce the blue at the dark end, reduce the green across the spectrum, and increase the red as much as I can, especially toward the bright end, while trying not to make the dark background too red. The aim is to get a very dark background in black, very dark gray, or very dark blue. Sometimes I work on a selection, but one has to feather the edges a great deal -- 20 pixels or more, sometimes -- to prevent the processed selection from standing out like a patch on a quilt. At the very end I crop and resize as necessary and use unsharp masking very carefully. Sometimes I do a _real_ unsharp mask, i.e., I apply a blurred copy of the image to itself. I'm going to try to further qualify the steps that I use, and if I am able to do that I will include the information on a future image and post a notice here. I will make one more try at both M42 and M45 soon, and if there are improved results I will post here. Thanks again, Davoud -- usenet *at* davidillig dawt com |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Space Shuttles Survive Jeanne; Assembly Building Loses More Panels | Scott M. Kozel | Space Shuttle | 78 | October 1st 04 01:48 AM |
Digital vs. Film in Astrophotography | Jason Donahue | Amateur Astronomy | 216 | January 5th 04 04:34 PM |
Digital vs. Film in Astrophotography | Jason Donahue | CCD Imaging | 35 | January 5th 04 03:11 PM |
News: PREPARATIONS FOR BUILDING SOYUZ LAUNCH COMPLEX AT KOUROU CONTINUE | Rusty B | Policy | 0 | August 7th 03 04:21 PM |
Astrophotography telescope for amateur photographer | brulu | Amateur Astronomy | 3 | August 7th 03 03:54 AM |