Load and manipulate wide-field RGB in Compose
Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2021 5:04 pm
Greetings all!
I've had some good results so far in loading narrowband frames into Compose and processing away. I was wondering now if there is a way to load, manipulate and process separate multiple RGB files that have already been aligned and combined elsewhere into Compose?
For example, say I have three RGB files that represent stacks of a regular OSC session, a mono Ha session, and a multiband OSC session with a L-eXtreme filter. Depending on the mix, one RGB file may be dominant over the others and needs to be attenuated. To accomplish that, I tried several different ways to assign the files to the Red Green and Blue channels so I could hopefully use the Total Exposure sliders to emphasize say, one file over the others. Didn't seem to work for me...the respective channel color always tinted the result.
I've searched most of the tutorials that I've found but didn't come across anything that was encouraging so far. Is what I want to do just wishful thinking? Thanks for any suggestions!
Craig
I've had some good results so far in loading narrowband frames into Compose and processing away. I was wondering now if there is a way to load, manipulate and process separate multiple RGB files that have already been aligned and combined elsewhere into Compose?
For example, say I have three RGB files that represent stacks of a regular OSC session, a mono Ha session, and a multiband OSC session with a L-eXtreme filter. Depending on the mix, one RGB file may be dominant over the others and needs to be attenuated. To accomplish that, I tried several different ways to assign the files to the Red Green and Blue channels so I could hopefully use the Total Exposure sliders to emphasize say, one file over the others. Didn't seem to work for me...the respective channel color always tinted the result.
I've searched most of the tutorials that I've found but didn't come across anything that was encouraging so far. Is what I want to do just wishful thinking? Thanks for any suggestions!
Craig