Have you already tried this?
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=2275&p=11146#p11146
Regards
Stefan
I’m on mac so out of luck with that…Stefan B wrote: ↑Tue Oct 26, 2021 6:49 pmHave you already tried this?
viewtopic.php?f=4&t=2275&p=11146#p11146
Regards
Stefan
I think the crucial point is that restore only works while tracking is active so the software can 'undo' the previous steps. After switching off tracking ST forgets all the steps and restore is greyed out.After applying NR and saving you can click 'Undo'. Then the 'Restore' isn't greyed out and you can go back.
My understanding is that tracking has to be active for Restore to be available.
Ah… I’ll try that. I had tried to activate tracking again and that didn’t work thought that's what you meant first time I saw that.Stefan B wrote: ↑Tue Oct 26, 2021 8:08 pm Nothing to do with OS. I think you looked at the post below the one I actually linked. Direct quote:
I think the crucial point is that restore only works while tracking is active so the software can 'undo' the previous steps. After switching off tracking ST forgets all the steps and restore is greyed out.After applying NR and saving you can click 'Undo'. Then the 'Restore' isn't greyed out and you can go back.
My understanding is that tracking has to be active for Restore to be available.
Non-linear stretching and then combining makes no sense... Is it likely you just stretched until you saw the detail "you liked" (which is mostly visible in the Ha) and then decided it was time to combine?
That's what it is supposed to do and what its purpose is, but squashing and stretching the dynamic range, detail and the per-pixel SNR prior, doesn't make a whole lot of sense.extracts luminance in that situation, but I thought it would grab sum from all of them).
Then I am frankly not sure what you are after any more... It shows all the detail you were after that you indicated in this post and is better(!) visible than in your PI/ST hybrid on all my screens. I am really wondering if there is something amiss with your screen calibration? Do you have, say, a phone or tablet handy? What do the images look like on those?I can't really tell much of a difference where you used Ha as lum there from some of the other versions though honestly.
Indeed, hence the recommendation to base your exposure times based on which detail you wish to acquire. However, given the renditions you prefer, it appears you actually do want Ha to be dominant in your image (indeed, it tends to be the most prevalent in terms of detail).For RGB those times make sense as being important since each contributes directly to a proportional section of total luminance, but in narrowband Ha is always going to be hugely dominant and I don't think everyone always wants that in their final image.
Signal you acquire, constitutes simple succesful photon counts (not every count is successful, which is the origin of the shot noise).Ha is almost always going to be the dominant signal, and generally needs much less exposure time to achieve similar SNR to oIII and SII
Not enough in terms of detail? Color? Were the objects poor in Ha signal/detail?I have heard that as a technique to focus on ha and then shorter on the others and just using ha as lum, but I've been disappointed in the past not gathering enough signal on the other channels,
That is absolutely true for this object. In fact, as a reference, any object you see around on the Internet that was rendered in SHO (and was properly processed!) will show great detail in S-II, if you can see that nice orange/golden coloring in it (e.g. the mixture of Ha and S-II; red and green). In a properly processed image, the colors mean something.I don't really want to just use Ha as lum, and I think there is great detail in Sii I would want to bring out.