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General Photography
Low Light & Night
First Quarter Moon at 300mm
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<blockquote data-quote="WyoDuner" data-source="post: 161684" data-attributes="member: 14602"><p>Dave and Pat, thanks for checking out this photo. First and foremost stacking is good way to remove random noise. The stacking software looks at all of the images being stacked and, by comparison (differentiation actually) , can differentiate the random noise form the subject. Even on the moon image at ISO 100 and 1/15 sec there is no real noise but the stacking results in a somewhat sharper image than I can get in PS or LR alone. In that case, I think stacking is really just just removing any atmospheric disturbances. Stacking is also useful to add multiple exposures for a brighter finally image. This is my first ever moon shot with the new DSLR and I'm pretty happy with the results. </p><p></p><p>For comparison, here is one of the images that was stacked. Only processing is lens correction, cropping and sharpening in LR.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]40884[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WyoDuner, post: 161684, member: 14602"] Dave and Pat, thanks for checking out this photo. First and foremost stacking is good way to remove random noise. The stacking software looks at all of the images being stacked and, by comparison (differentiation actually) , can differentiate the random noise form the subject. Even on the moon image at ISO 100 and 1/15 sec there is no real noise but the stacking results in a somewhat sharper image than I can get in PS or LR alone. In that case, I think stacking is really just just removing any atmospheric disturbances. Stacking is also useful to add multiple exposures for a brighter finally image. This is my first ever moon shot with the new DSLR and I'm pretty happy with the results. For comparison, here is one of the images that was stacked. Only processing is lens correction, cropping and sharpening in LR. [ATTACH type="full" width="60%"]40884._xfImport[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
Low Light & Night
First Quarter Moon at 300mm
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