


Launch Starry Landscape Stacker, and under "Help" in the menu bar select "Email Developer". Perhaps you could contact me directly and we can find a way to make masking easier for you. I am not sure how having a feathered brush makes it easier to make a mask. The edge of the mask has to have a hard edge-feathered alignment just does not work. Some useful software for stacking is: Starry Landscape Stacker (free trial available, Mac. I am not sure how Ian Norman's tutorial showed a feathered brush. Stars move between the different images, but the landscape does not. Other than the paint brush feather issue this is a great app and very user friendly! I’ve achieved my best astro shots with the help of this app. There is a program called Starry Landscape Stacker for Mac computers that I. I saw in Ian Norman’s tutorial video that his brush was feathered and there is no obvious way to achieve that in the app. I quickly learned about how stacking images of the sky could reduce noise in. jforkners gear list: Olympus E-620 Canon EOS 6D Canon 6D Mark II Olympus Zuiko Digital ED 7-14mm 1:4.0 Olympus Zuiko Digital 14-54mm 1:2.8-3.5 +4 more. I did view the how-to portion of the program’s posted info and am not convinced that it does anything that can’t be done in PS alone. Then we throw the images into an app such as Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac) or Sequator (PC). BTW, I have not used Starry Landscape Tracker. The idea here is to take several photos one right after another to reduce digital noise that generally occurs when pushing the camera’s sensitivity higher and higher. How can you feather the paint brush when masking? The paint brush is set to the hardest edge possible and that makes masking a very time consuming and tedeous process. This, however, is stacking for starry night skies, including the Milky Way.
