Hi all,
Just a few notes, in the hope that they will clarify some misunderstandings that (IMO) I've read on this thread, with respect to PixInsight, to the future development of PixInsight, and to my personal opinions. The following are just facts about PixInsight and descriptive comments about my own way of understanding astrophotography.
- I am not against painting tools. There will be painting tools in PixInsight, including bitmap-based, vector-based and text drawing tools. Painting and drawing tools will be integrated with a layer composition system (namely LayeredComposition) based on PixelMath. In fact, several important steps toward these tools have already been made: implementation of SVG graphics, extensive XML support, and vector-based graphics (the VectorGraphics class in PCL and its counterpart object in PJSR) in recent versions of PixInsight.
- I am against hand-painted masks in astrophotography. This is just my opinion. Everyone is free to use the available tools and resources as he/she wants. But for me, a hand-painted (= hand-painted-masked) image is incompatible with astrophotography, as I understand it.
- An algorithmic mask can be used poorly. In general, any algorithm can be used well or can be used poorly. Algorithmic masks and well implemented tools are necessary conditions, but not sufficient conditions.
- Applying the result of a process --e.g. a sharpening procedure-- through a well designed, algorithmic mask that has been constructed with homogeneous criteria for the whole image is not the same thing as applying it by painting holes by hand with a brush tool. In the latter case, the user is generating false structures --or the false impression that some structures exist-- because the process is not being applied in the same way to all objects sharing a set of properties in the image. Yes, an experienced user can paint masks with extreme care, but that doesn't change the fact that manual intervention is subjective, unrepeatable, and hence unreliable. For the same reason, photography replaced visual observation during the end of the XIXth Century. In the digital era, it is interesting to note how purely subjective data handling practices are replacing automatic data processing techniques in astrophotography. Regression?
- It is extremely discouraging having to compete with hand-painted images because a hand-painted one can always be much nicer, much more APOD-prone than an image of the same object acquired with the same equipment, but processed in a documentary way. No matter how smart we can be, no matter our processing skills, the efficiency of our algorithms and techniques: nothing can compete with a brush.
- Talk about shades of gray. (i) Using the clone stamp to fix small artifacts and defects is perfectly OK, as long as no significant image structures are invented during the process. Personally, I prefer leaving a blooming in all of its glory, if while retouching it I find myself guessing nonexistent or dubious structures. (ii) Removing traces of nonstellar objects in a star mask is OK and often necessary. (iii) Increasing color saturation for a particular color, for example red to improve HII regions, can be admissible under certain conditions, but for me this is a borderline practice. (iv) Applying morphological transformations to improve star profiles is OK, as long as some common sense is used (e.g., removing existing stars is inadmissible). I could put more examples, but I think you get the idea with these. Of course there are grays.
- I am not here to make money. Damn, now that I've just ordered my new Ferrari... 8) When I design new tools or new features or development ways for PixInsight I am not thinking on how to gather more users, but on how to improve PixInsight as I see and like it. I probably should be different, but as I once said before, I am older than 19 so there's little hope that I can change.
My 0.02 €