Keeping with the example of M81/82 and using MultiscaleMedianTransform and HDRMultiScaleTransform, the mask is suppose to protect the bright areas of the image so noise reduction is performed on the background area (lower S/N areas), at least that's my understanding. Using the StarMask tool as is I find that if I have really bright stars, M42 Trapezium stars for example, they don't get masked and therefore aren't protect properly which usually leave artifacts in their place. While this is an extreme example, the M33 image had 2-3 very bright stars I also could not get covered in the mask. That is from my lack of fully understanding how to control how to control the mask coverage area and so far I haven't come across any information in lay terms that I can understand that explains this. Harry's video covers the basics very well but leaves the finer points as "experimentation required" which is where I guess I'm at.
What would be very helpful for this topic of masks might be a list of processes that need masks and an example of how to approach making a proper mask for that situation. I love PI, as it offers more control than any program I've ever used, has vastly improved my image processing results, and has so much potential to do even more. I'm at a point where I'm trying to discover what more can be done, why, and how.
At this point I basically use PI to align my images, stack the individual into master images (red, green, blue, luminance, Ha), combine into RGB image, neutralize the background, color calibrate, create basic masks sometimes successfully, apply the HDRMultiscaleTransform tool for finer detail (depth), apply histogram stretching, reduce noise using MMT, use dynamic crop for cleaning up the edges of images as I dither my exposures, use DBE for background issues, and LRGB Combine to integrate the master luminance image with the RGB image after using Dynamic Align to align the two images.
I guess I went off point there for a minute except to say that some of these processes benefit from the proper use of masks. I should also point out that the order I use the above is not as listed. The attached M42 image shows what I'm referring to. While I think it turned out fairly well, I could not use the HDRMultiscaleTransform tool as I could not create an appropriate mask to protect the central stars of the Trapezium. I suspect there is more faint detail I could have brought out if I could have created the proper mask.
Thanks,