Thanks Joshua, I really like your incorporating from the very beginning the mention of your foreground, working at all the facets of getting the MW just right, but still touching up the foreground enough to be used as a first photo. I appreciate the the noise that gets introduced trying to bring out that dark foreground , and finessing reducing the noise, without or before having to do the next step, taking a separate photo of just the foreground, and merging the two. You have a great voice, and right tempo. Keep it up.
This is the best Milky Way editing video I’ve seen. I only have PSE12 and Affinity Photo so not sure how to apply all these techniques but it’s certainly given me an idea of where to start. Thank you so much!
Excellent tutorial, you just earned my subscription :). I’ve watched many Milky Way processing tutorials and this one is the best I have seen so far. I like how you provide more description of what you are doing and why, and doing the steps slowly enough to follow along visually rather than bouncing your mouse all of the screen like a Possessed game of Pong (sorry, dating myself there ;).
I applied to my previously edited Milky Way photos and your tips made such a great difference. Thanks so much for sharing. I've shared a link to your video with my Amateur Photography Group. :)
Hi. Your video is very interesting and as I’m just beginning to learn how to edit Milky Way raw images I was hoping your clear and informative guide would take me through the process. However, I’ve immediately hit a snag in that Lr Classic 2024 doesn’t have an option for a profile called flat or neutral. There are lots of different options and I wondered which one would be closest to what I need?
Great Video, I have used few noise reduction methods for Milky way part of the photo and I feel the lightroom does a great job overall for single exposure photos. For multiple exposures photoshop can do some magic by using median stacking of smart objects. Looking forward to your further videos. Thanks for putting out great content. It has helped me think more critique my own images and workflows. Great work! :)
Very helpful video, thank you! I'm jealous at you peple who live at latitudes where you can see the milky way core. Where I live we only get to see the tail in the winter...on the other hand we have lots of nothern lights, so it's okay :D
This is the thing I don't get when I go outside and look at the Milky Way it doesn't look anything close to what you made it look like in Lightroom but look like before you ran it through Lightroom. Are you actually bringing out the colours we can't see or making a pretty picture with colours that really aren't actually there?
Thanks Joshua, I really like your incorporating from the very beginning the mention of your foreground, working at all the facets of getting the MW just right, but still touching up the foreground enough to be used as a first photo. I appreciate the the noise that gets introduced trying to bring out that dark foreground , and finessing reducing the noise, without or before having to do the next step, taking a separate photo of just the foreground, and merging the two. You have a great voice, and right tempo. Keep it up.
This is one of the best editing instructional videos I’ve ever watched. Thank you!
Your presentations are always calm and free of too much talking. This makes the learning so much easier.
This is the best Milky Way editing video I’ve seen. I only have PSE12 and Affinity Photo so not sure how to apply all these techniques but it’s certainly given me an idea of where to start. Thank you so much!
Great edit technique. Tried this and it came out worlds better than my original attempt. Now I need to go back and re-edit all my MW photos!
Old but still valid and excellent like all your clips. A big thank you! :)
I like your methodical approach. I watches a number of other tutorials and this has been the best. It is clear why we are doing something. Very good!
This is a great video. Very well explained. Thank you.
Been watching some mily way editing tutorials, found yours. Very clear and to the point tips, this helped a lot! Thanks!
Thank you for the clear, concise editing tips. I followed it & love how my photo turned out! I even figured out how to use a watermark in Lightroom!
Your tutorials are always great.
Literally breathtaking
Excellent video. I was disappointed part two is not out yet. Really looking forward to more great info on Milky Way editing.
This video is so extremely good! So well explained! I'll re-edit my most recent Milky Way photo right this evening!
The best I've seen on the milkyway thanks
Great info! Can't wait for the rest of the videos.
Excellent tutorial, you just earned my subscription :). I’ve watched many Milky Way processing tutorials and this one is the best I have seen so far. I like how you provide more description of what you are doing and why, and doing the steps slowly enough to follow along visually rather than bouncing your mouse all of the screen like a Possessed game of Pong (sorry, dating myself there ;).
I applied to my previously edited Milky Way photos and your tips made such a great difference. Thanks so much for sharing. I've shared a link to your video with my Amateur Photography Group. :)
I just got into photographing the milky way..been out twice..turned out pretty good.
Hi. Your video is very interesting and as I’m just beginning to learn how to edit Milky Way raw images I was hoping your clear and informative guide would take me through the process. However, I’ve immediately hit a snag in that Lr Classic 2024 doesn’t have an option for a profile called flat or neutral. There are lots of different options and I wondered which one would be closest to what I need?
Good stuff, Josh! Looking forward to the rest of the series.
Agree clear easy to understand... thank you!
Perfectly explained, thank you!
You’re brilliant! So easy to listen to!
Great tutorial. Can't wait to improve my milky way photos.
Great Video, I have used few noise reduction methods for Milky way part of the photo and I feel the lightroom does a great job overall for single exposure photos. For multiple exposures photoshop can do some magic by using median stacking of smart objects.
Looking forward to your further videos. Thanks for putting out great content. It has helped me think more critique my own images and workflows. Great work! :)
Why can't I like a video twice
Very helpful! Thank you!
This video is so helpful! Thank you!
Great video man, liked it.
Thank you for the video
Really useful! Thanks for this.
Thank you for sharing
Nice job Mr C. The thinking mans lightroom Guru :-)
That was a great video when will the second part be up
Great stuff..
Wow I really learned a lot
Thanks!!
Very helpful video, thank you! I'm jealous at you peple who live at latitudes where you can see the milky way core. Where I live we only get to see the tail in the winter...on the other hand we have lots of nothern lights, so it's okay :D
super excited to give this a try, but Im missing Camera Calibration. Running latest version of software on a Mac. Any idea where to find this?
It should be in the lowest tab on the right hand side in the LR Develop Module
hey josh, what printer do you use for printing your photographs?
Lovely
11:01 Bob Ross of photography
12:12 aaww, now I am too curious how you will bring those foreground detail, ehehe..
This is the thing I don't get when I go outside and look at the Milky Way it doesn't look anything close to what you made it look like in Lightroom but look like before you ran it through Lightroom. Are you actually bringing out the colours we can't see or making a pretty picture with colours that really aren't actually there?
No such colors are actually in the space for our human eyes to see. :-)
What lense did you use
It says in the top right, 14mm f2.8
New video :D
How to get the milky way?
This video is so extremely good! So well explained! I'll re-edit my most recent Milky Way photo right this evening!