All About Astro.com
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Astro Gallery
  • Astro Gear
    • Software Bisque Mounts
  • Learning
    • How to Learn Astrophotography
    • A Telescope Buyer's Guide
    • Space is a Landscape
    • Developing a Plan for Our Images
    • Best Data Acquisition Practices
    • The Task of Image Processing
    • Where to Setup Your Telescope
    • Do Dark Skies Really Matter?
    • Astronomy and the Weather
    • Globular Clusters
    • Building a Roll-Off Roof Observatory
    • Choosing a 35mm film camera
    • Great American Solar Eclipse 2024
  • About Me
  • Jay's Slide Rules
    • All the Rules
    • My Favorite Slide Rules
    • Pickett >
      • Pickett N600-ES
      • Pickett N4-T
    • All About K&E Rules
    • The Educational Value of Slide Rules

TSP 2014 - Presentation Title and Abstract

12/2/2013

1 Comment

 
The good Lord permitting, I will be speaking as part of the Texas Imaging Symposium once again at this year's Texas Star Party.   The presentation, "Astroimaging DNA," will be a look at how astroimagers, past, present, and future can produce images in a recognizable and consistent style.  Here is the Abstract as posted to the TSP website:

Abstract:    Building off last year's presentation from AIS 2013, Jay presents more of the theoretical and philosophical aspects that undergird his imaging philosophy.  Regardless of the participant’s experience level in astroimaging, this presentation provides a cohesive approach that will help imagers inject "DNA" into an image.

 With information gained here, you can begin to maximize the potential within your own images - from data planning and collection; to processing and presentation.   But mostly, it will show you how you can create images that become uniquely your own, creating "signature" works each time.  The single session will detail four "nucleotides" of the imaging DNA chain: Growth, Aesthetic, Tolerance, and Consistency. 

Growth:  The development of the astroimager is the focus here.  This is a study at how ethics, opinions, education, and
theory affect the growth of the astrophotographer, and consequently, his or her imaging "program."  

Aesthetics:  In an arena that is traditionally considered science, is there room for an individual's aesthetic?  If so, what decisions can be made and how does this affect the overall quality and perception of the image?   

Tolerance:   This will involve a technical discussion of the photographic system - image acquisition, data interpretation,
and image processing - and how an imager learns tolerance, quality control, and eventual acceptance of the final result. 

Consistency:   If you've done it once, how do you repeat it?  Can all images contain recognizable DNA?  If so, what does that look like?  Thus, we look at how changes to the "workflow" are necessitated in our treatment of various objects/imaging types, as well as how many of the great, pro imagers have established their own digital "fingerprints." 


1 Comment
S.G. Cheah link
6/7/2023 11:25:28 am

Grateful for sharingg this

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Author...

    For more about me, be sure to read About Me!

    Archives

    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    July 2018
    October 2017
    August 2017
    January 2017
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013

    Categories

    All
    Eclipse
    Lunar
    Moon
    NEAIC
    Photoshop
    Presentation
    TSP

    RSS Feed

Home

Gallery

Contact

Picture

Terms of Use

All images and content on www.allaboutastro.com
​are copyright by Jay Ballauer. 
​Permission for use and ​proper credit is required. 
© COPYRIGHT 2003 - 2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.