OK... part 2...
I mentioned on an earlier post in this thread that I had tried using Stacked Opacity blending on moon shots and not been particularly impressed.
I was intrigued by the idea of increasing the image sizes by 200% , and using 'nearest' neighbour sampling' before aligning and subsequently applying the opacity blend changes. (It had never occurred to me to do this. Additionally, I had always applied Vignette and Geometric Distortion checks)
So I hunted out some recent moon shoots and applied the Super Resolution Technique out of curiosity....
Results as follows....
#1 This is the result of stacking 10 captures but NOT initially increasing image size by 200%.
#2 This is the result of stacking the same 10 captures, (from #1) and increasing image size by 200%.
and just in case this was a flook... I ran a second series...
#3 Again this is the result of stacking 10 captures but NOT initially increasing image size by 200%.
#4 And this is the result of stacking the same 10 captures, (from #3) and increasing image size by 200%.
In both cases I seem to have an image with significantly more clarity/definition, using the upsizing process.
Both series were sharpened using Smart Sharpen.I do not normally use Smart Sharpen much, preferring to use my one sharpening recipes, so I substituted my own 'preferred' sharpening and generated similar results.
(I normally use a combination of Gaussian, Surface Blur and noise/median frequency actions to apply specific sharpening to masked areas of an image.)
Regardless of the final sharpening method, the end result was the same.
At the moment I'm puzzling why the effect it is so much more evident with this type of shot compared to the 'normal' scene I used to test initially.
???
(Stating the 'obvious' none of these images where converted to grayscale
)