Ever tried editing a Milky Way shot and ended up arguing with your software? Same. Here’s how my Wembury Beach images survived Affinity Photo — just about.
Do you remember my Milky Way session at Wembury Beach last month?
If not, you can relive the sandy, slightly chaotic adventure here:
https://undersouthwestskies.blogspot.com/2026/05/photographing-milky-way-on-wembury-beach.html
Well… I finally sat down with a mug of tea, opened Affinity
Photo, and attempted to turn those raw files into something presentable. What
followed was part science experiment, part detective work, and part “why won’t
you just do what I’m telling you?”
In other words: a normal night of astrophotography editing.
This post walks through what worked, what didn’t, and what
I’ll do differently next time — because if astrophotography teaches us
anything, it’s that progress often looks like two steps forward, one step
sideways, and one step into a bramble bush.
Where Things
Started Going Wrong (On the Night Itself)
Let’s get the confession out of the way:
I should have shot at ISO 3200, not ISO 1600.
My Milky Way band came out far darker than I expected.
But hey — we learn, we adapt, and we try not to cry into our
rucksac.
The Great Stacking
Experiment
Before diving into Affinity Photo, I decided to run a little
three‑way showdown:
- DeepSkyStacker
- Sequator
- Affinity
Photo’s own stacking
Think of it as The Great British Stack Off — except
nobody gets a handshake and everything smells faintly of dew and seaweed.
Winner this round: Sequator.
Cleanest output, least noise, and the stars behaved themselves.
My Affinity Photo post editing Workflow (Step-by-Step)
Below is the full workflow I used — the good, the bad, and
the “why is this happening to me?”
1. Layer Setup:
Building the Editing Sandwich
- Opened
the Milky Way image and duplicated the background layer three times.
- Background
Sky
- Horizon
Glow
- Milky
Way Band
- Turned
off the Horizon and Milky Way layers.
- Highlighted
the Background Sky layer.
2. Selecting the
Milky Way Band
- Used
the Selection Brush Tool in Add mode (soft brush, snap to
edges ON) to select the Milky Way.
Used Subtract mode to clean up stray sky bits. - Refined
the selection:
- Radius:
1%
- Feather:
0.8 px
- Matte
edges: ON
- Output:
Selection
- Turned
on the Milky Way layer → clicked Mask → Milky Way isolated.
- Inverted
the pixel selection → turned on Background Sky → clicked Mask.
Now the sky shows, but the Milky Way band doesn’t.
A neat little cosmic jigsaw.
3. Fixing the
Horizon Glow
- Switched
on the Horizon Glow layer.
- Added
an HSL Adjustment:
- Reds:
–100% saturation
- Yellows:
–100% saturation
- Used
the Gradient Tool (Linear) to draw a gradient from below the glow
to above it.
Turned this into a mask. - With
a soft white brush, gently painted over the glow area to tame the orange
cast.
Think of it like ‘applying concealer to a horizon that
partied too hard’ is what a friend suggested when I was describing my frustration
with not understanding how to do the procedure well to her. I suspect she was
having flash backs to her college days!
4. Enhancing the
Milky Way Band
- Turned
off Background Sky + Horizon layers.
- Selected
the Milky Way layer + mask.
- Added
adjustments:
- Curves
(midtones boost)
- Levels
(tighten blacks)
- HSL
(blue tone tweaks)
- Clarity
Live Filter
- Denoise
Live Filter
This is the part where the Milky Way started to look like
the Milky Way again, rather than a ‘smudge’ from a toddler’s pastel crayon.
5. Working on the Background Sky
- Turned
off Milky Way layers.
- Selected
Background Sky + mask.
- Adjustments:
- Curves
(darken midtones)
- Levels
(deepen blacks)
- HSL
(correct colour cast)
- Denoise
Live Filter
- Clarity
Live Filter
At this point, both sky components looked decent
individually…
Which is exactly when everything fell apart.
Where It All Went Wrong (The Editing Meltdown)
You know those moments when your brain just packs its bags
and leaves the room?
That was me.
I wanted to blend the sky and foreground more realistically
— brightness, colour, transition edges — but Affinity Photo had other ideas. No
that isn’t fair actually – Affinity Photo knew exactly what it wanted to do and
how to do it – it was its idiot user that lost the plot!
❌ Attempt 1: Matching Brightness
Tried lowering opacity → no joy.
Tried curves → nope.
Tried whispering encouragement → still no.
❌ Attempt 2: Softening the
Horizon Transition
Tried a black brush on the Milky Way mask → nothing.
Tried Gaussian blur → absolutely nothing.
Tried glaring at the screen → surprisingly ineffective.
Eventually, I admitted defeat.
Sometimes the best editing tool is the “Close Program” button and a consolation
biscuit.
Final Thoughts (and the Images)
Despite the hiccups, I’m actually pleased with the progress.
Every session — whether under the stars or in front of the monitor — teaches me
something new.
These images reflect where my skills are right now:
improving, imperfect, and heading in the right direction.
Much more to learn, much more to try, and many more nights
under the South West skies ahead.








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