copy/paste of the deets from when I originally posted it on the reddit last november:
So despite doing astrophotography for over 5 years I've never gotten an image of M31 that I've completely liked until now. My last real attempt at it was in 2019, and looking back has some obvious noise reduction and color gradient issues (tbf I shot it from downtown Athens, GA). I recently visited my future in laws, who happen to live in the middle of nowhere, so I brought along my telescope to take some deep space pics. I also incorporated some hydrogen-alpha data from a while ago to help boost the Hii regions (the red splotches) in the galaxies a bit. At first I wasn't sure about the addition of the Ha data, so I ended up processing this image twice from scratch, one with Ha and one without. There were parts of each that I liked and disliked, so I blended the two finished pics together, and was very pleased with the results, which is the final image you see above. also here's a starless version for the hell of it. Captured on November 17th, 2022, from a Bortle 4 zone (Ha data was captured in October 2020 from a Bortle 6 zone)
ArcsinhStretch + HistogramTransformations to stretch nonlinear
The RGB image without Ha was processed almost identically as above, minus the Ha addition steps. while nonlinear they were processed pretty similarly, so I'm just going to list out the general steps as they broadly apply to both images:
Nonlinear:
LRGBCombination with stretched luminance
Shitloads of CurveTransformations to adjust lightness, saturation, contrast, hues, etc.
Extract L --> LRGBCombination for chrominance noise reduction
color saturation to slightly desaturate the Ha regions
More curves
SCNR > Invert > SCNR > invert to remove some greens and magentas