Golden Bridge, Los Angeles – Before and After
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| Light pollution Astrophotography Urban Astronomy |
The difference is striking. On the left, the orange sky glow typical of large cities drowns out all but the brightest stars. On the right, subtle gradient removal and color correction bring back the natural depth of the night sky. No Milky Way is visible here — just the quiet, real sky above Los Angeles as it would appear without the interference of artificial light.
Photoshop Processing Steps for Light Pollution Removal
Step 3: Filter-> Blue -> Gaussian Blue… (about 30px)
Step 4: Select original layer
Step 5: Image -> Apply image (Blending: Subtract; Offset: 40)
Step 6: Delete the duplicate layer
In this photo, the digital cleanup was done using gradient-removal layers in Photoshop and subtle color balance adjustments. The goal wasn’t to create an unrealistic night sky, but to recover the true dynamic range that excessive lighting had hidden. The restored image shows a faint trace of the starry night rising over the bridge — a reminder that the night is never completely lost to light.
See also for example video in my other post: Comet 103P/Hartley 2 from New York City
Note, that Astronomy Tools has more sophisticated methods to remove light pollution, or you can do some variations of such methods (it depends from size of you original image). You also can apply it only for part of original image.
The other way to remove light pollution is using multiple images, see for example my other post: M42 Orion Nebula using iOptron SkyTracker in NYC
Why Light Pollution Happens
Preserving the Night Sky
Final Thoughts
Related Astrophotography Posts
- M42 Orion Nebula using iOptron SkyTracker in NYC
- Comet 103P/Hartley 2 from New York City
- The Solar Eclipse of April 8, 2024: An HDR Revelation of the Sun's Corona from Westport, New York
- Why the Equatorial Sky Glows More Red - My Nights Photographing Airglow in Tanzania and the Galápagos
- Topaz DeNoise AI Canon Ra Milky Way Astrophotography











