I’ve taken a look at some earlier iterations of Astro Panel over the years, a plug-in designed for automating and enhancing both astrophotography and landscape photos. I found it a powerful addition to my editing arsenal, and it was easy to use but could do some very sophisticated editing. This new version from photographer Angelo Perrone adds more than 80 new astrophotography and landscape functions, as well as some features to support portrait editing.

Recently, I stopped using the plug-in as it did not work with Apple Silicon Macs (it does work fine with Windows). Finally, and happily, the latest Astro Panel X Pro embraces the newest chips from Apple, and I did my testing on both a MacBook Pro with an M2 Max chip (12 cores and 32 GB unified memory) and a new Mac Studio with an M2 Max with 12‑core CPU, 38‑core GPU, 16‑core Neural Engine, and 96 GB of unified memory. 

Astro Panel Pro X requires Photoshop CC and is only compatible with Adobe Photoshop CC from 2021 to the current 2023 version and, as I said, it is compatible with the new Apple Mac M1/M2 processors and Windows.

Installation is a couple of clicks, and the suite of tools appears under the Photoshop plug-in menu, not the filter menu. 

What You Get

Included in the purchase are some e-books (How to Photograph the Night Sky, Landscape Photography, and a PDF Manual). Also included are raw files so you can follow along with the training and overlay files in JPEG and PNG of skies and night skies to use with your photos. Also included are 25,000 Lightroom presets and a good video tutorial available online with a provided link. Coming soon to buyers is a retouch and portrait tutorial. 

The package is $56 U.S., but prices tend to fluctuate as the author has sales and upgrades for users of older packages. 

Using Astro Panel Pro X

When you open the plug-in, you’ll see it’s divided into two sections, Astrophotography and Landscape. 

I started with some astrophotos I’ve taken recently, including the star cluster M13 I grabbed the other night.  

I’m mostly a deep sky photographer, so I concentrated on those tools. There are a lot of one-click options that are time-savers, like removing the green cast in photos caused by light pollution. There are methods to remove gradients, reduce bright star halos, reduce stars in nebula photos, and enhance star colors. I found the functions worked well, and happily, there was an undo menu and a redo menu. Many of the functions in AstroPanel Pro X create a new layer, leaving you with plenty of control. 

The app also includes some nice features for Milky Way processing, including removal of light pollution, enhancing color, and increasing sharpness. Star trails are covered as well, with the ability to increase star colors, increase sharpness, and remove distortion. 

On the landscape side, there’s a wide variety of tools, such as fixing white balance, sharpening, noise removal, increasing sharpness and contrast, shadow and highlight recovery, Orton and glow effects (I found these very nicely restrained but effective), dodge and burn tools, and tools to fix the geometry of panoramas. 

Of course, all these things can be accomplished on Photoshop or Lightroom, but the automation here is quite slick and time-saving. With many of the tools, you can control the amount of the change and undo when needed. Think of Astro Panel Pro X as a sort of sophisticated macro generator with sliders and controls that let you decide the amount of some of the effects.

Astro Panel X Pro offers luminosity masks, and tools like Forward and Back, the Quick White Mask, Curve Level and Tonal Values, White Brush, and Black Brush. Hue/Saturation and Color Balance have been optimized compared to the previous version.

With these tools used together, you get very complete control of lighting for landscape photography, and for some, these tools alone may justify a serious look at this package.

My View

Astro Panel Pro X has been significantly improved over previous versions. While, as I’ve said, some functions are one click, there is a learning curve when you get into luminosity masks and some of the other advanced functions, but if you take the time to watch the tutorials and go through the electronic manual, you’ll have a set of powerful tools you will use in every editing session. 

I found the app stable and crash-free, working on both the release version of Photoshop and the new beta. It also behaved well under the beta of macOS Sonoma 14.0.

I think the only thing I’d like to see are tool tips for each functions, as sometimes, the icons aren’t obvious in what they do.

At $56, I think Astro Panel Pro X is a bargain. Just the extensive guidebooks to night sky photography and landscape photography are worth that. 

If you are willing to dive into the documentation and use the many features, Astro Panel Pro X is a really good investment. It’s available for purchase at this website, where you’ll get more details on what it can do for your astro and earthbound images.