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The spider (and it's shadow) in the enlarged inset image is also visible in the center of the larger image, if you look carefully.
A Rethink Autism therapist teaching the Motor lesson 'Imitating Gross Motor Movements.' The child is following the therapist and touching her nose.
Rethink Autism offers web-based educational treatment solutions: assessment, training, curriculum & data tracking.
This image came from my old Nikon D50 DSLR, with a low-end Nikon 70-300mm f/4-5.6 "G" lens mounted. The lens was at 300mm and wide open (f/5.6). I had the D50 at ISO800 under the cloudy sky to freeze squirrely motion. Exposure comp. was at +1 to get some detail in the shadows without blowing out the sky too much.
In the next image in my photostream, you can see that the as-shot image is terrible, with tons of chromatic aberration, too-dark shadows (despite a +1 exposure comp), soft details and quite a bit of noise.
Here you can see what a difference some post-processing can make with a poor image.
There is no built-in lens profile in Lightroom 5.4 for this lens, and I no longer own the lens. So the chromatic abberation correction settings were done manually, with a little vignetting reduction, too. I made no attempt to correct for other lens reality distortions. I wonder if a proper lens profile would have helped to further reduce the remaining chromatic aberration seen here. I maxed out the CA settings in Lightroom, including an eyedropper selection of the proper color ranges to confine the efforts to.
This is a single-frame, unstacked image, taken with an inexpensive 10X "finite" microscope objective lens.
Depth of field is only about 11 microns, which is .00043 inches. Yikes. Stacked images made with this lens require the subject to be precisely moved between frames in increments of less than a half-thousandth of an inch!
Another three-shot HDR.
I found this little scene as-is (almost). All I did was move one leaf that was covering the head of the shell.
Orange County Premiere of RECOVERED Journeys Through the Autism Spectrum and Back, A documentary by Dr. Doreen Granpeesheh and Michele Jaquis, at Chapman University, Orange, CA on September 27, 2008. Sponsored by the Assistance Leagues of Newport-Mesa and Orange in conjunction with ACT-Today!. Photo By David Bro/FiveBlocks News Group.