View allAll Photos Tagged focusstacking
© emef 2018
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All rights reserved except those specifically granted herein. Contact "emef" at emef@skynet.be to inquire any reproduction of this image
Testade att focusstacka 54 foton av ett blad jag hittade i trädgården. Använda iPad för hela arbetsflödet, från fotandet med kameran till import och focusstackning med Affinity Photo2 och slutgiltig finish med Lightroom. Några omården på bladen tycker jag inte blev helt bra. Lite osäker på om det var att bladet rörde sig (vilket det kanske gjorde) eller om det var programvaran som inte riktigt lyckades stacka ordentligt. XCD28P ihop med 10x diopter filter. Möjligen lite oskarphet med det extrema filtret. Hade ca 6-8 cm att spela med framför filtret. Skärpedjupet var inte stort med denna kombinationen. Alla foton med f8 och 2s exponering med ISO50. Slutbilden är beskuren för att ta bort lite tomt utrymme och jag drog på med lite extra effekter som textur, clarity och dis för att lövet och bordskivan skulle få liknande textur och färg. Jag är impad över hur iPad lyckades ta sig igenom 54 foton i storlek omkring 200 MB utan att hicka en ända gång. Och så lyssnade jag på countrymusik medan jag gjorde detta så färgtonen kommer nog med viss inspiration.
I am using a Nikon 10x objective on a Raynox DCR-150 "tube lens" to achieve 10:1 magnification. This setup has an image circle that covers a full frame sensor.
Another stacked image, 13 this time. The bellows was set at it's full extension of 175mm giving a field of view of about 5mm. I used align_image_stack to align the images, then tufuse to stack them.
Shot outside in ambient light, hade some problem with the flowers moving in the wind. Focus stacking with Helicon focus.
Uncropped shot . Pic is focus stacked from 2 pics. This shot www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/74058941/ was cropped from it.
A delightful little visitor to the side of our camper van in southern France, this is about 7mm of Buffalo Treehopper (Stictocephala bisonia), I believe. The pronotum is extended backwards forming a fearsome-looking thorn. An opportunity for an in-camera focus stack on a macro lens.
The petals on this Lilly that has not even finished opening up are translucent in this close up. Focus Stack.
Focus stack merge of 22 images. Processed in Helicon Focus and Nik Color Efex Pro 4 (Pro Contrast, Tonal Contrast, and Detail Extractor).
This little creature wanted to bite me. I got angry with it and acted accordingly. Because of that it became an excellent subject för a focus stacking session :)
30/01/2017 Female Hazel flower (focus stacked image) unlike the male Hazel catkins the female flowers are miniscule, with the flower itself at 1mm or so.
The macro capabilities of the Olympus TG-5 are amazing! There is a setting called "focus stacking" which takes several closeups with varying focal length and then very quickly merges them. The result is a super depth of field, as shown here.
This is one of the two images on which I was working when my PC got fried. It was a pleasure (in more ways than one) to finish it off on my new desktop.
Focus stacked from 2 shots- taken at 1.5:1 spider body about 3.8mm long
See www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/100806778/
for a 3-D version
Not sure what this inch-long bug was - didn't really matter because actually, I found it on my patio, lifeless. SO - great captive non-moving subject to try out a little focus-stacking. 11 images at F8 focus-stacked, shot with Canon 100 F2.8L IS macro with two extension tubes.