View allAll Photos Tagged focusstacking
Materials from a school project in Evesham. Photos taken by students through the town and along the river were merged using the Focus Stacking tools in Photoshop. They were then printed out for use in a giant collage.
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.
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
This species has an unbelievably huge range from Arizona to Maine to Alaska. However, like most orchids it is still fairly selective regarding habitat and not really common or abundant in most places.
Seen in G. R. Thompson Wildlife Management Area, Virginia. Focus stack of 15 photos.
Macro shot of a found and mounted hoverfly (?). 23 images shot with Canon 50D and MP-E 65mm at 3x using 0.12mm steps with a Cognisys StackShot and stacked in Zerene Stacker DMap+PMax. Lit with MT-24EX @ 1/16 with diffusion gels.
Side view of a Henbit (Lamium amplexicaule) flower. 51 images taken with 50D and MP-E 65mm at 5x using 0.06mm steps with a Cognisys StackShot and stacked in Zerene Stacker DMap + PMax. Lit with MT-24EX @ 1/16 with diffusion gels.
This is a focus stack (13 images) of what I think is some sort of coral fungus. Anyone know what it is exactly? It was in a woodland on a felled Beech tree. The width of the image is about 5cm. Have a look at the other photos in the set for the more general views.
Update: 15-9-10. Thanks to Malcolm Storey from my local Natural History Society in Reading I now know that the fungus is a Coral Tooth (Hericium coralloides). Thanks Malcolm.
3-D Cross-eye stereogram
Orchid on my windowsill, each pic focus stacked from 4 pics.
Came out just in time for Christmas :)
Compare this focus stacked 2 megapixel image with this gigapan made up of 352 images, each a focus stack of 18 megapixel images.
Also look at this gigapan of a one euro coin:
It looks like the Microscope optics don't provide 18 megapixels of information, at all. This image was made by taking a video while moving the focus knob through the complete range of focus, and then splitting the individual frames out of the video and using focus stacking software to focus stack the resulting frames.
Male common darter dragonfly closeup. Focus stacked from 2 pics
see www.flickr.com/photos/lordv/182290064/ for a crop from this shot