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You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Imaged at Entomology 2014 in Portland, OR.

 

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Focus stacked, Laowa 25mm 2.5-5x @ 5x @ f/5.6 + 1.4 Sigma teleconverter, Nikon D850 @ DX mode

I set up early for this sunset timelapse, when there wasn't much colour in the clouds. I had a feeling it might be a good sunset, but you never know for sure until it happens. Luckily my camera settings were still good once the sky exploded with colour. What a show!

This is 178 photos stacked into one image. I stacked the first 39 using the streaks present from this script, advancedstacker.com which fades in the photos, getting rid of harsh lines at the beginning of the cloud trails.

164 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop. After the waves got too big (see previous photo) I headed back to the car and got a better look at the storm clouds coming in. I could tell it was going to rain soon, but I couldn't resist getting a timelapse of the neat looking clouds before it did. (I'll upload a still from this timelapse next)

Fooling around in photoshop to create this image. I started with the background photo of Waimanalo on the island of Oahu in Hawaii taken from inside an old World War II pillbox above Makapu'u Beach Park. The photo of the plane was taken at the 2012 Kaneohe Bay Air Show and is of a U.S. Navy SNJ (AT-6). I brought the two photos together in photoshop to produce what you see above.

 

Post by Stephen Ball Photography.

 

Please don't use this image on websites, or other media without my explicit permission, blogs OK with notification and a link back, thanks! ©2014 Stephen Ball Photography, All rights reserved.

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

A photo stack from a timelapse I did of the milky way cruising across the sky. And on a side note, Spun is an awesome movie.

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

A time stack of the sunset made from 102 photos.

"A thermocline (sometimes metalimnion in lakes) is a thin but distinct layer in a large body of fluid (e.g. water, such as an ocean or lake, or air, such as an atmosphere) in which temperature changes more rapidly with depth than it does in the layers above or below."

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermocline

I was taught about this when learning to scuba dive. The strong warm/cool split of this image made me think of it. And then my mind wandered to how strange it is that I can dig up this tiny tidbit of information I heard years ago (and haven't thought much since then) but I can't remember where I put my keys two minutes ago, or the chords to that song I wrote the other day. I think our brains could use a less destructive encryption method and more hard drive space. Hurry up Science, my clock is ticking!

I made this image from 548 photos. I stacked the first 228 using the ultra streaks present in this script, advancedstacker.com and the last 320 photos were stacked "normally" with the lighten layer blending mode. (also automated with the advanced stacker script)

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

The individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

431 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop. This image represents about 4 hours of time. I was hoping to capture a good Milky Way timelapse this night. The galaxy wasn't as bright as I would have liked it to be, but it was a good timelapse none the less.

Once the colours of the sunset died down (earlier than I had hoped) I changed my camera setting in hopes of catching some light trails from the highway traffic. Unfortunately the wind picked up enough to shake my camera a little, so the city lights are a little messy (though it does make them easier to see in the photo) That could also be the reason for the wavy light trails. I did a bunch of work patching the holes in the lines, where the camera stopped for a second to record the image before taking the next shot.

I like this version better (see previous photo) because it's more interesting, and the colours are a nice match between ground and sky.

Another digitally mirrored photo stack. Because I can't stop.

A field full of fireflies. This year seemed like a good year for them, but I suspect that it may just be that I was paying more attention.

I made this time stack by combining 750 photos into one image.

518 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop, automated with this script advancedstacker.com

I also faded in the first and last 19 photos with 5% increments of the layer opacity.

I spent a lot of time cleaning up this photo, which I'll show you an example of next, so I wanted to make the most of it, because I wasn't very excited about the composition. So I got a little crazy in photoshop. I'll be posting that one soon too.

My first attempt at photo stacking the moon.

 

Shot with Nikon Z 7, Tamron 150-600mm G2. Processed with Lightroom, PiPP, AutoStakkert!3, and Registax.

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Please download and use these open source images for your own purposes. If you do, please reference Macroscopic Solutions.

 

Photography information: All of the images in this database were captured with the Macropod.

 

The Macropod is a rigid, portable photomacrography system, which allows the user to make razor sharp, fully focused photographs of small sized specimens at 18 to 26-megapixel resolution. It overcomes the extreme Depth of Field (DOF) limitations inherent in optics designed to image smaller specimens. Normally, lenses designed for macro will only render a very small fraction of the depth of targeted specimen in sharp focus at any one exposure. The Macropod allows the user to select and make multiple exposures in precise increments along the Z-axis (depth) such that each exposure’s area of sharp focus overlaps with the previous and next exposure. These source images are then transferred to a computer and merged by an image-stacking program. Zerene Stacker is used to find and stitch together only the focused pixels from each exposure into one image. The Macropod integrates industry-leading components in a novel and elegant way to achieve these results.

 

Contact information:

Dan Saftner

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

724 825 9426

 

Mark Smith

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

410 258 6144

 

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You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Gas station fireworks in the backyard. 9 photos stacked, cropped and mirrored.

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

253 photos merged into one image. I made this from I timelapse I shot back in June of 2012. A lot of the lines in the sky are from contrails (made by airplanes) drifting by.

10 Frames of Noisy, Light Polluted hell - Stacked Haphazardly

You Can See Ion Stream

311 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop. It seems my camera was having trouble recording the photos every 4 seconds, as you can see in the "glitches" or better yet, the voids in the lines. I'm guessing that's due to the speed that my camera can write to the SD card. I shot over 1000 photos in this timelapse, all in RAW at the largest size possible. This stack was made from a selection of photos near the end of the timelapse. I should look into this, because in some cases it really takes away from a good time stack.

Fun with cicadas. Found this dead one on my patio. At first I thought it was resting because of the heat today. But when I poked it, it didn't move. This is a 5 image photo stack to get most of it in focus.

  

I made this from a timelapse I shot last night. Last time I forgot my lens heater and the lens froze over pretty quickly. This time I forgot fresh batteries, and they died after 2 hours of shooting. I'm hoping it will be clear skies again tonight.

Myself, a tuk tuk, and the madness of Khao San road. (Which is a popular tourist destination in Bangkok that's full of bars, restaurants and various shops. It's almost always crowded, and there’s people partying every night of the week)

I made this image by stacking 45 photos, then cutting myself and the tuk tuk out and throwing them back on top. (because some parts were "erased" during stacking, since the tuk tuk and myself moved during the timlepase)

I wanted to make a looping gif from this timelapse, to post on my tumblr page, but I couldn't optimize it enough to make it under 2mb, without it looking absolutely terrible, but I did make a looping video for my FB cover photo, which you can see here... www.facebook.com/MattMolloysBeautifulNoise/

Oh look, it's the view from my backyard for the millionth time. Not my best time stack, but not my worst either. I've got a few good ones to post soon. Stay tuned! 173 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop.

Instead of keeping the title "Insert Clever Title Here" I went with Shannons suggestion.

230 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop. Some interesting shapes and patterns created by contrails and clouds moving in different directions.

You can download or view Macroscopic Solutions’ images in more detail by selecting any image and clicking the downward facing arrow in the lower-right corner of the image display screen.

 

Three individuals of Macroscopic Solutions, LLC captured the images in this database collaboratively.

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Daniel Saftner B.S. Geoscientist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer

daniel@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Version 2. Cropped a little more and mirrored 3 times. (the previous one was mirrored once, horizontally)

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

A photo stack from a timelapse I shot of the sun setting over some train tracks. I wish I could fasten my camera to the front of one of these trains and do a timelapse from the trains perspective. I'll have to see if I can find out who to ask about that sort of thing. Maybe VIA rail could use it for a commercial, as they seem to be advertising a lot more lately.

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