View allAll Photos Tagged photostack

I posted one of these pictures a couple of weeks back but at the time didn't have the right kit with me. So here it is again - fruiting bodies of the slime mould Arcyria ferruginea (I think). Quite widespread but great to catch it fruiting. The fruits with stalks are about 5mm.

511 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop, automated with this script advancedstacker.com. Here's a single frame from the timelapse if you're interested. www.flickr.com/photos/matt_molloy/15132695374/

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.

 

www.macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Contact information:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist

mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

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

annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

A stack of a few photos to make a long exposure look.

An experiment with photo stacking.

Aristolochia anguicida's native range extends from Mexico to Venezuela. Tom at the greenhouse says it looks like a mosquito. I (of course) think it looks like a Nepenthes.

 

#Aristolochia_anguicida #Aristolochia #anguicida #macro #photostack #CUgreenhouse #macroflower

Wahkeena falls flow down in this beautiful stream.

HDR of the stream created using 3 different exposures.

Clicked using Canon EF-S 10-18mm

Using the lighten layer-blending mode just made the blades of the windmills disappear, so this is 346 photos merged into one using the darken layer-blending mode in photoshop, automated with the script from advancedstacker.com

Started out playing with photo stacking 6 images in PS, then had to play some more. Cheers!

If you like this photograph as well as some of my other images, I invite you to take a look at my wildlife/birding page, which I try to update every few days, at grenfell.weebly.com and my web page at www.tekfx.ca

 

As always I am delighted and most appreciative of your your feedback and comments! so feel free to contact me for any reason. I can be reached at billm@tekfx.ca or on Flickrmail

 

All images are copyright. Please don't use this, or any other of my, images, on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission © All rights reserved and my web page at www.tekfx.ca

While I was shooting a timelapse of the sunset over the Saint Lawrence River in Notre-Dame-Du-Portage, a few different people told me that it was the second best place in the world for sunsets, next to Hawaii. The sunset didn't disappoint.

This is 131 photos merged into one image using the lighten layer-blending mode in photoshop, automated with this script advancedstacker.com

Tamron 70-300mm + Helios 44M

Illuminated with: macroscopicsolutions.com/store/product-category/imaging-p...

 

More information: www.macroscopicsolutions.com

 

MORE INFORMATION

 

Images in this gallery were captured by:

 

Mark Smith M.S. Geoscientist mark@macroscopicsolutions.com

 

Annette Evans Ph.D. Student at the University of Connecticut annette@macroscopicsolutions.com

Macro Photostack of 19 images.

 

Taken Jan 2015

  

Prints and Canvases

Twitter | Instagram

 

Following the footsteps of René Magritte, the surrealsit Belgium painter.

In 1929 he wrote under his painting of a pipe: "Ceci n'est pas une pipe", French for "This is not a pipe".

 

"The famous pipe. How people reproached me for it! And yet, could you stuff my pipe? No, it's just a representation, is it not? So if I had written on my picture "This is a pipe", I'd have been lying!"

René Magritte

 

This is not a wrinkly peppery.

It is not a wrinkly peppery you see.

But wrinkly peppery rhymes with three.

So this tuesday I'll go crazy

And this wil be my ent(e)ry.

A red wrinkly peppery.

Which it's not.

As you can see.

  

Crazy tuesday

Rhymes with three

Merry Christmas - 191 of 215 - trying a bit of photo stacking :-) Seasonal Greetings to all my Flickr friends - may you all have health and happiness xxx

Preparing for the first close-up photography day this Saturday - thought I had better run through the techniques. This is a 6 image stack of some locusts.

I've done a lot of these star trail photos of this barn. I'm still trying to get that "perfect shot" of this scene at night. I like this one, but it's not my favorite, so Ill keep trying.

I made this time stack by combining 425 photos into one image.

Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, CA

 

This place is really amazing. Several arches to explore and shoot, alot of boulders and rocks to hike around and climb on, and all while overlooking the Sierra Nevada Mountains and Mt. Whitney.

 

While setting up to shoot at Mobius Arch on my first evening another photographer showed up. We started talking and he mentioned a couple of other arches down the road (I had no idea they existed). We ended up shooting at both places that evening. I stayed an extra night to shoot the Milkyway at the wee hours of the morning (I was stationed at 3:00 am shooting). I ended up shooting with 2 other photographers. We had a blast shooting and light painting and cracking jokes till the sun rose that morning.

 

This shot is my first I've edited. This is Boot Arch. This shot is a stacked edit composed of stacking 10 shots of the same scene, letting Photoshop do it's stack editing process (reduce grain and add clarity to the shot). I compared 1 of the original shots to the stacked and it does make a difference. I'm still learning the process of stacking while shooting and processing, but definitely see the fun and benefit of it.

 

I have more of this Arch I'll be editing... so check back for other shots through the early hours to sunrise of this location...

 

Visit my Print Store @ wizumprints.com

 

Visit my Website @ WSM photography

 

© 2022 Walker Scott Moore - All rights reserved

There were some interesting clouds in the sky right before this sunset, but unfortunately most of them didn't catch the last rays of light, only some of them along the horizon caught some colour before it was all over. Still, they made for an interesting time-stack image.

I made this one with 290 photos.

30 Image Stack of Orchid Bloom.

Canon 6D 85mm + 36mm extension tube

1/10 sec; f/8; ISO 200

Tulelake National Wildlife Refuge December, 2020

396 photos merged into one image using the lighten blending mode in photoshop. I think this one pretty much covers the colour spectrum of sunsets, lacking only the darker reds. I can't get enough of this technique!

A damning indictment on the cleanliness of my cooker hob, but nevertheless provided the speckled object I needed for this week’s Macro Monday theme. A 9-image stack, blended in Photoshop, natural light. HMM!

Christella dentata. I find the unfurling of a new frond magical.

 

#Christelladentata #Christella #dentata #fern #frond #fernfrond #unfurling #macro #photostack #macrophotograph #CUgreenhouse

www.thomastrenz.net | #ThomasTrenz | © Thomas TRENZ

1 2 4 6 7 ••• 79 80