View allAll Photos Tagged photostack

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 while attending NEGSA in New Hampshire

 

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

 

Broken Mirrors and Screaming Turtles

By Up Dharma Down

On Narrabeen Lake, a Crane lunches from its watery perch into flight. There is, infact, only a single bird, photographed twice, with the two photos stitched together to form a panoramic view of the sequence. This was captured with my Nikon D7100 using an F5.6 300mm Telephoto lens.

photostacking. 2 in 1

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

 

The white fuzzy stuff in the center of a dandelion. With polen or seeds

it is especially hard to photograph the Milky Way here as the Galactic Center never rises above 19 degrees. The weather was not perfect (humid, low clouds) but with stacking of 55 overexposed shots (5 sec exposure, F/1.8, ISO 1000) and heavy post-processing I finally managed to get some details.

Photostack of two fireworks across the street.

This wasp was found dead and both antennas are missing.

 

This photo is based on 16 stacked images captured using a microrail with 200um step-size. Lens: AF Micro-Nikkor 60mm f/2.8D and 104mm extender rings. Nikon D800 settings: fully manual: 1/200 sec @ f/16, ISO 100. Flash SB900 at 1/8 power.

The raw images are first converted to Tiff (Lightroom CC) and stacked using Zerene Stacker. Post-processed: Photoshop CC and Lightroom CC.

 

Bulbophyllum taiwanense is a cute miniature orchid with flowers that are about 1 cm.

  

#Bulbophyllumtaiwanense #Bulbophyllum #taiwanense #orchid #orchidaceae #miniature #miniatureorchid #botany #CU #CUGreenhouse #UniversityofColorado #flower #inflorescence #macro #photostack #photostacking #macroflower #macrophotography

 

Diese beiden Pilze stehen noch – alle anderen im Umkreis sind bereits umgefallen. Vielleicht hat der viele Regen die Stiele erweicht oder ein Besucher (Schnecken, Wild, Menschen) haben die Pilze heimgesucht. Die Aufnahme entstand im Haslimoos aus 20 Einzelbildern ab Stativ, die mit Helicon Focus zusammengeführt habe. Erst bei der Bearbeitung sahr, wie viele winzige Fliegen auf den Helmlingen (?) unterwegs sind.

 

These two mushrooms are still standing – all the others in the vicinity have already fallen over. Perhaps the heavy rain has softened the stems, or a visitor (snails, deer, humans) has invaded the mushrooms. This photo was taken in Haslimoos from 20 individual images taken on a tripod, which I combined with Helicon Focus. Only during processing did I notice how many tiny flies were on the helminths (?).

Sony A99

Tamron 180mm @ 2.0x

1sec exposure @ f8 ISO 100

Wemacro rail 800 exposures @ 75um increments

Helicon Focus Stacking (Method C)

About 250 photos of the sun setting, all merged into one image. I can't get enough of this photo stacking technique.

Comet C/2014 Q2 Lovejoy, taken at McDermott Court at MIT.

Camera settings: 50mm F/1.4 lens @ F/2.2, 2 sec. per frame, 641 frames, ISO 1250. Stacked with 98 dark, 30 flat, 64 dark flat, and 100 offset frames subtracted.

Stacking settings: comet stacking, average mode, center ~40% cropped, 2x drizzle.

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

 

Sensor part of the FreeStyle Libre blood glucose monitoring system. This dedicated sensor is integrated on the main board inside the monitoring system. 42 photos are stacked using Zerene Stacker. The full width of the photo is approx. 15mm.

 

Camera: Nikon D850, ISO 64. Lens: AF Micro-Nikkor 60mm f/2.8D @ f/11 + 68mm Kenko extension tubes. Manual controlled microrail @ step-size 200um. Natural light.

Imaged while attending NEGSA in New Hampshire

 

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

 

Photo Stacking.

 

Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre, Sydney Olympic Park, NSW, Australia.

 

Please Keep Comments Respectable.

Star trails over Monterey, California.

Bracketed images created using Olympus photo bracketing/stacking. Raw files processed in Lr Classic then stacked in Photoshop.

 

© Web-Betty: digital heart, analog soul

Imaged while attending NEGSA in New Hampshire

 

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

 

Curious after seeing images of macro

photostacking,with Helicon gave this a try with my Cruella figurine and added Lucky

this is i guess 13 inches (20cm) long

and as you can see the DOF Sharp all the way down

Great result ,took 4 pics for this

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

 

Panasonic DMC-FZ50 + reversed Helios 44-2 f/2 58mm, photostacking

4 shots of the thistle and stacked in photoshop. Was quite a tough day for stacking photo's as it was quite breezy

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 see under a microscope only a very tiny bit is in focus at one time.

But I shot 58 pictures of this eye. The Zerene Stacker software then combines all the images to create one image. I cannot too many great things about the software, stop what your doing and go buy the software. It will open a whole new world of photography.

70 photos of the sun setting, merged into one image. I tried a few different versions of this one. First starting with all 230 photos from the timelapse, eventually trimming down to 70.

Some of my mother's things.

 

Created this image from over 20 separate images as part of an assignment to learn photo stacking for a class.

 

Created this image from over 20 separate images with different focal points to create a single image with multiple parts in clear focus. It was part of an assignment to learn photo stacking for a class.

 

This image needed to be done by hand to correct the area of the dish in the foreground that got missed. Learning curve...

 

April 3, 2022.

 

IMG_6395 split toning

Photostack 81 pics-Pmax & Dmap-April 14th 2013-Italy-Friulu (PN)-Loc. Cimolais 800 mt.-05-VII-2009

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