View allAll Photos Tagged photostack
We are out playing in the yard today, thought I'd take a shot (pun intended) at photo stacking. I took the same shot 12 times here as he ran across the driveway, then stacked them in Photoshop afterwards. Fun stuff!
I like to take photos at sporting events, but I wanted to try something different with my photos... see if I could use multiple photos to illustrate motion.
First attempt. More to come.
First time trying star trails, the moon was bright just up to the left so did reduce the stars i could capture, This is 96 images stacked in Photoshop with aircraft lights removed. Light pollution from Louth just in the bottom of the image.
71 pics photostack - Pmax - December 9th 2013.Italy - Veneto (TV) Revine Lago. 280 mt - Loc. Taiada - 13/25 - IV - 2012.
Another couple of first attempt at macro photography images, this time a spider (as if you couldn't guess).
The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes
Photostack 86 tomas tomadas con Nikon Plan 4 x 0,13 con flash Nikon SB 900 difuminado con un embudo blanco para formar dos mitades montadas en Ps photomerge para formar una sola, cielo desenfocado como fondo superpuesto, por una vez, un poco de montaje, en un par de días lo mejoro
The streak of light in the middle are several arrivals into San Francisco International Airport taken with approx. 20 different photos all stacked together.
A series of photos showing flower development from bud to seed case. Melaleuca, possibly M. decussata, a shrub in my garden, Geelong. The flowers are about 2 cms long.
This is the first of 17 identical images I took from a tripod for an image stacking test. It was actually more like 25 images, but I removed the ones from the beginning and end where the tripod setup was shaking a bit from me starting and stopping the photo taking. I went very carefully through the shots to find the ones that were to-the-pixel lined up with one another, which turned out to be 17 smack in the middle.
To get the 17 identical shots, I set my camera to multishot mode, the icon for which looks like several stacked sheets of paper. This mode lets you hold the shutter button down to take shots as fast as the camera can keep up. I wrapped a rubber band twice around the camera and shutter button, and then stuck a small toy Pixelblock in between the rubber band and shutter button. This was enough to hold the button firmly down. I let go, and remained motionless for awhile as the camera slowly snapped off about 25 7.1MP images of this pumpkin.
More in the next image...
Star trails over Chopwell 23.04.15
106 images over 36 mins
Camera - Canon 600D with 18-55mm lens
ISO- 3200
Aperture- f/5.0
Exposure time - 20s per frame
Stacked in Photoshop