View allAll Photos Tagged photostack
Photostack 91 pics - Dmap & Pmax - March 12th 2013 - France - Drome - Leoncel 5-VI-2012 - Coll Mariani Seregno
A series of photo showing flower development in Darwinia citriodora Lemon-scented Myrtle, in my garden, Geelong. Tiny caterpillar oresent.
Photostack 65 picks Dmap & Pmax - February 13th & 14th 2013 - Czech Republic - Bohemian Mer - Pisek VII-2012
Sticky Boobialla Myoporum petiolatum, a series showing flower development from bud. Grows in my garden but grows naturally in Victoria and South AUstralia. Stacked images.
Photostack 91 pics-Dmap & Pmax - March 17th 2013 - China - Jiahexiane, Xinbin, County Liaoning - VI-2006
As I am mostly a bird photographer, a miserable rainy day gave me a chance to get out the new Macro 100mm f2.8 L IS USM lens that i bought 3 weeks ago.
In the lounge room, I set up a small lamp table close to a north facing window, plonked an empty vase on it, hung a dark blue towel over a clothes horse for the background, and then shot off to the shops to get some flowers.
Macro photography is a newish discipline for me and I'd recently seen an article on the Web that described the method of photo stacking.
As we all know, when using a macro lens, the focal point can have a depth of field of a couple of millimetres. By using photomerge in Photoshop, 5 or 6 photos of different focus points can be layered together to increase the DoF.
To do so, you must use manual focus and slightly adjust the focus for each shot. I focused on the closest point and then moved the focus backwards each time i took a shot.
Photostack 71 pics - Dmap & Pmax - February 18th 2013 - Czech Republic - Bohemia Harachov - VIII-1978
Date: 29 Jan 2011
Time: 11:54am
Location: Wilson's Outlook, New Farm, Brisbane
Went to Wilson's Outlook to do a quick proof-of-concept. I wanted to learn the effect of using a Cokin ND Grad filter upside down when shooting cityscapes, and whether or not any stars would be visible as a result.
This is an 'Image Statistics' photo stack consisting of 14 photos.
A series of photo showing flower development in Darwinia citriodora Lemon-scented Myrtle, in my garden, Geelong.
Running crab spider. Approx. 10x magnification (lens: Olympus SPLAN 10 0.30 f=180) and 160mm extension tubes.
202 images stacked using Zerene Stacker. The images are sequential captured using a manual controlled micro rail with a step-size of 10µm each. Camera: D800 ISO 100 1/160 sec, Flash: SB900 1/64 power, Flash controller: Yongnuo YN-622.