View allAll Photos Tagged photostack
This my 1st photo stack shot of the moon. Taken from my backyard, it's a stack of 5 exposures, followed by a little post processing.
There were some of these out in the open last week but dogs / deer smashed them all by the weekend. There were some pristine ones today in the Native Wood part of the Waterhouse Gardens. (Photostack).
In the base only 1 long exposure. Partly stacked with 15 photos for the mill, because it was very slow rotating. Shot at river Oude IJssel in the Netherlands.
Taken with the Tamron (G1) 24-70 F2.8. No ND filters.
Star trails over my house 19/04/2015
143 images over 52 mins
Camera - Canon 600D with 18-55mm lens
ISO- 3200
Aperture- f/4.0
Exposure time - 20s per frame
Stacked in Photoshop
Polaris is situated just above my neighbours house. Using the houses gives me a good focal point for taking these exposures
Naomi Ring. This photograph was taken using the photostacking technique so that all of the ring is sharp perfectly in focus throughout.
I shot a series of five frames with my 105 mm macro lens, racking the focus from near to far. Then I stacked them in Photoshop and saved three versions of the resulting stack ranging from two stops over exposed to two stops under. The resulting three images were then combined in Photomatix 4.2.4 and this is the version that I saved. The lobster died shortly after these images were shot and he was quite yummy.
Venus Flytrap flower. I didn't even know Venus Flytraps had flowers. This is photostacked, and very small - about 1/4 inch (6mm) across. Shot on a full frame camera with 100mm lens at closest focusing (which is beyond macro, at 1.4x magnification), and cropped a tiny bit. 117 images used for the photostack. I used Photoshop Generative AI to fix most of the photostacking artifacts, but, this is exactly what the little flower looks like.
Jewellery for John Macintyre & Son. This photograph was taken using the photostacking technique so that all of the ring is sharp perfectly in focus throughout.