View allAll Photos Tagged stacking
Wheat Stacks.
No better place to relax,
than just a wheat field,
with stacks of wheat.
The smells,
the hard work,
still turning in the air.
A place all people should come to know,
and love,
it may not be the romance of some exotic beach,
tucked away on a far away private island,
its some where close by,
go and learn the beauty,
of a near by wheat field with,
(Wheat Stacks).
Steve.D.Hammond.
An eastbound stack train meets a westbound empty unit oil train along the busy Pittsburgh Line near Irwin, PA.
This is another stack of images. This time I chose to shoot it at ISO 3200 and stacked 27 images together. There is no post noise removal. I am very impressed. This trumped the long exposure at ISO 400 where I was getting overexposure in the building and not enough in the roof. Using High ISO and lots of stacks resulted in this very clean image.
I combined all of these using photoshop and median filters to stack the images. I'm way happier with this image over my harbour image.
This is my first attempt with my new Tamron 90MM Macro lens and a series of 11 photos focus stacked.
Strobist 1 SB910 handheld camera left at manual power 1/64 fired by a pocket wizard.
Three GEs from both BNSF and NS lead a stack train as it races westward on the BNSF Transcon. Williamsfield IL 5/21/16
This time I tried a different aperture, following advice from my boss at work. I have also stacked 7 shots of about 30 minutes each.
Trying to eliminate the 'shake' I got on all but the first shot last time, I paused for around 15 seconds between shots this time. No shake, but there is a gap.
Anyway, I'll take photos of other stuff while the full moon takes the stage.
Tried a few times to get the toes to line up like this - and I finally got it yesterday! Loved working with this almost 9lb baby girl. I absolutely love chubby newborns!!! They are so cute!
Run out of ideas on the beach waiting for it to go dark, then I noticed an abundance of pebbles lying around! I couldn't resist getting all arty farty and stacking them. I took this shot in Criccieth on the Llŷn Peninsula.
It's not a HDR image, I was on my stomach waving my torch around to light the scene up! Not usually my style of photography, but I'm trying to mix things up a bit now. Please be honest with your feedback! I need to hear what I could have done better etc.
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Tiger roll buttered then toasted, 2 patty's, 2 slices of cheese, pickle, 3 onion rings, chicken breast, ketchup, sliced chilli peppers, shredded lettuce and finely chopped onion.
An old Stack of a weevil on my kitchen table , previously unused as I was never sure if I liked the image or not.
Captured with the EOS 7D and the MPE65 , stacked using Zerene stacker 64bit
I stacked these myself! I know it looks simple haha but for some reason I lose myself in it when I balance rocks. I hope it only took me a few minutes but I might have been there for half an hour and not noticed the time pass!
I just love this quilt... it's made from my favourite line of fabrics, Moda 1974, and I got the scraps from Dana of Old Barn Co. I was inspired by a quilt Tula Pink made, and I named it Stacked because my husband thought they look like tall stacks of books :)
This is a composite image containing three different stages in a stacked, non-tracked astrophoto.
On the left is one image (of 21 shots total) taken with the EOS 50D, 200mm, ƒ/2.8, ISO 12800, 1 second exposure, from a fixed tripod. You can see, especially in the original size version, that this is an extremely noisy photograph.
In the center is the result obtained by stacking all 21 shots; the stacking process has produced an average of all 21 shots; this averages the noise out, because noise is random, while actual image features average out to the proper brightness they actually should be.
There's a little more to the process; as the 21 photos were taken, the earth spun underneath the night sky, so the images aren't exactly the same.
As part of the stacking process, a star at one corner is chosen and each frame is aligned so that star overlays the same star in the other frames. Technically, this is a "translation", or linear XY movement of each frame.
Once that is done, another star at the opposite corner is chosen, and each frame is precision rotated until that star, too, overlays perfectly for all frames. At this point, every feature in every frame is perfectly aligned.
In the third frame, at the right, you can see the results after the reddish background has been balanced out to black, and some amplification has been applied to the lowest light levels (bringing up the shadow detail.)
I use my own commercial software, WinImages, for all my stacking work; I built in all the tools needed to go from a set of JPEG images as seen on the left, to the final result you see here at the right.
I'm constantly working on this area of the software, so if you're using WinImages for astro work, please stay in touch with me and I'll see to it that you're up to date with the latest beta astro features, at no charge, of course.
Stacking is a wonderful technique that trades a little effort on the photographer's part (mainly working in software) for the opportunity to use standard photographic equipment to shoot photos that would otherwise involve special investments of hundreds or even thousands of dollars for tracking mounts. It is a fabulous way to get started in astrophotography, providing an opportunity to shoot deep space objects and get a feel for what is out there.
I'm using some already-stacked fabrics for these, so this part went very quickly! I usually make stars with the four sets of eight stacked diamonds, but this time, I'm going to do the zig-zag.
103 stacked images of Iris Japonica. The lighting is natural window light.
I've been very impressed with the images John Hallmen produces using the Zerene Stacker software, so I decided to try it out. This is my 5th composite image and one that I'm very happy with. This is one of my favourite flowers and when it came into bloom this week, I had to use it as my subject .
I don't have the marvellous gear that John has but my Tamron macro lens has done ok with this one.
This is done using the Pmax method. There is a bit of halo-ing in places, but in all, it's a good image.
I hope you like it, thanks for looking.
To see the best that this program can do, check out John's stream & his images www.flickr.com/photos/johnhallmen/