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General Photography
Focus stacking
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<blockquote data-quote="STM" data-source="post: 735949" data-attributes="member: 12827"><p>I used to use the Focus Stacking routine in Photoshop but wound up having to do a lot of touch up with it afterwards. Some subjects, where there were a lot of images with very fine detail it would not do at all. I switched to Zerene Focus Stacker and have had to do very little if any work afterwards. It is a bit on the pricy side, but if you do a lot of focus stacking like I do, it is definitely worth the money. This image of a Carpenter Bee required 50 images to be focus stacked so I could get her entire body and wings in sharp focus. I used a 55mm f/2.8 AIS Micro Nikkor on a PB-6 bellows at f/8 and the depth of field was about as thick as a piece of paper. </p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]339730[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="STM, post: 735949, member: 12827"] I used to use the Focus Stacking routine in Photoshop but wound up having to do a lot of touch up with it afterwards. Some subjects, where there were a lot of images with very fine detail it would not do at all. I switched to Zerene Focus Stacker and have had to do very little if any work afterwards. It is a bit on the pricy side, but if you do a lot of focus stacking like I do, it is definitely worth the money. This image of a Carpenter Bee required 50 images to be focus stacked so I could get her entire body and wings in sharp focus. I used a 55mm f/2.8 AIS Micro Nikkor on a PB-6 bellows at f/8 and the depth of field was about as thick as a piece of paper. [ATTACH=CONFIG]339730._xfImport[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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