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Post by rasbury on Sept 23, 2012 14:47:38 GMT
A photo from yesterday of the morning glory vines that are growing on the front fence. f/4.2@1/100 sec,ISO 200,7 stack image Have a few of the Echinecea that I will post later(it has become my practice plant for focus stacking)
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Post by jeeperman on Sept 23, 2012 18:28:32 GMT
I like the color combo here Ron. I find the blurred area of the stem looks to be sinking into green water fairly interesting as well.
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Post by nickjohnson on Sept 23, 2012 18:57:14 GMT
Hello Ron, Very nice – like the colour combo. Any chance of a little bit of detail in the light part at the centre of each flower?
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Post by chrisc on Sept 23, 2012 19:15:32 GMT
I've wondered about something and perhaps you or Miestermacro boy can answer: When doing a stack, and part of the image is recessed as in your flower, do you maintain the same linear plane across the image, or make the dip into the recession as needed to stay in focus?
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Post by rasbury on Sept 23, 2012 20:37:50 GMT
I've wondered about something and perhaps you or Miestermacro boy can answer: When doing a stack, and part of the image is recessed as in your flower, do you maintain the same linear plane across the image, or make the dip into the recession as needed to stay in focus?
Can't really say that I'm an expert at this focus stacking thing yet.All I have been doing is setting up the camera and changing the focus point from one area to the next going front to back.Have had some images turn out not so good as I use the view finder(live view really sucks the life out of my battery)to do all my focusing and a few of the images of the echinecea have noticeable out of focus issues in the image.
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Post by Kit on Sept 24, 2012 10:43:07 GMT
Ron, I really like this with the bags of lush colour and the sharp and soft thing you have going there. I hadn't seen it as sinking into water until Paul mentioned it, but yeah, it does look a little like that.
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