Focus Stacking in Macro Photography | Part 2 - Post Processing & Editing
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- Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
- In this video I go through some of the more basic methods I use for focus stacking and cleaning images. This is using examples where the in camera stacking has been quite clean with pretty steady willing subjects and tackles some of the most common issues that come up.
I use a combination of Helicon (www.heliconsoft.com/) and Adobe Photoshop with a bit more emphasis on Photoshop as I believe it gives more freedom at a faster, more reliable pace.
Learning these basic techniques will help you tackle many different, more complicated scenarios that will occur when focus stacking. In a later video I will covering some of the more technical edits and fixes when the in-camera part just a hasn't gone your way.
Gear & Software
@OMSYSTEMCameras EM1X with M.zuiko 60mm
@GODOXGlobal V350o
Diffuser by Cygnustech - / cygnustech
@Adobe @Photoshop @Lightroom
@tchelicon Helicon Stacking Software
0:00 Intro
2:00 The Basics
23:08 More Complex Scenrios
31:02 Split Stacks
Well presented. Thank you.
This is a brilliant tutorial thank you for sharing, now I just need to figure out the Mac shortcuts 😂
I have just subscribed to your channel, that is the best tutorial I’ve ever seen on photos stacking I do not have a program. I want to get into photo stacking so I think I will have to purchase it. Look forward to seeing more from you fantastic thank you🎉❤
Jamie, thank you for sharing your knowledge, experience and tips. I've watched this video numerous times and have learnt so much. This is a great thing you have done for the Macro community. You are a talented, humble and generous human being!
Fantastic tutorial Jamie, very helpful. Look forward to the next one 👍
Thanks very much Dee, Glad that you enjoyed it
I’ve honestly learnt so much it’s ridiculous
As someone who has been doing a lot of work in Helicon, this is so incredibly helpful! Hope you keep putting out more of this type of content.
Hi Jamie, great tutorial. I learned a lot hew stuff in your workflow, especially split stacking. I told my self , what 😂
Thank you 🙌
Haha, Thanks very much. Glad it was helpful for you
Amazing. Thanks so much. So much helpful, straightforward info.
Please to hear, thanks very much
Thanks Jamie 🙏🏻 perfect 👍
Really pleased to hear, thank you!
Jamie thank you very much for sharing your expertise in this master class session. It is well structured with suitable example and shows the technical difficulties and best practices to cope with them. Whereas I knew already many tricks I learnt some more: retouching with Photoshop, BCB technique and split stack technique. This was really great :)
Really Please to hear that the video was helpful for you. Thanks for the comment
Top notch tutorial mate! You're spot on about Helicon, I tried Zerene stacker and found it a bit unwieldy and complicated.
Thanks very much mate, glad you agree. I will give it blast at some point though.
Hi Jamie,
this is so useful.
Getting into macro over the last 2 month, seeing all the work you do in Lightroom and PS is great.
I'm still in the "single shot" phase but stacking is one thing I would like to get into this year.
Thanks you, have a great weekend.
Thanks very much, I’m very pleased to hear it was helpful for you
Brilliant Tutorial Jamie and i use Zerene at the moment but looking at your Helicon workflow i must give it a try, Thanks again very inspiring.
Thanks very much Phil, Glad that it was helpful for you. Im hoping to have a go on zerene at some point, would be great to compare them.
Thank you very much Jamie. So much great information. I have now subscribed.
Absoltely Great ❤
Very cool to see your skills at work, and it definitely sheds some light on how much work you really put into it. I'd say it's a labour of love! Great video!
Thanks very much, yeh there are times when it not necessarily 'enjoyable', but when your efforts are paid always a good feeling.
Thank you,
I have been too scared to take stacks as I thought the processing would be horrendous.
Turns out I do a lot of this in photoshop anyway so this should just be the next step (and using shortcuts should save me time).
My downfall is usually file handling/exporting/naming/saving (probably because I’m no spring chicken) so spare a though as you whizz through these things that probably seem so basic
can’t wait for part 3 as this is the most helpful and inspirational video ever
Brilliant stuff mate, thank you!👍
Great tutorial, I liked the BCB and split stacking technique very useful + I am somewhat good at photoshop so it will be easier for me to do the post in PS than in Helicon
Thanks very much. Yeh, Photoshop opens alot of creative doors for fixing and improving images, i alway feel very comfortable when Im in PS
Great tutorial!
Thanks very much, glad you thought so
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing. Very interesting to see other people's methods. I've kind gone the opposite lately and started doing more of my cloning in Helicon, mostly because the soft brushes in PS would paint outside of the cursor circle making me unknowingly paint over some edges. However, this video has inspired me to actually google it and sure enough it was a cursor setting. I've been very skeptical of BCB, but seeing how well it worked on your stack is making me want give it a shot (as I definitely spend too much time on some of my stacks).
Hey Jamie, amazing content, thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us.
I know this video is focused on post processing, but I was curious what your differential settings are when using OM's in camera focus bracketing? I might have missed that if you covered it in Part 1's video. I'm currently shooting at a differential of 3 and sometimes it seems like plenty while at other times it isn't enough (maybe because of camera movement?).
Yeh I did cover it a bit, but not in great detail. It depends on the subject and its size almost entirely. The smaller the subject and higher the magnification the smaller my differential gets. For most cases im using 2 or 1, but I shoot alot of very small things deep and its alot more work when alot of the time 3 would probably be more than fine. But for super tiny things, I Like to cover all the bases
I just binged all your videos today. Thanks for this, very very helpful as I just downloaded the trial version of Helicon. One question tho, you did the split stack of the fly and its "antennas". Is it possible to stack those two stacks again as well (just like the bcb method)?
Btw, your interviews are lovely as well. They made me miss Australia tho
Even as a non photoshop user this looks achievable 👃
Hi Jamie, can I combine parts of c method into b method in the lite version? Thanks for a great tutorial.
Hi,I really like the relaxed way you put your videos over.
May I ask what format you take your photos in? i.e raw. Reason being is I see when you have imported to Helicon they are tif files 👍👍
Thanks very much. I’m glad it’s relaxed and not boring 😂. Feel I might need some more energy sometimes.
I shoot in RAW, helicon just converts them to Tiff.
Do I need the Lite or Pro version to do what you have shown in the video
Once you've stacked the shots then processed in Photoshop you delete the original images? I guess if you shoot as many images as you do they take up hard drive space pretty quickly.
Is your flash stack shot at 1/100 th ? I am having a right nightmare getting any sharp stack at that speed. Might just take practice.
I've got to say...I found Zerene a lot easier to use than Helicon.