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Photoshop Image Stacking

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26 December 2019, 13:56
Opus1
Photoshop Image Stacking
Interesting video on Photoshop image stacking.

Photoshop Image Build


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29 December 2019, 01:10
BaxterB
Very cool, and a nice peek behind the curtain of how these pics are made. Dave Wesbrook once sent me pics he took of some Ferrari’s and rolls royces. He used film. He was damn good.
09 January 2020, 17:19
Wink
I'm glad I don't have to do that for a living. I could never be "that" kind of photographer.

In fact, many of the great images you have seen, from advertizing to photojournalism to landscape, were not post-processed by the person taking the picture but by some post-processing expert. They might even be two different talents in many cases. I doubt if the majority of great sports photographers, whose deadlines are a matter of minutes, ever post-process anything.


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AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim.
09 January 2020, 19:43
BaxterB
I agree with you Wink.

Post processing seems to be a specialized skill. I generate an ass-load of visual marketing product, but I’m not a graphic artist or designer. I generate the idea, the basic drawings and layout, then let the pros make it look good. I just don’t have the skill with Illustrator or Photoshop, et al., to do the work. Doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate their skill though...

...and I never, ever ask them to make it *POP*

Ha!
18 January 2020, 06:34
Ray Alaska
On a somewhat similar subject, there also is focus stacking in macro photography. The idea is to show most of the subject in focus (or the entire subject in focus). Nowadays the camera itself does some of the processing, and the rest is left to the photographer or somebody else to complete.
https://www.flickr.com/people/lordv/
18 January 2020, 15:07
Wink
quote:
Originally posted by Ray Alaska:
On a somewhat similar subject, there also is focus stacking in macro photography. The idea is to show most of the subject in focus (or the entire subject in focus). Nowadays the camera itself does some of the processing, and the rest is left to the photographer or somebody else to complete.
https://www.flickr.com/people/lordv/


Some excellent photos there.


_________________________________

AR, where the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history become the nattering nabobs of negativisim.
20 January 2020, 02:05
Peter
I did not view the video, but I believe the topic in question is High Dynamic Range imaging. I first came across this when I went to an exhibition of photographs that looked nothing like the ones I take! One of the photographers there told me about it. basically you take multiple photographs of the exact same scene, using different exposures, and then use software to combine them into one image that is printed. the results are amazing. You can Google it under this name if it relates to the topic under discussion. If not, please excuse the intrusion.
Peter


Be without fear in the face of your enemies. Be brave and upright, that God may love thee. Speak the truth always, even if it leads to your death. Safeguard the helpless and do no wrong;
20 January 2020, 06:07
BaxterB
Not exactly what the guy was going but similar. If you look at Zillow you can see HDR stuff like crazy...every darkened corner well-lighted but nothing overexposed.
20 January 2020, 06:58
Opus1
Baxter you bring up a good point, smart phones have exposure control that dedicated DSLR Cameras only dream about.

Living in Namibia, I have gotten into astrophotography. I recently picked up a Canon 5D Mark IV behind several fast lenses to capture the night sky. With a little practice I got decent pictures but star streaks are a challenge. I then read about the new Pixel 4 Google phone with the advanced Night Sight Mode. It blows away $4,000 dollars worth of DLSR. The images are jaw-dropping and childishly easy to take with no star streaks whatsoever.

Now, you can pick up 48 megapixel smartphones for less than the cost of a medium quality DSLR lens. Even my Mavic 2 drone can take 48 megapixel photographs by stitching 9 photographs together. Wonder when the all these technologies will cross.


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Just Remember, We ALL Told You So.