![]() ![]() This is also the workflow you would use if you don't edit in Lightroom. Then I bring the blended photo into Helicon Focus together with the images I captured for middleground and foreground. I usually do the exposure blending first and save the result as a TIFF. This is the workflow I choose if I also have to do exposure blending for the background. In addition to that, I also bring the Dehaze slider a touch to the left for woodland photos, because it helps to give those a more dreamy look. Sharpening is best performed at the end of the processing and kept low during raw conversion to avoid too many artifacts. I exclusively capture raw photos and I apply some standard editing to them, which includes bringing up the shadows and turning down the highlights a bit, making slight adjustments to temperature and tint, removing lens distortions and chromatic aberrations as well as reducing the sharpening. Image Preparation in Lightroomīefore stacking a number of images, I usually prepare them in Lightroom. Aside from the first few steps, the workflow overlaps with the one in Lightroom, which I show below. If you want to use the stand-alone version that's also possible. Scenes like this, where I have to deal with intersections between foreground and background, are typically hard to stack manually, if there's no clear line along which I can draw the mask.Īs I already wrote above, Helicon Focus comes with a Lightroom plugin, which is automatically installed, if you have Lightroom. An example is the photo below where I have the fern from the foreground reach into the background. Together with the automatic focus bracketing of the Canon R5, which allows me to capture focus stacks very quickly, Helicon Focus enables me to tackle very complex landscape scenes. Not only is Helicon Focus very intuitive to use with a nice interface, but its algorithms also worked surprisingly well for my detailed woodland photos from Costa Rica. I downloaded and installed it, fed a complex woodland stack into Helicon's Lightroom Plugin, and in a breeze stacked and retouched my first photo with it. Very conveniently, Helicon Focus offers a 30 day trial with full functionality. ![]() After Alex Armitage mentioned it again in a comment under my handheld focus stacking article I had to give it a try. I had already heard of Helicon Focus many years ago but for some reason dismissed it. ![]() I needed a more convenient and precise way to piece everything together. Once I had taken the first photos of the chaotic Costa Rican forest in Monteverde, I had enough of manual stacking. For some such photos, the stacking can take me as much as half an hour or even an hour. But especially when it comes to woodland photos it can be tricky to find and combine the sharpest areas. And for most photos, this is a viable option. Acceptably sharp is usually not sharp enough for the large prints I like to sell.īecause of the limitations of Photoshop's automatic stacking algorithm, which often leads to unsharp areas in the final photo that need to be fixed, I usually perform the stacking manually using masks in Photoshop. Using the hyperfocal distance while trying to get everything acceptably sharp with just one photo was always too much of a compromise for me. But it does not matter what you shoot – landscapes or flowers, animals or still-life – Helicon Focus will make your images stand out.For more than 10 years I've now been stacking my landscape and architecture photos to achieve optimal sharpness from foreground to background. Nowadays micro photography, close-ups, jewelry and product photography became truly dependent on focus stacking. Take several shots at different focus distances instead of just one, and Helicon Focus will quickly and smartly combine the stack into a fully focused image. With focus stacking software you can make your usual camera render results that could not be achieved even with a classic tilt-shift lens. Professional photographers and enthusiasts seeking to keep up with the trend take advantage of focus stacking to create eye-catching images. Today it's hard to imagine macro or micro photography without focus stacking technique. Plain single shots are bit by bit giving place to improved and more sophisticated technologies like HDR and EDoF. ![]() Now it's the advanced technology that makes the difference. The digital revolution of the last few years made professional photo hardware widely available and affordable. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |