Good macro photography technique says to get the subject square to the camera (parallel to the focal plane). That's because the depth of field--the zone that's in focus--is very shallow.
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The camera was directly above this flat bug, so the body and head are in focus. Click an image to compare pairs. (f/6.7 1/3000s ISO 800 #5 of 8 images)
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Focus stacking most prominently added more of the flower. It also improved the bug's legs and antennas. There are artifacts, too, in the form of a reflection on the left side and distorted petal edges.
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This fly is not square to the camera. It didn't respond when I asked it to move, so what could I do? I like the shot, though. (f/5.6 1/500s ISO 800 #2 of 5 images in the stack)
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Focus stacking added the fly's wings, the fly's legs, and the stem it's standing on.
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I'm attracted to bees' faces, and this one was square to the camera. Without focus stacking, that's all I'd have. With it, I got its wings, legs, and hairs on its body. (f/6.7 1/350s ISO 800 8 images)
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None of these struck me as being particularly good... (f/5.6 ISO 800 1/750s) | | | | |
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... but the 5 pictures stacked together turned out nicely. |
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Sometimes I can experiment with how much background to include in the stack. (f/4.8 1/250s ISO 1600 3 images) |
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Which one do you prefer? (5 images) |
Cool, so that’s how it’s done.
ReplyDeleteNice. Love seeing their cute faces!
ReplyDeleteVery cool!
ReplyDelete