An unconventional and very interesting way of lighting the core part of the flower.
I think I would stack. You have a lot in focus, but having the closest parts out of focus often isn't the best.
The top third would form a nice abstract image or one of those what-is-it? images.
Really a wonderful close up. The nearest part of flower is oof. But somehow it does not prevent the viewer's attention from going to the center of the flower.Yet, i am also eager to see the image in full focus from nearest to the farthest
An additional benefit from stacking is the increased image pixels...
Last edited by xpatUSA; 8th February 2021 at 05:10 PM.
Yes, I've used it quite a few times, but unless you have a very fast memory card it is best to work in jpg only as saving a series of the huge RAW files slows the whole thing down alarmingly. Not such a big problem with flowers but for insects or anything that is liable to move it is a significant factor.
Why not shoot the flowers in raw and stack in post?
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Indeed, no reason not to. I was just commenting on the automated focus stacking feature in the X-T3 which looks great at first sight as a means to speed up a focus stacked image for subjects likely to move, but which in reality slows down to a crawl with ordinary memory cards due to the time needed to save the big files. It works brilliantly with jpgs by the way, a 10 shot stack executed automatically in less than 1s. The same could be achieved with RAW files if you care to buy a super fast but super expensive memory card (I didnt).