
Originally Posted by
DanK
Glenn,
I do lots of flowers with Zerene. What I have found is that in many instances, DMap does better with flowers. It supposedly preserves slightly less detail than PMax, but it does considerably better, in my experience, with the delicate color balance and textures that are often critical with flowers. Also, stacking can sometimes cause false specular highlights on textured surfaces, and DMap does that less. On the other hand, if you have big distance front-to-back between adjacent parts of the image, I have found that PMax sometimes creates less haloing.
I sgree with Snarkbyte that the tutorials are very helpful, particularly for learning how to use retouching. However, it is not always the case that combining images from both processes works best, at least in my experience. I think the designer chose a case where it does, in order to show that you can use a composite rather than a single image as a source for retouching. I have combined from a second composite a few times, but most often, if I have doubts, I stack both ways, pick the better of the two composites, and go from there.
I'll post one I did recently with DMap. I think it was about 5 images.
Dan