Thanks David for comment.
Thanks David for comment.
Having just tried stacking myself, I think this a good attempt, and for me , worked well. I cant comment on the the technique as I am still learning, but well done.
For a first time and hand held on a live subject, I personally would say good work. I can understand the good feedback and see the development that it will lead to. Being as it is not something I have tried I am looking on with interest and an open mind to learn before i try
Nicely done Rudi. Hand held yet! That's doing it the hard way.
I had exactly the same experience recently with a seemingly still bumblebee covered with morning dew. When I went to stack the images, I saw that he was doing exactly what Grahame described. I might have salvaged the stack with some manual work, but I gave up. I have only successfully stacked a few bugs in years of bug hunting.
Re how many shots: when the subject is staying put (not bugs, that is), I do what Kodiak suggests: start a bit in front of the closest point of focus and continue until I am sure I am past the rearmost. Then I blow the images up in Lightroom and discard the ones I don't need. In this case, it looks like you could have gone further back. However, I don't see any sign that you have too few for the range that is in focus. There are no gaps of clear detail in that range; it just stops a bit soon.
All in all, an excellent job.
Thanks Dan for the comment. In this case the antennae were the most moving parts from frame to frame.I have a few more frames further back, but not alligned with the others, so I could not use them, maybe some day....You are right that the focus just stops a bit soon. But we can't have it all...