Shouldn't have said "fix", sorry Brian. What I meant say was that the b/g is yours to do with as you will. I myself rarely if ever use a textured background for a watch, except for ribbon, but I'm not saying that you should not.
http://kronometric.org/tcw/mec/b182lan925/mas.html
Started this article about wristwatch engraving long ago but never finished it . .
http://kronometric.org/article/engraving/temp.html
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Last edited by xpatUSA; 11th December 2017 at 02:55 AM.
Thanks for the compliment!
Yes, I rarely shoot small products outside because they are usually headed for eBay. So I am blessed with fixed, continuous lighting which helps a lot. Three lamps and home-made diffusers.Please keep on saying what makes sense to you. We have our own styles which with any luck will improve for the sharing
As we said before, reflectors outside could work for you (Kodak R27 8x10"; white side works if you have them, or they are quite cheap these days on eBay).
Sometimes a diffuser for harsh sunlight might help. I use medium-thick A4 tracing paper, edged with thick kitchen foil so that I can curve it around stuff.
By using a separate diffuser to the lamp, I can change the amount of diffusion by moving the lamp closer to or further from the subject; and/or by moving the diffuser closer to the lamp or closer to the subject. Probably can't do that with the Sun, eh?
See "Lambertian" surfaces, mentioned in here:
http://kronometric.org/phot/lighting...20handbook.pdf
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Last edited by xpatUSA; 12th December 2017 at 05:54 PM.
Hi Brian,
Are there any sources on stacking you have found particularly useful?
For my local photography club we had an assignment to photograph an egg. I thought it would be a good opportunity to learn how to do stacking. I put on my macro lens, set the aperture to nearly wide open, and made small adjustments to focal length. I followed some tutorials on how to do stacking in Photoshop. Photoshop chose one frame and used it for about 95% of the final image with some obvious blotches take from some of the other frames. It was a mess.
You said you use Fuji's software to stack so maybe the procedure is quite different from photoshop. This isn't the first stacked image you've posted so I was hoping my story would sound familiar and either you have great advice or a particularly good source of information.
Thanks,
Mike
I was born in Vancouver and spent a few summer holidays in your part of the world.
Don't know how great my advice will be but here goes:
ImageJ is free software designed for and by scientists. It does a great job of stacking and even has some handy sharpening tools. If I said Fuji it was a mistake.
My technique is simple. I shoot in RAW. Do the universal adjustments in RAW export in TIFF reimport aft stacking in TIFF and maske my final adjustments.
Hope that helps.
Brian
Previously you've mentioned "Fiji", Brian, which is a super-set of ImageJ:
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/50059191
First post is my reference and has some pics that are quite good.
Thank you both Brian and Ted.
I downloaded FIJI and EnfuseGUI as that is what was mentioned in the dpreview post.
As outlined in dpreview I used FIJI to align my layers and then EnfuseGUI to combine them. FIJI actually misaligned my images worse than the original. That made the Enfuse results a blurred mess. I tried Enfuse without the alignment process. I see the potential, though without alignment the results weren't perfect.
I suspect either I don't have enough images (5 in the stack) or there are not enough easy points of reference on the egg for the alignment software to work properly. I strongly suspect the later. When I get the time I will try again with a less smooth object.
Thanks again!
Probably 'points of reference', Mike.
I find image alignment to be the most awkward of the steps necessary for stacking work. An app is supposed to find "control points' so as to distort a number of images to be "the same" but it is so often defeated by this or that.
Currently, I use 'align_image_stack.exe' which is a popular command-line utility, oft used by programs like Hugin and the like. But . . sometimes it works and sometimes it don't ...
With an egg, would it be possible to put some black dots on the egg with a marker pen - to be cloned out of the final output?
Last edited by xpatUSA; 20th December 2017 at 06:03 AM.