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White Hydrangea & DOF Blending

gmitchel850gmitchel850 Registered Users Posts: 100 Major grins
edited December 22, 2008 in Finishing School
Here's a holiday flower. A white hydrangea. This shot uses three stacked shots to extend DOF.

whitehydrangea.jpg

I started in ACR 5.2. I selected the shots and then clicked on the Tools | Photoshop | Load Into Photoshop Layers menu item.

Inside Photoshop CS4, I cropped the photo. Then I used Edit | Auto-Align Layers with the Auto Projection option and then Edit | Auto-Blend Layers with the seamless Tones and Colors option. That stacked the layers and blended them.

The rest was basic edits. Dust & scratches filter to get rid of dust and dirt specks. Shadows/Highlights to improve texture in the hydrangea petals. TLR Inkjet Output Sharpener at 240 ppi. (The photo was at 240 ppi resolution.)
This was shot under natural light with a Canon 1Ds MkII, Canon 180mm "L" Macro Lens, Gitzo tripod, Kirk BH-1 ball head.

I can tell you that the technique of stacking photos to extend DOF is much harder than it sounds in theory and from the Photoshop gurus. I took lots of shots today of the hydrangea and a white lilly. Few of the sets worked well. With natural light and a small DOF, you end up with exposures of a second or more. Any movement, like the tiny stamens on a lily, will cause issues. I switched to full flash with a pair of 550EX flashes and an ST-3 transmitter to get to 1/60 sec. to stop movement and darken the background. I'll post an example of the lily later.

I'm working on a video tutorial now. ;)

Comments are welcome.

Mitch

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