Shooting the moon: Simple question
Shooting the moon: Simple question
see attachment.
however i am finding that if the moons in the separate images are too -close- (i used a 2-minute inter-frame interval for the attached)... helicon focus tries to overlay all the moon images into a single moon image.
i've experimented a bit with the A/B/C methods, and the sliders...but not readily able to understand what's going on. i'd like to shoot a 1-min inter-frame interval, but not sure how to tell helicon to keep the moon images distinct.
suggestions? just operator error i hope? thanks!
Re: Shooting the moon: Simple question
Pardon me for jumping in ... since you have not had a reply.
Helicon's primary job is stacking for focus depth, not mere stacks. It has a panorama mode under the Edit menu that might work for you.
If you use Photoshop, selecting all images in your sequence and opening as layers with create a stack. You will have to change the blend mode of all but the bottom layer to 'Lighten'. (I'm working from memory but I think that is correct.)
Hope this helps!
Helicon's primary job is stacking for focus depth, not mere stacks. It has a panorama mode under the Edit menu that might work for you.
If you use Photoshop, selecting all images in your sequence and opening as layers with create a stack. You will have to change the blend mode of all but the bottom layer to 'Lighten'. (I'm working from memory but I think that is correct.)
Hope this helps!
Re: Shooting the moon: Simple question
hi bob,
thanks for jumping in...
yes, i realize that what i'm trying to do is outside the intended scope of what helicon is designed to do...and does extremely well:)
i just noticed another user successfully creating image stacks in this way, and thought i'd take it out for a spin.
and in fact, it works great in the limited test-cases i've tried.
i know photoshop offers similar capabilities...will go that route instead.
thanks for the reply!
w.
thanks for jumping in...
yes, i realize that what i'm trying to do is outside the intended scope of what helicon is designed to do...and does extremely well:)
i just noticed another user successfully creating image stacks in this way, and thought i'd take it out for a spin.
and in fact, it works great in the limited test-cases i've tried.
i know photoshop offers similar capabilities...will go that route instead.
thanks for the reply!
w.