Hi- Please go easy on me if I don't have the terms, etc correct as I an new at this.
I am using Stack Shot with Helicon Remote to take macro photos. I have no problem with the A and B point and taking all the shots properly with regular macro. However, I also use a microscope objective to take extreme macro shots, and Helicon is not setting the first step correctly.
Using the microscope objective, I will set A and B, and for the sake of simplicity, let's say I want to take 10 shots. What happens when I click Start Shooting is that Stack Shot (with Helicon Remote in control) goes to A, then moves about 1/4 the way down, then starts taking the 10 shots. The DOF is really small.
Normal: shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|
What I get: ---move----------------shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|shot|move|
This makes it difficult to take the shots!!!
I have File/Preferences/StackShot /Size of focusing steps set to 1 microstep, although I get the same result at all the microsteps I try.
I hope I have explained this well enough.
Any suggestions???
Stack Shot focusing- newbie question
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: 16.07.2022 03:42
Re: Stack Shot focusing- newbie question
Pretty cool, though I need some help understanding something.
What's the advantage of this over shutting down the aperture and getting a wider depth of field?
I could imagine this would be helpful with an image where the background needs to remain completely out of focus, which you'd only get with a narrow depth of field, but in the example he uses in the video it seems like it'd be easier to just take one shot at f/22 instead of a series at f/2.8 and then stack.
What's the advantage of this over shutting down the aperture and getting a wider depth of field?
I could imagine this would be helpful with an image where the background needs to remain completely out of focus, which you'd only get with a narrow depth of field, but in the example he uses in the video it seems like it'd be easier to just take one shot at f/22 instead of a series at f/2.8 and then stack.
Re: Stack Shot focusing- newbie question
The video is just to show the workflow and we used a shooting subject that we could find. One apparent advantage of opening the aperture is to let more light in, shooting at F/22 could be unfeasible in some cases. But generally, focus stacking is done when you need depth of field so deep that it's not achievable with a single shot at any aperture.