How to merge Focus Stacking images in Photoshop

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2022
  • Gary Friedman demonstrates how to use Photoshop to merge individual focus stacked images to ensure everything is razor sharp. Check out these videos to show how to use focusing stacking:
    on Fujifilm cameras: • How to do Focus Stacki...
    on Sony (and other) cameras: • Focus Stacking on Sony...
    on Olympus cameras: (Olympus cameras do the merging for you in-camera; no need to use the techniques outlined in this video.) • Focus Stacking for Oly...
    This is from the Friedman Archives Blog Post on Focus Stacking. You can see all of the content here: friedmanarchives.blogspot.com...

Komentáře • 47

  • @rodtaylor7690
    @rodtaylor7690 Před rokem +5

    At last, a genuinely easy way to understand the process of focus stacking in Photoshop that doesn't use Lightroom first. Thanks so much Gary :)

  • @rendermanpro

    Great tutorial, straight to the point instead of 30 minutes stre-eeeeeeeeeeee-ching to make it artificially long to put more ads. Love short format.

  • @jmosley3722

    Thank you!!! You saved me an hour of work!!!

  • @martinstajer1826

    A great simple video, thank you! I feel for your waiting, had to upgrade my laptop now because I walked all over the Earth twice before exporting single image in lightroom 😂

  • @amorlomibao3452
    @amorlomibao3452 Před rokem +2

    Thank you Gary. I like your simple way of explaining what needs to be done in focus stacking. It's funny that whenever I attend a lecture, there is always a wise guy who stands up, grabs the microphone then explains as if he is the main speaker. The honorable man however just sits down there, listens, then assimilate what the subject is all about but remain silent.

  • @andrewhillphotosvideos2909

    thank you

  • @juliainman9389
    @juliainman9389 Před rokem +1

    Excellent!!! Thank you!

  • @islandhopperstuart
    @islandhopperstuart Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent explanation Gary.

  • @NadimOmran
    @NadimOmran Před 2 lety +1

    Always the best explanations dear Gary

  • @italogiardina8183
    @italogiardina8183 Před rokem

    Clear and easy to follow for intended results rather than follow endlessly micro detailed tutorials.

  • @RonHelton
    @RonHelton Před 2 lety +1

    Wow, nice!

  • @delphiprogrammingtutorials2280

    Greetings from sunny, Central Texas! Excellent, easy-to-follow tutorial with superb images as the outcome! Thank you, Gary. I have found that this works particularly well with my Canon kit lenses for overall detail and sharpness! With a tripod, remote shutter release and manual focus, combined with the Live View, you can create one image from many that can easily compete with much more expensive lenses. I can also see that combined with automatic exposure bracketing, the sky's the limit! VERY NICE!!!

  • @agnethabergman4701
    @agnethabergman4701 Před rokem +1

    Sorry to bump, but found this very helpful on my first attempt at focus bracketing! Thanks for taking the time and also not plugging other things!

  • @Chuck_Burke
    @Chuck_Burke Před rokem +1

    Hi Gary...thanks again for another well done video. Did you once do a workshop on Maui with Randy Hufford?

  • @BazzFreeman
    @BazzFreeman Před 2 lety +1

    For those of us without Photoshop, Helicon Focus is the go-to tool.

  • @EnglishStrippedBare
    @EnglishStrippedBare Před 2 lety +1

    Gary, long time reader first time writer ;)

  • @rachaelpadman2597
    @rachaelpadman2597 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this Gary. If I understand correctly, you are saying that Photoshop decides which bits of which images to use -- you don't have to select bits of each layer manually? I hadn't realised it could be that simple!

  • @genesis1177
    @genesis1177 Před rokem

    Great to the point video. I really like it. I just got the new PS Adobe photoshop 2022 and tried each step by step to see if it would work. It did not. It worked right up until the second I hit edit to open the blend layers and the auto align access lines. The entire scroll box was gray and unresponsive. Only got it to work once by accidently hitting something at the top of the box. When I did I finally I checked the box for stacking and hit ok. The pictures never did come up on screen side by side. Just one at a time when I swiped them from one separate stage to another. Nothing happened. I am not surprised. Nothing on one person's computer or photoshop ever works or looks the same as the people's equipment doing the tutorial. I am so glad I only bought this dog crap version for one month. I 've always thought these photoshops from Adobe were the worst and waste of money. You have to be a computer scientist just to complete one little simple thing. Every 2 minutes they are changing the positions of the icons, the interface, rearranging every stupid box or location of one thing or another. To the point where half the crap you find under File is now found under Edit and vice versa. Too many steps to get to what you need. Last time I will ever deal with Adobe. It is a worthless piece of hardware that only photographers and other professional computer experts can use. Adobe is not for beginners or people who are not an expert at navigating computer software like Adobe. Once something fails to work as you see on a video, you have no clue what to do in order to get it to work. And help lines are worthless. Too expensive for photo software to be this (complicated). Thank you for your video just the same. Much appreciated. But this software hasn't completed one project I have attempted and I have tried them all step by step for batdom. Simply put, this crap doesn't work. I would advise anyone here who has not bought Adobe and is not an expert to NOT buy it at all. It is too much stuff adjoined to it to be honest for the average non-professional to navigate. Try something cheaper with less bells and whistles that never function like they are supposed to. That is my honest assessment and review of Adobe. IT IS THE WORST and most useless software I have ever purchased.

  • @AjBProductions

    Thank you for this fine and clear focus stacking tutorial. One quick question if you don't mind. After the images are stacked the file that is created is a tif and is much smaller than the originals were. Are we loosing any clarity or detail (pixel data) with a tif? My canon RAW files can go from 30 GB to less than 2 after focus stacking. Thank you.

  • @gordons.dempseyii1345
    @gordons.dempseyii1345 Před rokem +1

    My pc used 95% of my 40 GB of ram. I had 37 pictures of flowers that I was making into one photo.