Hello Ben. I wondered if anyone (manufacturer) actually make clear glass attachments so that you don't need to leave the sensor exposed for refractography. I'd love to try this but I'm not prepared to leave the sensor exposed to the air and dust!
It's not something I've researched Rob, but maybe. I don't think this is a very common style though so i doubt manufacturers are catering for shooting without a lens.
Hi Benn, could you recommend a simple straightforward guide to focus stacking? I don't know how many times I take 50 if not more shots of let's say a raspberry, my Mac then struggles so long to auto align and auto blend... and the result just isn't as good as I see with macro experts..
50+ shots is really hard on the computer if you do it using photoshop, there's a guide here that uses helicon focus - th-cam.com/video/I3lAy5eS868/w-d-xo.html
Ben your the best Thank You
Thanks Michael, glad you enjoyed it.
Hello Ben. I wondered if anyone (manufacturer) actually make clear glass attachments so that you don't need to leave the sensor exposed for refractography. I'd love to try this but I'm not prepared to leave the sensor exposed to the air and dust!
It's not something I've researched Rob, but maybe. I don't think this is a very common style though so i doubt manufacturers are catering for shooting without a lens.
Which light did you used in this video?
Hi Benn, could you recommend a simple straightforward guide to focus stacking? I don't know how many times I take 50 if not more shots of let's say a raspberry, my Mac then struggles so long to auto align and auto blend... and the result just isn't as good as I see with macro experts..
50+ shots is really hard on the computer if you do it using photoshop, there's a guide here that uses helicon focus - th-cam.com/video/I3lAy5eS868/w-d-xo.html
@@Adaptalux thanks man! Does this work with Astro shots too for star trails?