Very nice stereo image.
I would get rid of the signature completely, it is a distraction.
I would also get rid of the areas of halo cloud, it should not take much effort.
You have to be careful of backgrounds in stereo because you can easily detect how close they are to the subject and see their texture.
Maybe you could blur the texture and/or darken the background ?
If you do all of that I look forward to viewing it on 3D TV
I bought Affinity Photo yesterday, I look forward to using it, have you tried its stacking feature ?
David
Butterfly foot (stereo added)
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
-
- Posts: 51
- Joined: Mon May 02, 2016 2:04 pm
- Location: North Wales,U.K.
- Contact:
Beatsy,
Those images are amazing!
How did you manage to get all those overlapping hair-like structures perfectly, without them blending with each other and confusing stacking software? I apologize if this is a dummy beginner question that has been asked many times.
I tried a 10x stack with a beetle leg not long ago and failed miserably at those overlapping "hairs" all over foreground and background. Not much vibration to blame, but stacking software (CombineZP) was confused by those hairs. Mine looks like piece of cake though, compared to what you had/did there.
I do need to study stacking techniques and post processing work.
Those images are amazing!
How did you manage to get all those overlapping hair-like structures perfectly, without them blending with each other and confusing stacking software? I apologize if this is a dummy beginner question that has been asked many times.
I tried a 10x stack with a beetle leg not long ago and failed miserably at those overlapping "hairs" all over foreground and background. Not much vibration to blame, but stacking software (CombineZP) was confused by those hairs. Mine looks like piece of cake though, compared to what you had/did there.
I do need to study stacking techniques and post processing work.
Selling my Canon FD 200mm F/2.8 lens