Fly Haltere And Calypter
Moderators: Chris S., Pau, Beatsy, rjlittlefield, ChrisR
Fly Haltere And Calypter
Small fly (not yet unidentified) 4mm, nose to butt. Haltere and calypter at 10x, 148 steps at 10µm.
- rjlittlefield
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Re: Fly Haltere And Calypter
Nicely done!
I find that complicated anatomy like this looks great in stereo, which Zerene Stacker can make from a single stack as described HERE.
Have you tried that?
--Rik
I find that complicated anatomy like this looks great in stereo, which Zerene Stacker can make from a single stack as described HERE.
Have you tried that?
--Rik
- rjlittlefield
- Site Admin
- Posts: 24396
- Joined: Tue Aug 01, 2006 8:34 am
- Location: Richland, Washington State, USA
- Contact:
Re: Fly Haltere And Calypter
Al, thanks for sending me the source images so that I could work them up as stereo.
Here is the result as crossed-eye stereo:
Here is a closer crop:
These are plus and minus 3.447%, which given your stack dimensions corresponds to plus and minus 3 degrees, so a total of 6 degrees of stereo separation. This is a little less depth separation than would be seen through a typical stereo microscope, but still lots of depth while being easier to fuse than say 8 or 10 degrees of separation. For the first crop, I adjusted the depth with respect to display monitor surface using the left/right arrow keys in StereoPhoto Maker, so as to place the whole fly behind the monitor surface. The second crop is adjusted differently, so as to place the haltere and calypter closer behind the monitor surface than they would be otherwise. This introduces some "window error" artifacts for the leg and front margin of the wing, but I thought it was a good tradeoff for easier viewing of the haltere and calypter. No retouching, straight from Zerene Stacker PMax.
--Rik
Here is the result as crossed-eye stereo:
Here is a closer crop:
These are plus and minus 3.447%, which given your stack dimensions corresponds to plus and minus 3 degrees, so a total of 6 degrees of stereo separation. This is a little less depth separation than would be seen through a typical stereo microscope, but still lots of depth while being easier to fuse than say 8 or 10 degrees of separation. For the first crop, I adjusted the depth with respect to display monitor surface using the left/right arrow keys in StereoPhoto Maker, so as to place the whole fly behind the monitor surface. The second crop is adjusted differently, so as to place the haltere and calypter closer behind the monitor surface than they would be otherwise. This introduces some "window error" artifacts for the leg and front margin of the wing, but I thought it was a good tradeoff for easier viewing of the haltere and calypter. No retouching, straight from Zerene Stacker PMax.
--Rik