For ID, not exhibition, following up on Overread's post.
Taken in grab mode, mostly:
I'm only a fluttering mothist. The same author (Waring et al)'s not-field-guide is also good and their Micro Moths book. I like Manley's British Moths, full of photographs.
They tend to fly in my open wndow this time of year as the light's on all night while I develop an H imprint on my nose.
These are also "for id"; pretty poor quality, not as good as yours!
This one was sitting on the arm of my chair until I moved it a moment ago, trembling the way thay do which makes stacking impossible:
These are queued on the window - arms's length, balancing..: ?? and maybe an apple moth:
This one is a gold triangle. A short out-of order stack in Photoshop: PS's stacking is poor but it doesn't mind the order.
This I don't know
Just moths for ID.
Moderators: rjlittlefield, ChrisR, Chris S., Pau
Just moths for ID.
Chris R
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Re: Just moths for ID.
Zerene Stacker's PMax doesn't mind order either, as long as it's not so serious as to mess up the alignment.ChrisR wrote:PS's stacking is poor but it doesn't mind the order.
Also the current version of Zerene Stacker has a new function, “Re-order input files > “Sort by Scale”, that can put images into correct order with most lenses. To use it, you first align the images to determine relative scale, then do the re-order, then align & stack again.
--Rik
Oh I thought the Pmax "Pyramid" relied on the order.
Out-of-order is what my Panasonic produces in focus-bracket mode. It focuses on each of the grid of focus points top left to bottom right, which needs sorting.
That "little one"; I can suggest where you've seen it, it's on the front cover of "Field Guide to the micro moths of Great Britain" ! isbn 9780956490223
I hadn't realised - I'll find it.
Out-of-order is what my Panasonic produces in focus-bracket mode. It focuses on each of the grid of focus points top left to bottom right, which needs sorting.
That "little one"; I can suggest where you've seen it, it's on the front cover of "Field Guide to the micro moths of Great Britain" ! isbn 9780956490223
I hadn't realised - I'll find it.
Chris R
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No, the pyramid is within each frame: full resolution, then half-resolution, quarter-resolution, and so on down to a single average of the whole frame. The processing across frames is only to accumulate some simple statistics, mostly largest absolute value of corresponding pyramid cells.ChrisR wrote:Oh I thought the Pmax "Pyramid" relied on the order.
--Rik
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Some well known Moth sites for identifications
British Moths UK Moths
http://ukmoths.org.uk/thumbnails/
Europe
Lepiforum: Bestimmung von Schmetterlingen
http://www.lepiforum.de/
North America
Moth photographers Group
http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/Plates.shtml
and for those ”Down Under”
Australian Moths Online
http://www1.ala.org.au/gallery2/main.php
British Moths UK Moths
http://ukmoths.org.uk/thumbnails/
Europe
Lepiforum: Bestimmung von Schmetterlingen
http://www.lepiforum.de/
North America
Moth photographers Group
http://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/Plates.shtml
and for those ”Down Under”
Australian Moths Online
http://www1.ala.org.au/gallery2/main.php