I decided to give it a try. My results are here
<http://zone-10.com/tope2/main.php?g2_itemId=19915> I was stacking 4
images at different focus points. I've only shown 2 of the original
images. The first was the nearest focus point and the second shows the
farthest focus point. The 3rd image is the focus stacked result from
Photoshop.
Images shot on E-M1 with m.Zuiko 14-150 at 90mm f/6.3 from about 6 feet.
Observations:
Moose's Photoshop procedure is close but not completely accurate
The whole process is amazingly easy to both shoot and process
I elected to use content-aware fill to cover some missing bits on the
edges and corners due to mis-alighnment. Worked great.
The resulting image has lost considerable vibrance. Probably easily
recovered by running back through ACR but I didn't try.
This particular image has somehow picked up distortion in the vertical
bars in the background that is not seen in any of the originals. I
tried dropping an image I thought might be complicit in the distortion
(the one most out of alignment with the others) but that didn't help
anything.
Summary: This was quick to shoot and easy to process so I'll do it again
even if it sometimes gives some odd results (distortion in background)
The processing steps I used
===========================
1) File => Scripts => Load files into stack
2) In Load Layers into stack dialogue:
Add open files as desired
Select "Attempt to automatically align source files"
3) After the alignment make sure all the image layers are selected.
If not, hold down the CTRL key and click on each layer that needs
to be selected.
4) Edit => Auto Blend Layers (if this is grayed-out no layers are
selected for blending.. see step 3)
In the auto-blend dialogue select:
Stack images
Seamless tones and colors
Content-aware fill transparent areas (if desired)
5) Flatten image, remove any fill selection marching ants with CTRL-D
6) Save final image under a new name.
Chuck Norcutt
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