Dennis
21-03-2008, 03:54 PM
Hello,
When taking close ups with our 60mm macro lens, we constantly run into depth of focus problems where the “top” plane of the image is usually in focus, but the shallow depth of field, even at apertures of F11 and F16, means that the “middle” and “lower” planes are out of focus. Stopping down to F32 doesn’t solve this and from what I understand, begins to introduce diffraction effects which may affect the image quality.
After reading a post on IIS about specialised software that can “stack” these “planes of focus”, I downloaded and installed Helicon Focus (http://www.heliconsoft.com/)which has a 30 day free trial, a US $70 annual licence fee (for 4 years then lifetime) or a one off US $250 lifetime licence fee.
Here are the first results. Frames 1 to 3 were the input photos where I focused on different “depths” of the flower and the final pane is how Helicon assembled these. Look carefully at Frames 1 to 3 and you should easily spot which part of the frame is in focus, the remainder being out of focus. This was a very difficult test as the flower was swaying in the breeze so I could not keep it in the same position, and the foliage also moved between frames.
Cheers
Dennis
When taking close ups with our 60mm macro lens, we constantly run into depth of focus problems where the “top” plane of the image is usually in focus, but the shallow depth of field, even at apertures of F11 and F16, means that the “middle” and “lower” planes are out of focus. Stopping down to F32 doesn’t solve this and from what I understand, begins to introduce diffraction effects which may affect the image quality.
After reading a post on IIS about specialised software that can “stack” these “planes of focus”, I downloaded and installed Helicon Focus (http://www.heliconsoft.com/)which has a 30 day free trial, a US $70 annual licence fee (for 4 years then lifetime) or a one off US $250 lifetime licence fee.
Here are the first results. Frames 1 to 3 were the input photos where I focused on different “depths” of the flower and the final pane is how Helicon assembled these. Look carefully at Frames 1 to 3 and you should easily spot which part of the frame is in focus, the remainder being out of focus. This was a very difficult test as the flower was swaying in the breeze so I could not keep it in the same position, and the foliage also moved between frames.
Cheers
Dennis