From the course: Photography Foundations: Macro and Close-Up
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Understanding the aesthetics of depth of field - Photoshop Tutorial
From the course: Photography Foundations: Macro and Close-Up
Understanding the aesthetics of depth of field
Throughout this course, I've been defining shallow depth of field as a problem, as something that you are kind of constantly fighting when you are working at macro scale. Now that you've seen focus stacking, you have a solution to that shallow depth of field problem. But does that mean that every image you shoot, when you're working macro, needs to be really deep depth of field? Obviously, if you are shooting a moving subject, or if you are out in the field, focus stacking is not always an option, but here in the studio it is something you could try to do on every shot. But should you? Take a look at this. Our Director, Jacob Cunningham, shot this great shot of a bee, and I was looking at it, and thinking, "That's a really great shot of a bee." But I love the texture on the ball, whatever that is, that seed pod think that the bee is standing on. And, I thought, "Well, it would be cool if there was some more depth of field underneath the bee." So, I started to rebuild the shot, and…
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Creating a simple manual focus stack4m 40s
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Creating a focus stacked image with manual merge6m 17s
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Creating a focus stacked image using Helicon Remote11m 6s
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Working with a StackShot rail for focus stacking11m 46s
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Merging a focus stack with Photoshop11m 12s
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Merging photo stacks with Helicon6m 53s
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Understanding the aesthetics of depth of field4m 25s
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