![]() ![]() This tool includes an automatic detection of colors that helps you retouch the image. It has an Erase feature that allows you to delete any object or person from your image without damaging its quality. InPixio Photo Studio Pro 12 is not only a great tool for focus stacking but it also has an impressive array of features that you only meet in more expensive software out there. Spider beetle (Ptininae, Ptinidae, Coleoptera) from Baltic Sea (Lithuania).Home › Software › Photo › Digital Photo › Focus stacking software This method greatly increases the possibility of “popping up” the insects, removing all the objects (dust, scratches, other debris…) that are located in between the camera and the insect. Looking that there are a lot of air blobs and debris in the foreground, using the retouching tools was quite easy to remove the imperfections obtaining a clean and clear image.īelow is a Ptinidae as calculated before applying a sub-stacking and after having processed the image using the sub-stacks and in Photoshop. From a set of 198 images, I’ve created 11 substacks composed of 20 images, compiled in Helicon, and retouched with the tools available in the software. This is the resulting output, I must improve a bit the technique of editing using multiple layers, but this is my first slabbing, then forgive me! □ Bee acquired with a LOMO 3.7x, step of 35µm, acquisition time 1/2″, home-made diffuser – 227 images 100% Cropped and unprocessed image, showing the details of the complex setaeīelow is a comparison between an image obtained using the “classic” method (stacking without slabbing) at left, and at right the same using the slabbing. On the first test I performed, the result is definitely good, I only had to do a couple of retouchings and nothing else. How to operate? Here is step by step how to create a substacking:įrom the File menu you access the section Batch process… (or by pressing the F7 key): ![]() It is the possibility of making corrections from the single image stacks that allow you to get a better result. If you compile the image, based only on the substacks, the result without the operation of editing, is not particularly different from the one you get by compiling the whole set of images in one single step. The fact of using packages of substacks created from the fusion of about ten-twenty images (the number of images is user-defined, there is no common rule), makes editing easier, less “time-consuming”, and the final result is a clean and correctly displayed image. With this low DOF, the process of image correction based on individual frames (sometimes more than a hundred) is particularly tedious. This is particularly useful when you have hairs, bristles, legs or antennae that are in the foreground, and overlap with complex parts that are in the background.įor example, an image acquired with a Mitutoyo 10x lens and with a 2.5µm step originates a very important number of frames. Once you have created the image from the merged computed substacks, you select the intermediate images (substacks) and work with the editing tools to replace the incorrectly compiled parts. The substacking process is used to remove in the editing phase those horrible phenomena of transparency and halos present between the subjects in the foreground and those in the background. This new release includes, among other new features, a function that allows you to create substacks in an intuitive and functional way. This function (also called slabbing operation) is present in the versions of the competing software Zerene Stacker, but now is available on Helicon Focus (version 8, currently in BETA release – ).
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