Every seen a photo in a magazine ad for a new watch or other small item and wondered “How do they get the entire item in such sharp focus?” They use a technique called Focus Stacking so that every part of that Rolex is in razor sharp focus, from the numbers and hands on the watch to the band attached to it.
Focus Stacking is where you set your camera up on a tripod so you are nice and stable, then you shoot the product or item, changing your focus point but not moving the camera or changing the focal length.
This is 5 captures of the same scene but with different focus points. |
Once you have captured your images, import them into Lightroom and then go to the Develop module and activate your Len Profile Correction. Once you have that done then select all of the images in the group that you shot and select the Photo menu item, then go down and select “Open as Layers in Photoshop.”
Once they are opened in Photoshop, select all of the Layers at once, then click the Edit Menu and choose Auto-Align Layers. Then when that has completed, click the Edit menu again and choose Auto-Blend Layers. When the process has completed, you will have a single new image where everything is in sharp focus and with high details.
All 5 shots from above combined into this Stacked image |
Now all you have to do is save the new image and you are done. Focus Stacking is a lot of fun and can give you fantastic result so grab your trip, cable release and tripod and give Focus Stacking a try!
Comments/Questions
Liam I appreciate you posting this tutorial for students who have yet to take View Camera Theory. But in Focus Stacking as I teach it the image you have identified as the final merged photograph would have everything in the frame from the front of your Canon to the house and trees behind it in sharp focus. I think you could come pretty close to what you have in one shot.
ReplyDeleteI have a tutorial I did for my classes that has an object 3' from my camera to buildings, trees etc.over 2 miles away in focus. Very impressive.