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- #1
I led a webinar a couple of weeks ago with Nikon Ambassador Vincent Versace. One of the topics we discussed was focus stacking. He is directly connected to the development team for Nikon cameras and software, and in earlier days had talked about combining images into focus stacks.
Vincent suggested that one of the techniques he uses for focus stacking is to have a wide open set of images for the back of the in focus area so the background is nicely blurred. He might use f/8 for most of the stack, but use f/1.8 for the back of the stack.
I'd never really thought about this technique, but it makes a lot of sense. There is nothing that says a stack of images needs to have the same aperture for all images.
Vincent suggested that one of the techniques he uses for focus stacking is to have a wide open set of images for the back of the in focus area so the background is nicely blurred. He might use f/8 for most of the stack, but use f/1.8 for the back of the stack.
I'd never really thought about this technique, but it makes a lot of sense. There is nothing that says a stack of images needs to have the same aperture for all images.