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Focus stacking/bracketing consists of taking several shots of the same frame (in this case, a landscape) at different focus points within your frame to ensure sharpness throughout. Is it necessary? In most cases, no, as an aperture above f/9 will typically cover any slight variations in depth of field. However, if you are using an ultra-wide lens with subjects close to the lens and a large distance between the foreground and background elements, it is beneficial to ensure sharpness throughout.
There is plenty of excellent software out there that can take care of the whole process for you, with little to no anomalies when outputting the final image. My personal preferred method is Lightroom and Photoshop, and in this short article, I’ll show you the way in which I go about it.
Focus Stacking
For this composition, I chose five focus points, though adding a couple more on the edges would have benefitted the shot. The extra points would help sharpen the wide-angle distortion. Cropping could also correct this, but I like the distortion effect from wide angle lenses. Neither one is entirely correct. It is simply a creative decision. Just be aware of the different options so you can be intentional.
Choose more focus points than you think you need. It’s better to take extra images than get home and realize you should have taken more. The number of focus points depends on the scene.
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The image clearly shows the difference in focus between image one, focused on the foreground rock, and the final image, focused on the back rocks and grasses.
Lightroom and Photoshop
Once images are uploaded and selected in Lightroom, balance the adjustments. Edit one image to your preference, then synchronize the edits to the remaining images. This allows for easier blending later in Photoshop. Note any bracketed shots at this point to prep them before opening in Photoshop. Fully bracketed sequences can be HDR merged in Lightroom. Otherwise, merge individual shots like a sky.
Select all your images, then choose Edit in>Open as layers in Photoshop. If not already open, this command will open Photoshop and stack your images in layers in a single document.
With all your layers selected, go to Edit > Auto Align. If you are relatively new to this, I would go with the default setting in the pop-up window that appears, then simply select ok and let Photoshop do its magic.
The Safety Group
Once all of your images are aligned and stacked in Photoshop, while they are still highlighted, press command+J (Mac) CTRL+J (PC). and this will make a copy of the layers. As these copied layers are now selected, click the group/folder icon at the bottom of the layers menu, and the copied layers will neatly be grouped into a folder, the safety group. Turn the layer visibility off, and you won’t need them again with any luck.
This layer group allows for tidying any anomalies between all the focused images. I’ve found it particularly useful with water, especially waves, as Photoshop doesn’t always blend these seamlessly. The layers in the safety group also help when there is unnoticed movement in your frame.
The next step, with the original layers selected, is to go to Edit > AutoBlend Layers and select okay. Photoshop will select the best focused areas across the layers and blend them into one final layer.
Using the Safety Group
As I mentioned, Photoshop doesn’t always get it right, and there can be slight variations or anomalies within the final merged layer. In this case, there was a slight wind during one of the shots, and a fern had moved. To help combat this movement, it was time to engage the help of the safety group. Turn on your safety group and turn off the visibility of the layers. Turning each layer on and off individually, go through them until you find a layer that best matches the focus you are trying to achieve.Once you have defined the layer you need, using a hide-all mask, hold down Alt when selecting the mask icon. With a white paintbrush, paint in the area that you want to reveal.
This technique can also emphasize other areas in your images. In this case, I selected one layer that I felt had a better water effect. Using a hide-all mask and white paintbrush, I painted in the areas I wanted. You may also want to include areas from other layers – a hide-all mask lets you do this.
Focus stacking isn’t necessary for all your photographs, but it is a great technique to have under your belt. The first image below wasn’t a focus stack simply because there was nothing in my immediate foreground close to the lens.The next images were, however, the lighthouse through choice and the remaining images due to the close proximity of the foreground elements so that I could maintain the sharpness throughout.A word of caution, however, as sometimes, you can go overboard with focus points, which results in a sharp image throughout as expected. But in doing this, you lose the aesthetics and atmosphere of the scene you were trying to capture; just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.
Final Thoughts
This is my preferred method of focus stacking, although there is software out there that excels in doing it. I have found this method to be the most reliable for me and my photography. I’m sure, however, that Adobe and others will be working on AI versions that take care of the entire process seamlessly, and until then, I’ll keep using this technique.
If you want to learn more about photography and editing, a series of videos I can highly recommend is Photographing The World with Eli Locardi, found here on Fstoppers, now with its fifth release, Photographing The World: Japan, with over 14+ hours of tutorials you can find here.
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