I will also look into the sony edge program, I was not aware that would do stacking. I use helicon focus, I will definitely look into tethering with that for stacking- that would be great if that worked! I tried the remote method, was tedious for 100+stacks, but it did work. These are great ideas I need to look into more. I moved to Sony recently and am wondering what to do as well. I looked into it when I had Nikon but when they came out with in camera stacking, I went with that. I believe you need to purchase the pro plan. Helicon stacking software offers a feature tethered to camera that will stack for you. This link describes a technique using the Sony remote that might work: ![]() If you are into product photography I guess you are not depending on portability so a computer is not a problem? If so then I'd try the Sony Imaging Edge program with the free open source bracketing add on. In the demo videos Camranger has on their site, the fps is below 1. Their 60mm macro lens and their auto focus bracketing works well. The slowness of the camranger is not an issue for the type of images I am doing- think product work.īoth options will cost roughly the same- especially if I buy a lens used. Or- try something like the camranger2 to use stacking on the sony- either the a7riv or A1. Then continue to use the d850 for stacking and tabletop work. I am torn between the nikon105 and sigma 105mm and use this for my macro work. I have a sony a7riv and the sony 90mm macro- and really really like this combo for images without stacking.īuy another nikon macro lens. I was using my nikon d850 which does a wonderful job- using the nikon 105macro vr lens- which I had borrowed long term. I still do a fair amount of tabletop macro- some of which requires focus stacking. I am a long long time nikon user that moved to sony a couple of years ago, for vision and health reasons only. ![]() This is a cross post- I also posted it in the macro forum ( with little response.)
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