

- #Will helicon focus work with eos m6 cameras full
- #Will helicon focus work with eos m6 cameras software
The TS-E was used straight-on as a high-quality 24mm prime with. Indoor architectural photo, 5D (original), TS-E 24mm, 11 shots. Sample of product photography: 5D (original), 70-200mm F4L at 126mm, 6 shots. Note the little bit of gold blurring on the front ski. I have had good results with Helicon Focus. Tree lights and a floor lamp for lighting. Latest effort at f/4, iso 100, 0.8 seconds, 60 images from about 1.3 ft using the RP with the RF 85mm f/2 macro. Like the Canon EOS 90D announced at the same time, the EOS M6 II has a new 32.5Mp Dual Pixel CMOS AF sensor. It uses the EF-M mount, which is different from the mount used by Canon’s full-frame mirrorless cameras and Canon’s DSLRs. Find the source image that has the part you want in focus, set the brush size and border the way you need and brush in the piece of the source image. The Canon EOS M6 Mark II is an APS-C format mirrorless camera. For what it’s worth, I just learned you can brush in specific focus planes from source images if there are any issues with the choices the depth compositing tool made Once the composite is complete, select the Depth Compositing Editing Tool in DPP4.
#Will helicon focus work with eos m6 cameras full
I’m using an 85 mm on a full frame and stacking in DPP4. It has more megapixels (32.5 to 30. I’ve been mostly playing with ornaments on the tree with the tree and lights as backdrop. I just fitted the Canon 180mm F3.5 L Macro Lens onto my EOS-M6 (Mk I) using the Canon EF-M to EF Adapter and the Helicon FB Tube did indeed work. Every single technical advantage, bar ISO, goes to the Canon EOS M6 Mark II. Even the slightest breeze sends those flowers bobbing. Because of wind, it's harder to do higher mags in the field. I'll be posting those in the macro section. Since this, I've been doing some "field" stacks directly in the garden, at least until the snow arrived. I used a neweer ring light and natural light from one side. This stack was done indoors, with a plain white background, a piece of mounted photo canvas with legs added. Helicon is much, much faster, but Zerene makes re-touching easier. Turns out to be complicated - the size varies with aperture, focal length and with magnification! So I have a kind of cheat sheet/table. I actually did some calibration to see what the step sizes were. This was probably a 30 image stack, maybe more, stacked with Helicon Focus. Most of my stacks are done at f8 using step 3 in the camera settings.
#Will helicon focus work with eos m6 cameras software
Any shot details you can share? How many images? What software? Any special software settings? 1 - 10 in the bracketing, did you leave it at the default of 4 or change it for some reason?

My only ask in threads like this (love the image and clean stack here), is a little more of the execution.
