![]() My use of Helicon Remote is discussed in the video at the bottom of the page I won’t linger on it here. I don’t have a motorized setup, so I couldn’t test this feature. I understand that even if I were using my Canon MP-E macro lens (a wonderful macro-only lens with no autofocus), Helicon Remote can control motorized macro rails. This isn’t a macro setup (1:1), so I could use the camera’s focusing mechanism. My camera was tethered to the computer, letting Remote do the driving. In this instance, I started with Helicon Remote. Being able to drop in your raw images makes life easier and gets you faster into the work of making the “real” image. What if you’re shooting with one of the 50+ megapixel cameras? You would shoot a stack of, say, 20 images and then have to convert them all to TIF before you can import them into your chosen focus stacking program. Of course, it retains the ability to use your camera raw files (no need to convert to TIF or jpg). I am incredibly impressed with how much Helicon Focus has improved since I first used it. Recently, however, I was preparing to be a guest lecturer for a college class to demonstrate focus stacking, and it seemed only fair that I should take another look at Helicon Focus. But I was successfully using the other software and Photoshop to stack my images. Time passed, and I don’t even remember why I first switched. It was good, and I used it for a while, then switched to another program. Several years ago, when I first began photographing feathers, I tried some software called Helicon Focus.
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