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dasarpan007 OP t1_j655d0k wrote

Yes, multiple shots with same shutter speed & settings, but focussed at different points as the plants in the immediate foreground are quite closed. Not different focal lengths for this image as those peaks are quite big, however, I use that technique from time to time.

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gloridhel t1_j65dtjg wrote

Focus stacking?

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[deleted] t1_j65g305 wrote

[deleted]

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that_guy_you_kno t1_j65wv9d wrote

So not a single exposure.

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[deleted] t1_j65xrbm wrote

[deleted]

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that_guy_you_kno t1_j665ixw wrote

You're either incorrect or lying to people. An exposure is a shutter cycle. If you blend multiple shutter cycles into an image it is not by definition a single exposure.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exposure_(photography)#:~:text=An%20%22exposure%22%20is%20a%20single,of%20photographs%20in%20one%20image.

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TrebekCorrects t1_j668ybv wrote

Yes that is, by definition, multiple exposures but at different focal planes.

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FLATLANDRIDER t1_j66bjtd wrote

Yea this person is wrong. If you ended up with multiple files that you then stacked/blended together to make the final image, then the image is by definition a multiple exposure image.

To put it another way; the camera sensor was exposed multiple times to capture the image, hence being a multiple exposure image.

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TrebekCorrects t1_j66ccxb wrote

When I read their initial setup, I wondered how tf they could rack focus from the plants to the mountains during a single shutter click without lens warping or any blurring.

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eye_spi t1_j6630u8 wrote

Is this a distinction made possible by digital cameras/photography? What limited experience I have is from traditional film, and I have trouble envisioning what you say in that context.

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FLATLANDRIDER t1_j66bmxd wrote

The sensor was exposed multiple times to take the image though. It's a multiple exposure image.

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grayrains79 t1_j66kwya wrote

TIL that photography is a lot more complicated than I thought it was.

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ipoopedonce t1_j65mn4g wrote

Can you give the focal length? And general angle to take these photos? Beautiful by the way

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dasarpan007 OP t1_j65o708 wrote

Most of these kinds of shots are taken at 15 mm (which is the widest I have available). The angle totally depends on what I want in my composition, for example in this shot I wanted that stream and the whole reflection of the mountain in the midground, so I was higher from the ground. In some shots, there is nothing interesting in the midground, and so I am more closed to the ground and immediate foreground. Hope it helps

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