You drink alone then? ;0)

J

Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 19, 2015, at 3:29 PM, P.J. Alling <webstertwenty...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> It's not against my religion to visit Pentax Forums, but I refuse to take 
> communion with them.
> 
>> On 10/19/2015 6:07 PM, Darren Addy wrote:
>> If I'm not mistaken, the same effect can be achieved in-camera using
>> multiple exposure and chossing the appropriate blend mode.
>> A very informative thread on this subject can be found (for those of
>> you for whom it is not against your religion to visit pentaxforums)
>> at:
>> http://www.pentaxforums.com/forums/172-pentax-k-3/274453-tutorial-k-3-multi-exposure-modes-additive-average-bright.html
>> 
>> 
>>> On Mon, Oct 19, 2015 at 4:21 PM, Mark C <pdml-m...@charter.net> wrote:
>>> Actually that does work on my CS6 standard edition, nor does the process
>>> outlined in the video.
>>> 
>>> Both the method you outline below and also the method in the video are only
>>> enabled in Photoshop CC and CS Extended. I actually delved into that last
>>> spring and learned that the only way to average with standard CS6 is to
>>> manually adjust the layer opacity - I forgot my own research!
>>> 
>>> Nice shots from Devon - averaging give the water a smooth but not silky
>>> texture. I once read an article by  George Lepp (IIRC) who suggested putting
>>> a camera on a tripod and taking multiple exposures to soften moving water
>>> without creating the "silky water" effect. That was back in film days and
>>> multiple exposures was a simple way to combine multiple images...
>>> 
>>>> On 10/19/2015 9:17 AM, Mark Roberts wrote:
>>>> Mark C wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Thanks for posting that - I did not know how to automatically average
>>>>> layers in Photoshop so that will be very helpful! I've been doing it
>>>>> manually ala the technique they used with Gimp.
>>>> That video doesn't even show the easiest way of averaging Layers in
>>>> Photoshop. Here's the best way: From the FILE menu choose SCRIPTS and
>>>> from that sub-menu choose STATISTICS. You'll get a dialog box in which
>>>> you can choose the files you want (picking them individually,
>>>> targeting an entire directory or using files you have open); then use
>>>> the drop-down list in that dialog to choose the way you want to
>>>> combine them — "Mean" and "Median" are usually the best choices.
>>>> 
>>>> Click OK and Photoshop does the rest.
>>>> 
>>>> I used this technique for several shots I took in Devon this past
>>>> summer:
>>>> http://www.robertstech.com/temp/7df02413-16.jpg
>>>> http://www.robertstech.com/temp/7df02417-23.jpg
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
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>> 
> 
> 
> -- 
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> immortality through not dying.
> -- Woody Allen
> 
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