NEW Sony a7R V - Tips & Tricks for Pixel Shift Multi Shooting for Stunning Images

NEW Sony a7R V - Tips & Tricks for Pixel Shift Multi Shooting for Stunning Images

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NEW Sony a7R V - Tips & Tricks for Pixel Shift Multi Shooting for Stunning Images
This video is a comprehensive tutorial on how to get the best out of the Pixel Shift Multi Shooting feature of the Sony A7R V, the Sony A1 and various other Sony Alpha cameras. On the Sony A7R V the Multi Shooting feature generally works very well, in contrast to previous Sony Alpha cameras. But what to do if Sony’s Imaging Edge software produces a blurry or low quality stacked high resolution image, maybe even with unwanted artefacts? In this video I show an example of such a case and how to nevertheless produce a super-high resolution image via an action in Photoshop. I also show two stunning images taken in Zurich and Singapore where Imaging Edge actually delivered a perfect quality super-high resolution image. This video teaches you everything you need to know about Sony’s Pixel Shift Multi Shooting feature. See also my new video "Sony a7R V + Sony 20-70 f/4 vs Sony 24-70 f/2.8 GM II": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOlRW1Jsly8 Content: 00:00 Introduction 02:03 The Pixel Shift Multi Shooting feature on the Sony A7R V 02:52 How Pixel Shift Multi Shooting works 03:29 Images from two shooting locations: Zurich and Singapore 04:33 Looking at a single shot night photography taken in Zurich 04:52 Looking at 16 frames shot in Multi Shooting mode 05:48 Lesson learnt: never shoot an image series in AWB 06:07 Sony’s Imaging Edge Multi Shooting software: only .ARW files 06:44 I typically do not use Sony’s Imaging Edge for post-processing 07:44 Processing Multi Shooting frames in Imaging Edge 09:23 The stacked image out of Imaging Edge is blurry and not good 10:49 The 16 frames from Multi Shooting are really good and useable 11:23 It takes 5 steps to stack and compose the 16 frames in Photoshop 11:56 Step No.1: loading the 16 frames into a stack in Photoshop 12:46 Step No.2: increasing the image size to the target resolution 13:46 Step No.3: auto-aligning the 16 layers / images 14:24 Step No.4: giving each layer an equally distributed opacity weight 15:42 Step No.5: flattening 16 layers into one layer, exporting the image 16:25 Suggesting automation of the process via a Photoshop action 16:46 Imaging Edge Multishot image vs Photoshop Multishot image 18:20 Processing 16 Singapore images in Sony’s Imaging Edge 18:56 Processing 16 Singapore images via my Photoshop stacking action 20:18 Comparing the results from Imaging Edge and Photoshop stacking 20:34 In this case, Sony’s Imaging Edge did a really good job 22:28 Another example where Sony’s Imaging Edge worked very well See also my other related videos and subscribe to my channel for more content. NEW Sony a7R V - 70 Tips & Tricks & Settings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmOEmPUd3G8 NEW Sony a7R V vs Sony A1 | Full Comparison https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVRCTVcZsH8&list=PLh9EoIn0-OYR62wm-x7nKMrcRPx5uWQwj&index=166 Music (if applicable): epidemicsound.com (licensed) storyblocks.com (licensed) motionarray.com (licensed) #Sony #SonyA7RV #SonyA1 #SonyA7RIV