|
|
Creating an image stack (Photoshop Extended)
For best results, images contained in
an image stack should have the same dimensions and mostly similar
content, such as a set of still images taken from a fixed viewpoint,
or a series of frames from a stationary video camera. The content of
your images should be similar enough to allow you to register or
align them to other images in the set.
- Combine the separate images into one multi-layered
image. See Duplicate layers.
Note: An image stack must contain at least two layers.
You can also combine images using a script (File >
Scripts > Load Files into Stack).
- Choose Select > All Layers.
Note: To make the Background layer selectable with the
All Layers command, you must first convert it to a regular layer.
- Choose Edit > Auto-Align Layers
and select Auto as the alignment option. If Auto does not create
good registration of your layers, try the Reposition option.
- Choose Layer > Smart Objects >
Convert to Smart Object.
- Choose Layer > Smart Objects >
Stack Mode and select a stack mode from the submenu.
For noise reduction, use the Mean or Median
plug‑ins.
For removing objects from the image, use the Median plug‑in.
The
output is a composite image the same size as the original image
stack. You may need to experiment with different plug‑ins to get
the best enhancement for a particular image.
To change the
rendering effect, choose a different Stack Mode from the submenu.
Stack rendering is not cumulative—each render effect operates on the
original image data in the stack and replaces previous effects.
Stack modesStack
modes operate on a per-channel basis only, and only on non-transparent pixels.
For example, the Maximum mode returns the maximum red, green, and blue
channel values for a pixel cross section and merges them into one composite
pixel value in the rendered image.
Rendering plug-in name
|
Result
|
Comments
|
Entropy
|
entropy = - sum( (probability of value)
* log2( probability of value) )
Probability of value = (number
of occurrences of value) / (total number of non-transparent pixels)
|
The binary entropy (or zero order entropy)
defines a lower bound on how many bits would be necessary to losslessly
encode the information in a set.
|
Kurtosis
|
kurtosis = ( sum( (value - mean)4 )
over non-transparent pixels ) / ( ( number of non-transparent pixels
- 1 ) * (standard deviation)4 ).
|
A measure of peakedness or flatness compared
to a normal distribution. The kurtosis for a standard normal distribution
is 3.0. Kurtosis greater than 3 indicates a peaked distribution,
and kurtosis less than 3 indicates a flat distribution (compared
to a normal distribution).
|
Maximum
|
The maximum channel values for all non-transparent
pixels
|
|
Mean
|
The mean channel values for all non-transparent pixels
|
Effective for noise reduction
|
Median
|
The median channel values for all non-transparent pixels
|
Effective for noise reduction and removal
of unwanted content from the image
|
Minimum
|
The minimum channel values for all non-transparent
pixels
|
|
Range
|
Maximum minus the minimum of the non-transparent
pixel values
|
|
Skewness
|
skewness = (sum( (value - mean)3 )
over non-transparent pixels ) / ( ( number of non-transparent pixels
- 1 ) * (standard deviation)3 )
|
Skewness is a measure of symmetry or asymmetry around
the statistical mean
|
Standard Deviation
|
standard deviation = Square Root(variance)
|
|
Summation
|
The sum channel values for all non-transparent pixels
|
|
Variance
|
variance = (sum( (value-mean)2 )
over non-transparent pixels ) / ( number of non-transparent pixels -
1)
|
|
Remove stack rendering Choose Layers > Smart Objects >
Stack Mode > None to remove any rendering from an image
stack and convert it back to a regular Smart Object.
Edit an image stackBecause an image stack is a Smart Object,
you can edit the original images that make up the stack layers at
any time.
Choose Layer > Smart Objects >
Edit Contents, or double-click the layer thumbnail. After you save
the edited Smart Object, the stack is automatically rendered with
the last rendering option applied to the stack.
Convert an image stackTo preserve rendering effects on an image
stack, convert the Smart Object to a regular layer. (You can copy
the Smart Object before converting, in case you want to later re‑render
the image stack.)
Choose Layer > Smart Objects >
Rasterize.
|