Once stacked, you may notice 'checkerboard' transparency at the very edge of your stack group. We recommend against attempting to create live stacks with hundreds of images. Live stacking is designed to work with tens of images, not hundreds. You can manually align layers if auto-alignment isn't 100% accurate. Your images are blended and presented in a Live Stack Group in the Layers panel. Select the layer's perspective filter layer and adjust corner handles on the page. Check Live Alignment to add a live perspective filter to each pixel layer in the stack this allows the perspective of any layer to be adjusted after stacking without affecting its pixel layer (this may affect performance depending on size and number of images to be stacked).The former applies a perspective adjustment to each image the latter repositions and/or sizes the image layer. Choose a Perspective or Scaling operation from the menu to allow for successful auto-alignment.(Optional) Uncheck Automatically Align Images to manually align images later in the Layers panel.Click Open to add the images to the stack list. From the dialog, click Add to locate and select your images for blending.Could be used with stacked video frames (within the same scene or shot). Entropy-analytical: represents the number of bits required to encode information in the stack.Darker results represent greater noise and less tonal uniformity (more pixels further away from dominant gray level). A brighter result represents low noise levels and a tonal uniformity (most pixels at dominant gray level). Kurtosis-analytical: detects the peakedness of an image.Can be used to determine tonal and spatial differences between images. Skewness-analytical: highlights edge detail and indicates the intensity of pixel value distribution.More intense distributions are shown very clearly. Variance-analytical: as Standard Deviation, indicates how pixel values are spread between images.Useful for object removal as it clearly indicates areas that will be averaged out with a Median operator. Standard Deviation-analytical: measures the distribution of information between the images.Usually results in overexposure, but can be used to lighten very underexposed imagery. Total-produces the total value of pixels from each image.Can be used to increase tonal range if used with bracketed exposures. Mid-Range-uses the middle pixel values from each image.Good for analyzing what has changed between each image. Range-indicates areas that change across the image stack.Suitable for exposure blending where the subject is darker than the background. Minimum-uses the minimum pixel values from each image.Can be used for creative exposure blending where the subject is lighter than the background. Maximum-uses the maximum pixel values from each image.
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