• Welcome to Camera Craniums: The Photography Community for Enthusiasts.
 
Members
Stats
  • Total Posts: 62,412
  • Total Topics: 5,705
  • Online today: 78
  • Online ever: 856 (January 21, 2020, 09:07:00 AM)
Users Online
  • Users: 0
  • Guests: 99
  • Total: 99
If you would like to make a donation to help with the running costs of the site, then a donation button has been added to the bottom of the page.  Thanks.
Temu £100 Coupon bundle o...Amazon Spring Deal: SanDi...🌸🌼 Get Ready to Blossom w...Marantz Professional MPM-...Google Pixel 7a and Pixel...JasmineSanDisk Ultra 64GB USB Fl...SanDisk 512GB Extreme PRO...GiaDo You Shoot Photos With ...Which eye do you use with...SanDisk 256GB Extreme PRO...Duracell Plus Alkaline 1....RØDE VideoMicro Compact O...I must be one of the rare...Learning Resources

HDR (informative article)

Started by Beaux Reflets, October 28, 2012, 09:45:55 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Beaux Reflets

:beer: Andy

"Light anchors things in place and gives perspective meaning."

The choices we make are rooted in reflection.

http://beauxreflets.blogspot.com/

Hinfrance

#1
Probably very good Andy, but it requires Photoshop, and I don't have £600 lying around for a bit of software.

You might want to have a look at Dynamic Photo HDR as an affordable HDR editor.

Howard  My CC Gallery
My Flickr
The theory seems to be that as long as a man is a failure he is one of God's children, but that as soon as he succeeds he is taken over by the Devil. H.L Mencken.

Beaux Reflets

I have not got Photoshop either for the same reason. I just found the basic practical explanations very informative even for manual HDR  images compiled using different exposures and blending them in layers. Are there any useful and good freebie HDR editing programs? although I do enjoy the longer hands on approach, rather than quick fix automation's that then need tweaking.
:beer: Andy

"Light anchors things in place and gives perspective meaning."

The choices we make are rooted in reflection.

http://beauxreflets.blogspot.com/

donoreo

Quote from: Hinfrance on October 28, 2012, 10:13:55 AM
Probably very good Andy, but it requires Photoshop, and I don't have £600 lying around for a bit of software.

You might want to have a look at Dynamic Photo HDR as an affordable HDR editor.
Or something completely free (in cost and it is open source software) http://qtpfsgui.sourceforge.net/ Luminance HDR. 

Hinfrance

Quote from: donoreo on October 28, 2012, 12:09:32 PM
Or something completely free (in cost and it is open source software) http://qtpfsgui.sourceforge.net/ Luminance HDR. 

Thanks for the link - the last time I looked at this it was truly dreadful - but that was years ago. I shall download it and have a fiddle with the new version forthwith ;)
Howard  My CC Gallery
My Flickr
The theory seems to be that as long as a man is a failure he is one of God's children, but that as soon as he succeeds he is taken over by the Devil. H.L Mencken.

Beaux Reflets

Quote from: donoreo on October 28, 2012, 12:09:32 PM
Quote from: Hinfrance on October 28, 2012, 10:13:55 AM
Probably very good Andy, but it requires Photoshop, and I don't have £600 lying around for a bit of software.

You might want to have a look at Dynamic Photo HDR as an affordable HDR editor.
Or something completely free (in cost and it is open source software) http://qtpfsgui.sourceforge.net/ Luminance HDR.

Will take a look - cheers for the link Donoreo
:beer: Andy

"Light anchors things in place and gives perspective meaning."

The choices we make are rooted in reflection.

http://beauxreflets.blogspot.com/

donoreo

I have only given it a quick play so I cannot say how good it is.  I have also never used any other HDR software.

Karen

I use Photomatix and find its very controllable.

jinky

Yes I think Photomatix is hard to beat. Don`t use it as much as I did with my D80 but still get great results when I dip in again. You can go over the top when the subject suits or my favourite activity is to present one to many of the HDR haters and them not realise it is an hdr. Did a print swap at a Leeds Flickr event once and a guy who saw HDR as the work of the devil loved it when he was able to get a landscape of mine. I loved it more when  I told him it was an hdr  :2funny:

donoreo

Quote from: jinky on October 29, 2012, 05:03:57 PM
Yes I think Photomatix is hard to beat. Don`t use it as much as I did with my D80 but still get great results when I dip in again. You can go over the top when the subject suits or my favourite activity is to present one to many of the HDR haters and them not realise it is an hdr. Did a print swap at a Leeds Flickr event once and a guy who saw HDR as the work of the devil loved it when he was able to get a landscape of mine. I loved it more when  I told him it was an hdr  :2funny:
To me that means you processed it correctly.  I do not like HDRs that look like HDRs. 

jinky

Fort me there is no correct or incorrect and different subjects might benefit from different processing. I did some shots in Valencia last year that looked wonderfully futuristic to me and suited the OTT HDR processing and I took the photos for me so why not. Similarly I processed some in a standard way - it was the hdrs that got the comments and had the wow factor. Depends what you are aiming for and I don`t see why anyone can state they hate HDR like the Leeds guy did when there are so many variations on the theme. You love or hate the resulting picture whether it is hdr or not and with photomatix you can blend images too so it`s a great tool.

Camera Craniums is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Program. This affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to products on Amazon.