Well guys we (Kjott21 and I) are playing with my Cannon DSLR.. We are trying our hands are HDR (high Dynamic Range) photos.. Check out what we have so far.. Kjott21 is doing the processing on a few more that I will post as soon as he finished them.. Give us some input... !Thumbs Up
I love that first one. There is one other one that we have to post but I need to remove my plate from it. Hopefully we can get some better ones. I don't think we did too bad for our first attempt.
By "It doesn't help the image any IMHO" what do you mean?
HDR shots add more depth to your phots.. Utilizing the under exposed and over exposed photos you can add more shadows and accents that one would normally lose with a standart eposure shot.. It helps plenty if you know what your doing and process the different exposures properly..
LOL, I know CRAP about it.. LOL. Naah, I'm still trying to learn all the features.. There is a ton of things that these things will do, way more then my ability will allow me to do..
HDR does "lose proper coloring" however it evens out the exposure across the entire photo. By illuminating the darker areas, dulling out the brighter areas one has the ability to adjust the photo exposure. By adjusting the layers of exposure the photo regains all of it's detail in all the areas.. The detail that was lost in the darker area was illuminated as the detail in the brighter areas was brought back by dimming them out.. True the colors are squied a bit which can be adjusted in Post Processing (if you know how to do that which I don't) but the color issue is acceptable to me for the detail...
Definitly try it out.. But don't make our noob mistake.. HDR photos are best in dim light with multiple light sources.. You can't get a good final produce when all your exposure photos are over exposed by sunlight like our first few attempts.. We also really didn't know how to adjust it either.. Read up on those links, I learned A TON reading them..
i thought HDR implied a dynamic range of lighting. how can you have a dynamic(changing) range(many values between two set values) of light in a static photograph? unless you took the same photo multiple times with different exposures and blended them together to give the illusion of a dynamic range of light?
3 is the minimum. You can do as many adjustments to the exposure as the camera will allow. The more different exposures you have the more light/shadow detail you are going to pick up.
without intense computer editing. you cant take 3 pictures of the same crowd of pissed off people and not get substantial blurring. even if your camera could take 3 shots, adjust the f-stop and exposure in less then a second, you would still have bluring from motion.
there is a spot i usually go for car pics. its a parking garage at a local hospital. figure it would be a good place at night to take pics and try this out since it has a ton of over head dim lights. ill post them up if its presentable
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