View Full Version : Practicing Faux HDR
theantiquetiger
10-22-2011, 02:47 AM
I learned the basic of faux HDR and have been practicing. I feel this is my best outcome so far
***after uploading, the first image (the HDR image) was compressed, so it is a little soft. It was right at 275 before uploading***
Marko
10-22-2011, 10:47 AM
I'm sorry AT, i must disagree.
The purpose of HDR is normally to get a better range of tones in an image.
In this case, to my eye, you have actually reduced the range of tones and your HDR image looks underexposed.
The original (shot 2) is much better than your HDR. (I also don't think it 'needs' an HDR treatment)
Hope that may help - Marko
theantiquetiger
10-22-2011, 11:06 AM
I'm sorry AT, i must disagree.
The purpose of HDR is normally to get a better range of tones in an image.
In this case, to my eye, you have actually reduced the range of tones and your HDR image looks underexposed.
The original (shot 2) is much better than your HDR. (I also don't think it 'needs' an HDR treatment)
Hope that may help - Marko
Thanks, Marko. The non-HDR image above to me just looks like a snapshot. It seems to be a flat, dull image. The "HDR" image above has life to me. I do realize it seems underexposed, but the parts I love about the image are the red in the wood ceiling, how the chairs kind of pop out.
I do know I have a long way to go, but other than the dark area on the left side, I really like the effect. I must say again, it was 274.9kb before I uploaded it, so it was compressed, making it a little soft.
Marko
10-22-2011, 11:11 AM
With respect, it has nothing to do with compression.....This HDR does not work imo. The original needs some dodging and burning is all. It's 100 times better than the HDR.
You are the boss of your own image of course. I just call them like I see em on an excellent calibrated monitor.
kevin99989
10-22-2011, 11:37 AM
I agree with Marco - and i like the original image also (before processing).
What were your processing parameters - ie - how much fill light did you use? Did you bring up the contrast and saturation?
my suggestion would be to bring up the fill light parameters - there might be too much contrast in there now. But I see what you're trying to do....
theantiquetiger
10-22-2011, 12:10 PM
I agree with Marco - and i like the original image also (before processing).
What were your processing parameters - ie - how much fill light did you use? Did you bring up the contrast and saturation?
my suggestion would be to bring up the fill light parameters - there might be too much contrast in there now. But I see what you're trying to do....
I was just following a simple single-image HDR technique I found on YouTube.
I adjusted the color curves a little and made a duplicate layer with a mask. I made that layer B/W and inverted the colors and added a softglow. I then moved the opticy (spl) to about 75% and set to soft light. I then merged the layers and adjusted the color levels to my liking.
Does this make sense?
Gremlich
10-22-2011, 12:54 PM
check this link (http://gimpology.com/submission/view/fake_hdr_look_in_gimp)
Gimpology seems to be the best place to stop and read.
theantiquetiger
10-22-2011, 01:18 PM
check this link (http://gimpology.com/submission/view/fake_hdr_look_in_gimp)
Gimpology seems to be the best place to stop and read.
I did see that link but it was a little over my head. The one I used has about the same steps, just not as much in depth.
Gremlich
10-22-2011, 01:33 PM
I did see that link but it was a little over my head. The one I used has about the same steps, just not as much in depth.
Pixels are free, the only thing it costs is your time.
theantiquetiger
10-22-2011, 07:28 PM
Pixels are free, the only thing it costs is your time.
OK, Grem, I followed the link you posted. What you think?
Original
http://www.photography.ca/Forums/attachments/f2/13893d1319266041-practicing-faux-hdr-store2small1.jpg
Old HDR attempt:
http://www.photography.ca/Forums/attachments/f2/13892d1319266034-practicing-faux-hdr-store2hdrhdr.jpg
New HDR attempt:
edbayani11
10-23-2011, 02:30 AM
agree with everybody that the original is much better. the "hdr" is just more saturated in color but it has so many dark areas with no details.
since you're doing faux hdr, why not put some detail by painting like the backs of the chair and maybe the top shelfline on the top left of the image. as marko says a little dodging and burning and some sharpening would help a lot.
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6037/6271752042_5f19a9cb00_z.jpg
Marko
10-23-2011, 12:58 PM
When the HDR has LESS tonal range than the original, it's a poorly done HDR.
And an image with a full tonal range doesn't need HDR....If I wanted to practice my HDR, I would choose another image, not this one.
thoughton
10-25-2011, 08:38 AM
Your second HDR attempt is about a bazillion times better than the first :) Although to be frank I also can't see much more detail in the shadows, which would normally be a hallmark of HDR.
The softness was killing the first attempt. In fact I wouldn't even have called it softness, it just looked out of focus to me. I don't believe that mere JPEG compression could cause such extreme softness either. I'd ditch that HDR technique and stick to the new one :)
scorpio_e
10-28-2011, 03:41 PM
The second attempt is much better. The image is a bit underexposed too . I agree with Marko and would suggest trying HRD on another image.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.
SEO by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.