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My first HDR attempt

This is a discussion on My first HDR attempt within the Critiques forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; Hello everyone ! I start practice HDR, and I really need some help. So far I have a link and ...

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Lovin My first HDR attempt 06-13-2010, 10:05 PM
dante I always use PhotoMatix for... 06-14-2010, 12:59 AM
Lovin So, I'm using Lightroom 2.7... 06-14-2010, 02:14 AM
JAS_Photo I am just wondering why you... 06-14-2010, 03:23 AM
Mad Aussie I think JAS hits on the most... 06-14-2010, 03:48 AM
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  1. #1
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    Default My first HDR attempt

    Hello everyone !

    I start practice HDR, and I really need some help.
    So far I have a link and an article from DPP about HDR.
    I need to know what it's missing, or what what is wrong.
    Now it looks worst because I re-exported from Lightroom 2.7 to make it smaller.

    Thank you !

    "I suddenly understood that a photograph could fix eternity in an instant." - Henri Cartier Bresson

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    dante is offline Member
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    I always use PhotoMatix for the HDR generation. Then you have to do Tone Mapping to get the right result.

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    So, I'm using Lightroom 2.7 and Photomatix Pro -> Tone Mapping.
    "I suddenly understood that a photograph could fix eternity in an instant." - Henri Cartier Bresson

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    I am just wondering why you would need to HDR a night image? Since its all about shadows and light, wouldn't a long exposure with a very small aperture give you what you need? Just curious?

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    I think JAS hits on the most important point ... HDR isn't needed and tends to have little effect on a scene such as this one.

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    The whole idea of HDR is for where the range of light exceeds the capability of the camera and with that picture the range is beyond what the camera can capture but so far beyond that even with HDR you still can't see into the shadows cast by the trees so is really waisted.
    If you take for example a stained glass window in a church then with HDR you can get inside of church and window.
    The same applies to looking out of a window you can capture room and the view.
    Even where the range is not strictly required using HDR will reduce the grain in the shadows.
    However the program also is important. Using Photoshop CS4 I found it also changed the colours giving purple edges to clouds. And anything that moves is a problem including clouds using the bracketed function on the camera goes a long way to reducing the time between shots but people walking, wind turbines and like still cause problems.
    Picturenaut the free HDR program seems to do a better job than Photoshop CS4 with true HDR but many use HDR to get wow factor and distort the picture. If that's what you want look at "Lab Color" in Photoshop CS4 which will do same without having to take three or more images.
    As a picture your HDR is very good but as an example of HDR use it is not.
    This is a bad picture as such but it does show what HDR can do and you will note you can see all the detail under the aqueduct and yet the sky is not a white out only using HDR could I get that range.
    It also shows the problems with cloud colours which would have been better had I used Picturenaut instead of Photoshop CS4 but I was at college at the time and was forced to use CS4.

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