Photography podcast #59 talks about HDR (High dynamic range) photography in an interview with fashion photographer and HDR instructor Joseph Cartright. In this podcast we discuss how to create an HDR photograph and be warned, this is an intermediate level podcast. That said, Joseph reviews many of the terms that confuse digital photographers these days, so part of the podcast (especially the beginning) reviews concepts relevant to all digital photography. In a nutshell an HDR image is made of 2 or more shots where the same scene is photographed with bracketed exposures and then put together with software in order to extend the dynamic range (get additional information in the highlights, midtones and shadows) of the scene.
Here’s a few terms as explained by Joseph that are good to absorb right away;
– Latitude — Refers to how much you can be ‘off’ of the correct exposure and still have a usable image.
– Dynamic range — Refers to the usable range of data you can capture between the highlights and the shadows before you lose data. (If you overexpose too much there is no data in the whites or highlights and if you underexpose too much there is no data in the blacks or shadows).
Links mentioned in this podcast and HDR references — Joseph Cartright Photography
Software:
Photomatix — http://www.hdrsoft.com/
FDR tools — http://fdrtools.com/front_e.php
Software overview — http://wiki.panotools.org/HDR_Software_overview
Reference Sites:
http://www.hdrlabs.com/siggraph/
http://www.hdrlabs.com/siggraph/index_files/Witte_HDRI_Tips_Tricks.pdf
http://www.creativepro.com/article/photo-murals-make-you-think-big-really-big
HDR tutorial by Trey Ratcliff
Assignments on the bulletin board:
December photo assignment — The Holidays
December assignment — Photographing words — Winter
Thanks as always to‚ Steven K,‚ Susan, EJC, Dan, JK and aophoto who posted a blog comment about our last podcast. Thanks also to Mark3351, Alex Ross rana, djKianoosh, Rikki, eroder, The_Camera_Poser and benjamindicaprio for joining our bulletin board and posting a few times. We LOVE comments and suggestions so please send more.
If you are looking at this material on any other site except Photography.ca — Please hop on over to the Photography.ca blog and podcast and get this and other photography info directly from the source. I Subscribe with iTunes I Subscribe via RSS feed I Subscribe with Google Reader I Subscribe for free to the Photography podcast — Photography.ca and get all the posts/podcasts by Email
You can download this photography podcast directly by clicking the preceding link or listen to it almost immediately with the embedded player below.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download