HDR Photography: Difference between revisions
From Mike Beane's Blog
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{{Frame2|Image:Hdtest_tower_orig.jpg|Original|Image:Hdtest_tower_notones.jpg|HDR}} | {{Frame2|Image:Hdtest_tower_orig.jpg|Original|Image:Hdtest_tower_notones.jpg|HDR}} | ||
=Test 3: Dining Room Light= | |||
[[Image:Light2Test HDR.jpg]] | |||
=Real Test 3: River= | =Real Test 3: River= | ||
* 17 pictures ranging in exposures | * 17 pictures ranging in exposures |
Revision as of 00:46, 18 May 2007
This is a test jump into HDR photography. Hopefully it develops as I learn more, but it was so interesting I just took a leap at it.
Faux HDR
- First off, I cheated at this. I took 1 picture (which wasn't really a great picture to begin with) and manually manipulated the colors to over & under expose. For the first test I wanted to see the merge results.
- The results were rich in color. I shifted between 2 exposure spaces and the latter of the two was the richest.
- Having seen the combined difference, I'll work on learning on the Powershot S3 how to manipulate the over/under exposure and see what a true light picture results with.
Real Test 1: Flower Pot
- Flower pot on Porch. I took this a few hours after the faux test. Much better
- Pictures one and two are cropped sections of the flower pot. Note the detail in the HDR version.
- Picture three is the full HDR picture
- Picture four is a combination of all of the exposures (marked) and a grayscale strip to show the differences.
Real Test 2: Tower
- 21 pictures ranging in exposures
- Noted that there is a need to drop overly exposed pictures (95% white) from the batch
Test 3: Dining Room Light
Real Test 3: River
- 17 pictures ranging in exposures
File:Hdrtest-river-original.jpg |
Programs
- HDR Shop - V1 is free for non-commercial
- Photomatix - The older version is free (no tone tools)
- Apparently no alignment options
- Photoshop C2 or higher
- qtpfsgui
- Artizen - Save to .hdr for use with other programs (no branding)