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HDR image generated using Photomatix Pro.

This spot is a hidden treasure on Koh Phangan behind some private beach front residences. It's the only location on the island with mangroves. I took the shot using in camera HDR but afterwards processed the originals using HDRsoft. Normally i'm not a big fan of the surreal style but in this case it looked great on the trees and leaves.

Trial Version

www.hdrsoft.com/

 

Also used Topaz Labs Adjust

www.topazlabs.com

I just returned from my first visit to Yosemite. Wow! I wish that I had went before now. After all the rain, all the waterfalls were going gang busters. I think there maybe a few new waterfalls this spring. I have not processed everything yet but I think this may be my favorite image from the trip.

 

Technically, this is my first real fisheye shot (with my full-frame 5D). This is also a high-dynamic range (HDR) image with exposure bracketing of 10 stops! I have started using Photomatix (www.hdrsoft.com). It works like magic in difficult lighting conditions like this scene.

My first try at HDR picture... just read a few interesting stuff on HDR photography on here: www.hdrsoft.com/ and thought i'd give it a try so here we go, the view from my room...

 

I downloaded the free trial version of Photomatix to create this and then used photoshop to remove those annoying watermarks u get all over the picture with the trial version.

Image captured in Port Royal South Carolina back in 2011. This is a handheld bracketed shot run through HDRSoft 32 bit Lightroom plugin for HDR. Look closely at the masts on the shrimp boats, there are pelicans on most of the masts.

My first HDR project

I had a little wander at the weekend around the church area of Branston Village. I've been reading Photography forums, blogs and magazines on improving landscape photography and thought I'd try bracketing my shots to retain more detail.

 

After reading up on the HDR groups discussions pages I read Trey Ratcliff's website on HDR and downloaded HDRSoft Photomatix Pro to try it out and this is the final outcome. A little more dramatic than my usual shots but I tried not to over do the toning during the HDR process.

Carl, Drew & Craig moving Drew out of Hopkins Hall - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL - 16 May 2009

Visit to Concrete City with fellow photographers: Curtis Solanick, Brian Bukeavich, Lewis De Joseph, Marty Straub and Dave Cohen.

 

Since purchasing MacPhun's new HDR software, AuroraHDR Pro over the holidays, I made sure to capture plenty of bracketed exposures to jump head-first into the program (I've used HDRsoft's Photomatix Pro dating back to late 2006)

 

Concrete City

Nanticoke, Pennsylvania

Thursday, January 7th, 2016

 

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(© 2008 Príamo Melo) This is my first HDR image published. The scene was way too contrasty, the sky was nicely bright and beautiful, very warm, but the camera metering was rendering the city too dark, as you can see below. I decided to take multiple exposures (0.1sec, 0.2sec, 0.4sec and 0.8sec @ f/25, 117mm, being 0.2sec the suggested camera metering setting for the shutter speed at this aperture) to merge later digitally. I used a trial version of Photomatix, as you can read in the photo. I know some people boost the tone mapping process to create artistic views in their work, but here I just wanted to get the same view my eyes provided me in that gorgeous sunset. Whenever a photograph in my gallery receives a HDR treatment, be sure I'll let you know!

 

(© 2008 Príamo Melo) Esta é minha primeira imagem com tratamento HDR publicada. A cena tinha um contraste muito grande, o céu estava claro e bonito, tons quentes, mas o sistema de fotometria da câmera estava resultando numa cidade muito escura, como você pode ver abaixo. Decidi realizar múltiplas exposições (0.1sec, 0.2sec, 0.4sec and 0.8sec @ f/25, 117mm, sendo 0.2sec a velocidade do obturador sugerida pelo sistema de fotometria da câmera para essa abertura) para fundir digitalmente depois. Usei uma versão de teste do Photomatix, como você pode ler na foto. Sei que algumas pessoas exageram no processo de mapeamento de tonalidades para criar visões artísticas em seu trabalho, mas aqui apenas quis obter a mesma visão que meus olhos me deram naquele pôr-do-sol deslumbrante. Sempre que uma fotografia aqui na minha galeria receber um tratamento HDR, tenha certeza que lhe avisarei!

"TADAAAAAM..." et voilà ! :D

 

Pas mal non? Et je n'ai ni retouché le contraste ni la lumière ni les couleurs...

(Mieux en grand format)

 

...C'est ça le triple effet HDRI !!! (Avec le logiciel Photomatix Pro !)

 

Mmm...peut-être un chouilla foncé !? :/

  

En fait non ! :)

    

Si en fait ! :(

         

Tout compte fait, non ! :D

 

FOROGRAFLARINIZI HDRsoft Photomatix Pro ile düzenleyin bu yazılım Resim düzenleme programıdır renksiz karanlık resimlerinizi bile renklendirebilirsiniz;

yüksek kontrastlı resimlerinizinde gölge veya kaliteığınızı kendinize göre en uygun şekilde ekleyebilirsiniz

 

 

  

www.bedavaindir.xyz/hdrsoft-photomatix-pro-5-1-3-32-64-bi...

My first experiments with HDR, high dynamic range--three shots of the same scene taken at different exposures (using AEB and high-speed shooting) and combined with HDRsoft.

The house in HDR. Thanks to Rebeccas Dad for the originals I used to make it.

 

Made using this tool: www.hdrsoft.com/index.html

cathedral in Perouges My first try in HDR

 

Photos shot on my Canon 550d using Magic Lantern.

The images were post-processed with Photomatix 5 using the Fusion Real Estate method to create HDRs of each frame. The video was put together with VirtualDub.

Berry College in Rome Georgia. This is a bracketed shot using Promote Control. Brackets were post processed using Lightroom and HDRSoft 32 bit merge to HDR plugin.

Shot with my Canon EOS 70D. Post processed in HDRSoft Photomatix, Adobe Lightroom, and Topaz Labs Clean/Adjust/Simplify.

Shot with my Canon EOS 70D. Post processed in HDRSoft Photomatix, Adobe Lightroom, and Topaz Labs Clean/Adjust/Simplify.

This one's taken during a boardwalk through the Daintree Rainforest. The water and the curly vines just made it such a great cliché for a Rainforest photograph.

 

This is an HDR from 3 shots, tone mapped in Photomatix.

Light rain / drizzle this afternoon... I ventured out anyway because I was itching to shoot some photos and run them through Photomatix. :)

 

Back Mountain Recreation - Lehman, Pennsylvania

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

Five Three exposures post-processed in Asobe Lightroom and PhotomatixPro by HDRsoft.

 

Carrizo Plain National Monument is described on pages 98-100 of my 320-page guidebook Photographing California Vol. 2 - South.

Yes - today another red sunset over West Kowloon, Hong Kong.

(15-04-2011)

(You can only make a realistic sunset by using HDR technique)

Este es un Making-Of de estas Fotos:

www.flickr.com/photos/vdbruck/2279858538/

www.flickr.com/photos/vdbruck/2272587015/

 

No se todas las palabras espicificas de Photoshop en castellano. Si algien puede traducir las palabras, po rfavor mandame un flickrmail.

  

1.) "Al principio fue la idea". Este es la parte mas importante - la fase de planificacion. Aquí tengo que

considerar que quiero hacer exactamente, cuales son mis posibilidades, que equipo necesito (maquillaje, ropa, atrezo), donde puedo realizarlo y como es la luz.

Cuando tengo una idea, siempre la escribo o la pinto en mi "Blackbook". Ahora tengo una pequeña coleccion de ideas que estan esperando su realizacion.

No tiene sentido planificar las fotos en detalle si aun no conoces las circunstancias - que quiere o puede hacer el modelo, que puedo realizar en verdad, que localizaciones tengo, etc.,,

 

2a/b) Que pena que el original no tuviera esta arena volando. Pero aun así, me gusta. Por eso he hecho una pequeña composicion. He robado la arena de otra foto ;-)

Me gusta la luz en triangulo: dos flashes detras del modelo y un flash delante. Tienes que utilizar Gobos, Snoots, Flags y Grids para evitar el "Lensflare" pero en aquel momento no tenía ese equipo.

 

3.) Para alcanzar este look el HDR (High Dynamic Range) y "Tonemapping" es la parte mas importante. Por eso voy a describir este proceso algo mas.

Normalmente necesitas una secuencia de exposiciones para hacer un HDR. El objetivo es capturar todas las informaciones de situacion si la camara esta fuera de linea.

Por ejemplo: si hay sol, la gama de contrastes enter sol y sombra normalmente es demasiaso para el sensor de la camara. Para capturar todas las informaciones necesitas varias exposiciones (normalmente 3 (+/- 2 f-stops) o 5 (+/- 1 F-stop).

En este caso - y siempre si hay accion - capturar varias exposiciones no es posible. Por eso he revelado varias exposiciones de RAW (-4, -2, 0, +2, +4) y he abierto estos con Photomatix.

Photoshop puede procesar un HDR tambien, pero no el segundo paso: "Tonemapping". El HDR ahora tiene demasiadas informaciones para mostrar en la pantalla o en papel. Reducir controladamente las informaciones es imprescindible; y Photoshop no puede hacerlo facilmente.

Por eso necesito Photomatix o tambien EasyHDR. Estos Programas tienen varios ajustadores y controlarlos depende de la foto y es una question de intuición y experiencia.

Solo puedo decir, que un gran problema con HDR son los "Halos". Halos son regiones alrededor de bordes de contraste que brillan.

Para prevenir los halos, una posibilidad es poner el ajustador de luminosidad en su posicion máxima y ajustar todo alrededor de este reglaje.

Otra posibilidad es procesar la foto despues de "tonemapping" en photoshop con "Layers and Masks" utilizando "Dodge and Burn".

 

4.) Para el resto trabajo en Photoshop, he añadido la arena utilizando "Transform>Warp" y "Layermask"para adaptarlo al fondo del original.

Tambien he retocado los "Lensflares": basicamente un "Adjustmentlayer" de gradacion con "Layermask" por el tamaño de circulo.

 

5.) Correcciones de color global y en detalle: especialmente alrededor de "lensflare".

 

6./7.) Las tecnicas estan descritas en esta discusión: www.flickr.com/groups/strobist/discuss/72157594577686705/

Me gusta mucho el procesado con "Filter>sharpening>Unsharpeningmask". La fuerza del efecto debe estar entre 40 y 100 y el radio mas de 30.

En este caso, con algunas tecnicas tambien tendrias el problema de "Halos". En estos momentos, solo podrías compensar ese efecto colateral con "Layermask" y "Dogde/Burn".

Ademas podria ser que este efecto no estuviera perfecto para toda la foto. Quizas queda bien para motivo principal pero no para el fondo...

Por eso necesito "Lazermask" otra vez para amortiguar el efecto.

 

8.) He refinado el contraste global y recogido la saturacion un poco.

 

9.) He cambiado los colores a una tonalidad mas calida.

 

Mas informaciones:

 

HDR:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_range_imaging

stuckincustoms.com/2006/06/06/548/

www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/high-dynamic-range.htm

hdr101.com/

www.cre-aid.nl/2006/06/13/hdr-high-dynamic-range-workshop/

www.flickr.com/groups/hdr/

www.flickr.com/groups/l4/discuss/72157594241560739/

flickr.com/photos/stevacek/

tutorialblog.org/hdr-tutorials-roundup/

www.cybergrain.com/tech/hdr/

www.hdrsoft.com/

 

Tutorials Photoshop:

www.todo-photoshop.com/

www.webtaller.com/construccion/diseno/programa/photoshop/

www.good-tutorials.com/tutorials/photoshop

www.tutorialized.com/tutorials/Photoshop/1

photoshoptutorials.ws/

 

"Dave Hill Look"

www.flickr.com/groups/strobist/discuss/72157594577686705/

 

Libros en espaöol

Todos los libros de Katrin Eisman, Scott Kelby, Dan Margulis

It's 110 miles from here to Las Vegas, but the light pollution is clearly visible to the southesst.

ahaaaa, finally cracked this HDR lark...

18 frame High Dynamic Range image, compiled, tone mapped and rendered with HDRsoft Photomatix

 

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My first attempt at HDR using the trial version of Photomatix Pro. This is a normal photo exposed for the house.

Near Avebury, Wiltshire, UK. This neolithic hill was entirely built by hand, about 4600 years ago. More info on Wikipedia..

 

Originally taken by Tehm, I sliced the image into separate images that showed differing levels of exposure - from just the clouds, to just the hill with an overexposed sky. This was done artificially in Photoshop using curves, and then combined into an HDR image using Photomatix. It's not a particularly great photo, but I think that it does illustrate the potential in the software, especially if you are able to combine real shots taken at different exposures.

 

See Silbury Hill on Google Maps [?]

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