HDR 1st attempt......

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P-E

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Ian
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I know its not everyone's cup of tea but for me it add's a little fun and I enjoy having a play.

So my first attempt.......have I got it all wrong or not a bad effort?

photomatix-trial.jpg
 
It's hard to tell your pics a bit small - you can go to to 800 pixels and 160kb. I'd say you're on the right track though, the shot has that HDR look about it, lacks a bit of colour perhaps?
 
Cheers CT.............I thought I had posted 600x400 :thinking:
 
647 X 446 actually, which of course includes your white border. :)
 
CT said:
647 X 446 actually, which of course includes your white border. :)

Lol your correct CT........I just had a senior moment.:lol:
 
I have lots of those! :D
 
cracking shot, and looks good too, a winner.
TFS
 
Everything looks good apart from the sky, seems a little grey and superimposed.
 
SammyC said:
Everything looks good apart from the sky, seems a little grey and superimposed.

I think that's because it didn't need to be HDR anyway. HDR works best with scenes with massive contrast ranges... that's what it's for - to compress those ranges so they're all present in a print that would otherwise be over/underexposed in parts. With this pic, HDR has been appled to an image that was probably not the contrastiest in the world to begin with. It's not backlit, and it had a nice blue sky... I would suggest there was no need for HDR.. it just makes it look flat and over-processed.

It's a nice photo... I actually think HDR ruins it. It would have been stronger without it.. assuming it was exposed correctly.
 
what is HDR? Its a nice image but the words across the middle don't do nuffin for it ;)
 
High Dynamic Range.

The spread of RAW for a single shot is about 5 stops, with high contrast scenery having a range of about 8 stops & the human eye having a 10 stop range. HDR helps you combine several exposures of same shot to aid the inclusion of the wider stops in your shot.

Nicked from CS2 help

The dynamic range (ratio between dark and bright regions) in the visible world far exceeds the range of human vision and of images that are printed or displayed on a monitor. But whereas human eyes can adapt to very different brightness levels, most cameras and computer monitors can capture and reproduce only a fixed dynamic range. Photographers, motion picture artists, and others working with digital images must be selective about what’s important in a scene because they are working with a limited dynamic range.

High Dynamic Range (HDR) images open up a world of possibilities because they can represent the entire dynamic range of the visible world. Because all the luminance values in a real-world scene are represented proportionately and stored in an HDR image, adjusting the exposure of an HDR image is like adjusting the exposure when photographing a scene in the real world. This capability lets you create blurs and other real-world lighting effects that look realistic. Currently, HDR images are used mostly in motion pictures, special effects, 3D work, and some high-end photography.
 
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