Another one to try is Nik HDR Efex Pro 2
very easy to use.
http://www.niksoftware.com/hdrefexpro/usa/index.php?view=intro/main.shtml
Stu
Dynamic Photo HDR 5 for me, prefer it over photomatix
samems said:Guys, if I take 3 bracketed shots, what do I do next? Do I need to put them together in say, Adobe first before going to photomatix
I'd just bung them in photomatix and see the results, once you start getting your head around it, then try tweaking each image before hand.![]()
Kerioak said:If anyone has CS5 have they tried the builtin in software for HDR and how does it compare?
Ive used CS5 and have photomatix, CS5 does the job very well, but you don't have tonemapping. Tonemapping in HDR really brings the picture to life and gives it a fake / painted look. (which I really like, although some don't) if you get photomatix software you can use tonemapping alone as a plug in for photoshop.
swanseamale47 said:You do have the tone mapping in CS5, it's done strangly in 2 stages I'll admit, you merge to hdr from file menu (file/automate/merge to hdr) to get the 32 bit hdr file, then for the tonemapping step you go to image/ajustment/hdr toning for the tonemapping.
If you have CS6 theres an even better cheat way, but it doesn't work in CS5.
If you have CS6 theres an even better cheat way, but it doesn't work in CS5.
mmmm, what's this cheat then Wayne?
If you shoot your bracketed images hand-held, PS aligns the images better than photomatix; then if you save the resulting file as a 32 bit openEXR file and drop that into photomatix for tonemapping it works out quite nicely.