That is a beautiful photograph! Well done! It makes me feel homesick for Ontario...
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That is a beautiful photograph! Well done! It makes me feel homesick for Ontario...
Though I don't understand one bit of the explanation, I want to say that I LOVE the result!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jessika
Your camera has the setting - press menu, go to the second menu, and it should be the first option - AEB (auto exposure bracketing.) Press OK and then the right arrow until all three brackets are at the settings you want. Press OK to set.
It's best the mount the camera on a tripod. The setting takes three different photos are three different exposures, so it's best to take a picture of a still object.
Do a good search - there's a good torturial somewhere that I used a while back for my first HDR for the XTi. :)
That's the photo matrix's words from the program that lets me do an HDR photo.Quote:
Originally Posted by MommyOf3cats
I'm going to be getting a tripod so the HDR photos will be allot more clear.
Would be nice to see other PT members doing HDR photos if they can! :)
Wow, a beautiful winter scenery!
I was wondering the same, so I opened it in Photoshop to see it better. I was able to get a little more detail out of the text. It says "Photomatrix".Quote:
Originally Posted by MommyOf3cats
The link below is a HDR application that makes this type of photo processing easy - there are examples. It's not free though. Until you pay for it, it'll insert a watermark on the images you create with it.
http://www.hdrsoft.com/
OH I understand how to do it manually; I always mess with my white balance. :)
But I will look for that button right now... I had no idea it was even there (goes to show I read the manual, eh? Actually normally I read manuals for EVERYTHING, but for this camera there's just so many features it can be confusing.)
Thank you SO MUCH!
You can also essentially do that to any image in photoshop. When you say the program "puts them together" that sounds like changing the blending modes on each layer.
That is beautiful! I attempted making one, turned out pretty cool. :D
http://i26.tinypic.com/119xc21.jpg
Original
http://i30.tinypic.com/10endxu.jpg
Thanks so much! I just bought a tripod so I should be able to do it. I was also wondering why you just couldn't take the same pic and change different layers in Photoshop. I wish I had known about this for my "tree in Maryland" pics. Would have been awesome! Maybe I'll experiment in Photoshop with those pics, first.Quote:
Originally Posted by kittycats_delight
From my understanding, especially after reading the wikipedia article, it isnt the same as messing with the image in photoshop. Because in photoshop yes you can lighten one area and darken another, but essentially what this does is take one "base" picture, one picture overexposed and one picture underexposed so when you combine all three you have more detail in the lighter and darker areas of the picture that the "original" just wouldnt have. If this makes sense?Quote:
Originally Posted by Suki Wingy
EDIT: After some googling I found some tutorials that really explained it... although I don't know my software well enough to combine them to play around with the levels yet (I haven't messed with image editing beyond brightness/contrast and sharpness and resizing in years...) so I'm trying to get ahold of PS CS2. But until then, I've figured out how to take the pics using my camera :)
For those that are interested:
http://backingwinds.blogspot.com/200...dr-images.html
http://www.howtotakehdrphotos.com/tips-and-tricks/
Good luck!
I'll post results once I figure this out a bit more. What program are you guys using to create yours? All I have is Paint Shop Pro and Photoshop CS and I know it won't work in PSP and heck if I've NEVER been able to figure PS CS... lol.