mverta wrote:
But you can fake it by taking a single LDR and adjusting copies of it to "look" like you'd taken it at different f-stops.
which doesn't make much sense, does it? there is no hdr that you can "fake" out of a ldr image, you just take a clamped range from 0 to 1.0 (and in leo's file doesn't even get to 1, it's clamped around 0.9) and store it in a hdr format.
sure hdr shop won't tell you there's not much of a hdr in that picture, but what you get it's not really useful. a photograph like leo's, if taken with multiple exposures and then combined in a hdr file, should contain, for example, information in very bright areas like the windows (which can't be taken in a single ldr picture where it's clamped to 1, and simply recorded as white). stopping it down you should actually see the exterior (which would have been correctly exposed shortening the exposure time), but in this case you don't get anything, just white fading into gray.
if you could fake like this, you could take a ldr output out of maxwell, working a bit with curves, exposure or whatever, and pretend to have a render which gives you all the dynamic range of a mxi.
3dtrialpractice wrote:
can anyone fill in mor about what RAW dynamic range is?
they usually are 16bit files, and a single raw can't record all colours and intensities of an interior/exterior like leo's.