vampires... yes.. because of the brown sky...

Bracketed exposures for tone mappingBubbaloo wrote:I like those! They have a "dreamy" feel to them.
So what was the technique?
Would you mind giving a short explanation/tutorial on what you mean by that for us newbies?Jeff Tamagini wrote:Bracketed exposures for tone mapping
exactly...and this is good software, however I tone map by hand for the most part in photoshop with masksHervé wrote:like this..
take the same photo at different exposure.. then there are apps that take care of the rest... as an example..
well sort of..
http://www.hdrsoft.com/examples.html
I really only use 3 myself...you can set the camera to bracket itself so your first shot is correct exposure the second is under and the third is over. But the brackets are limited to 3 and you specify the distance in 1/3 stop settings. I use this because I dont like carrying a note book to write down settings for 6 or 9 bracket shots.misterasset wrote:I've tried this myself with less than stellar results. I think I tried taking too many different exposures. The posted example page only has three different exposures per picture. I'll try that next time.
knurrebusk wrote:I´m not the one to speak!
From Russia with sadness, he is still American.
I like the wild of America.
Jeff Tamagini wrote:Bracketed exposures for tone mappingBubbaloo wrote:I like those! They have a "dreamy" feel to them.
So what was the technique?
Amazing piece of art and great finding (unless it's coloured by you)killian2828 wrote:Great pictures guys.
Nope, that vibrant red leaf made it easy to find. Glad you like it!Fernando Tella wrote:
Amazing piece of art and great finding (unless it's coloured by you)
knurrebusk wrote:I´m not the one to speak!
From Russia with sadness, he is still American.
I like the wild of America.
knurrebusk wrote:I´m not the one to speak!
From Russia with sadness, he is still American.
I like the wild of America.