jimradford
CS5 HDR
This HDR image came from sunset photos taken last January during a PhotoMorroBay outing. Howard Ignatius, who was one of the leaders of our group, ran over to two nearby horseback riders and asked them to ride into our view of the sunset. They obliged, making a great photo opportunity. I took several bracketed shots for HDR, but when I processed them with Photomatix Pro and Photoshop CS4 I couldn’t consolidate the riders (they were moving all the time) resulting in ghosted images. The new Photoshop CS5 HDR Pro program has resolved this problem. It has an option for removing ghosts. After processing the multiple images, it selects one to freeze the action. If it selects the wrong one you have the option to select any of the others. Great job CS5!
CS5 HDR
This HDR image came from sunset photos taken last January during a PhotoMorroBay outing. Howard Ignatius, who was one of the leaders of our group, ran over to two nearby horseback riders and asked them to ride into our view of the sunset. They obliged, making a great photo opportunity. I took several bracketed shots for HDR, but when I processed them with Photomatix Pro and Photoshop CS4 I couldn’t consolidate the riders (they were moving all the time) resulting in ghosted images. The new Photoshop CS5 HDR Pro program has resolved this problem. It has an option for removing ghosts. After processing the multiple images, it selects one to freeze the action. If it selects the wrong one you have the option to select any of the others. Great job CS5!