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Mein erster HDR- Versuch. Es kommt sicher auf das Motiv an, ob dieses Verfahren ein Gewinn ist. Hier: Klinik am Eichert, Göppingen.
Abendliche Aufnahme mit Belichtungsabstufung -2 / 0 / +2. Verarbeitung mit Freeware (unaussprechlicher Name "Qtpfsgui").
Ich hoffe, die Belegungszahlen gehen jetzt nicht zurück. Vorsichtshalber das Bild ohne HDR:
www.flickr.com/photos/w-tommerdich/3025989744/
November 2008.
As I came up to the lock outside the marina in Amsterdam, I turned around and the scene was so compelling I had to snap some frames. After a day of dreary clouds it was nice to see the sun come out and pop a few things into frame for me.
I used 5 images to create this HDR.
Images used -3, -2, -1, 0, +1
I combined them using HDR Efex Pro.
I added a little more contrast, removed a little of the blue from the photo, and added some detail.
This is a practice in HDR suggested by Kulu40 at My First HDR group.
Made with Photomatix: Enhance Details
Derelict Building at Kew, Southport. Three shot HDR Canon 50D Sigma 10-20mm Processed DPHDR5 and Gimp.
江戸川橋-代官山-渋谷 2017_03_24
代官山町、渋谷区
M.ZUIKO DIGITAL 14-42mm F3.5-5.6ⅡR
[HDR from 5 jpeg images ±4EV, Handheld]
I've started shooting HDR...
The real goal is to do HDR stacks from the air. This was my intent when I left the house. But a combination of low wind, the wrong kite, and rig troubles kept my camera grounded.
Instead I started shooting HDR stacks of the coastline, but realized the ever-changing surf was going to cause problems. I switched to infrared with a Hoya R72, and the longer exposure times blurred the surf into non-existence.
This is a six image stack with two images at the same exposure value. They didn't do anything to expand the dynamic range, but it helped to finish blurring the surf.
The HDR processing is pretty mild. I just wanted to bump up the shadows in the rocks. I think the highlights may still be blown out. Further work required.
The infrared oddity in this shot is the light blue area at the edge of the rocks where they meet the water. This is algae, which is rendered near-white in the infrared. It's my first time shooting IR at the water's edge. Who knew?