View allAll Photos Tagged hdr
These are the HDR's I took during my trip to india! Im not the biggest on HDR but decided to upload them anyways.
Fell free to comment, favorite, or share my pics (with my permission)
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Thanks for your visit and dropby ! Have a nice weekend my flick mate !
Canon 5D MKII - Tamron 28-75mm f:2.8 - Asus T100 - BreezeSys DSLR Remote Pro
37mm f:8 - HDR 5 exposures - 30s., 15s., 8s., 4s. and 2s. merged with Photomatix
►►► Explore the world of HDR with me at farbspiel-photo.com - View. Learn. Connect.
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Snatch your free copy of my new eBook today: HDR Top Tips - 10 Tips for Better HDR Photos.
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About | HDR Cookbook | Before-and-After | Making-of | Pics to play with
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(Hit 'f' to fave this image)
The story of this photo
This is a 6-exposure HDR image from inside the Porta Nigra in Trier, Germany. This building was built by the Romans around 200 AD. Today, it is a World Heritage Site. In the post-processing, I gave this image back some of the colors that the original building must have had.
It has been quite a while since I uploaded my last image. I hope, I have not lost too many of you due to this. I have been busy lately creating new content and new formats. For example, I have started a video tutorial series called Hands-on Photo Tips. I am also in the process of releasing more in-depth content in yet another format. I will tell you more on that soon.
I promise, I will be creating images more regularly now. For now, let's start with a 4-in-1 feature: Over the week, I will also be posting a Before-and-After comparison, a Making-of video, and a Pics-to-play-with feature for this image.
How it was shot
> Taken hand-held
> Six exposures (-3, -2, -1, 0, +1, +2 ev) - semi-autobracketing [details]
> Camera: Nikon D7000
> Lens: Nikon AF-S DX Nikkor 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5G ED
How it was tonemapped
> CA reduction and white balance correction on all source exposures in Adobe Camera Raw [details]
> Saved the 6 images as TIFFs
> Created two additional exposures in ACR to get all the details in the highlights and in the shadows [details]
> Applied noise reduction (Topaz Denoise) to each of the source images [details]
> Resulting TIFF images were then used as input to Photomatix (Details Enhancer option)
How it was post-processed
> Post-processing was done in Photoshop
> Topaz Adjust to get back the details and the colors [details]
> Topaz Infocus (sharpening - not on the windows)
> Levels layer on the windows (more contrast)
> Photo filter layer on the floor to get back the original color (red)
> Levels layer on the floor (more contrast)
> Saturation layer on the floor (master)
> Levels layer on the bowl (more contrast)
> Saturation layer on the bowl (master)
> Saturation layers on the pillars/arches and the border (desaturation)
> Levels layer on the pillars/arches and the border (more contrast)
> Levels layer on the walls (more contrast)
> Saturation layer on the walls (yellows, master)
> Levels layer on some areas around the windows to reduce the glare
> Global Levels and Saturation layers for tuning the overall colors and contrast
> Some retouching to remove litter
> Slight vignetting [details]
> Watermarking
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Learn these techniques at farbspiel-photo.com - View. Learn. Connect.
- Thanks for viewing!
To get the sunset positioned over one of the coves on Lake Argyle, we drove part way around the lake, turned off the roadway an dfollowed a gravel road down towards the lake. About two thirds of the way down, the road was blocked, so we hiked from there down to a primitive campsite and then beyond it to the shoreline. However, the water level was higher than I expected, and so we were not able to work our way from that point along the shoreline. A few fish later (caught by by grandson), we had a breif view of a beautiful sunset.
The night before, when I debated whether go to the lake, the sunset turned out to be spectacular. Unfortuantely, I stayed home that night and missed out.
_MG_6531_2_3_tonemapped
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A HDR of 3 shots taken on the shore of the Queenstown lake (I forgot the actual name). There is quite a few different filters on this one including a 3 stop ND, two grad filters and a polariser. I am not 100% happy with the processing used but I like how it turned out. I may have to revisit it oneday to give it a different treatment.
Please view large (L). Comment are appreciated. Enjoy!
This picture was taken early in the morning while I was walking on the beach. This fence door caught my attention and I took a few shots of it trying different angles. I chose the one I took low to the sand because it made the door look bigger and more dominant in the composition because of the barel distortion which also enhanced the sense of perspective from close point to way back in the landscape.
From this one shot I made a series of different copies by adjusting the composition off camera creating a bracket series of -2 to +2 EVs in steps of 2/3 of a stop. That makes us seven images merged. Final processing in ACR.
Timing and light were just great for the result.