HDR vs. Flash for Interiors and Real Estate Photography

Similar documents
Photomatix Light 1.0 User Manual

Step 1: taking the perfect shot

HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE IMAGING Nancy Clements Beasley, March 22, 2011

A Beginner s Guide To Exposure

PHIL MORGAN PHOTOGRAPHY

Produce stunning. Pro photographer Chris Humphreys guides you through HDR and how to create captivating natural-looking images

Camera controls. Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority & Manual

High Dynamic Range Photography

HDR is a process for increasing the range of tonal values beyond what a single frame (either film or digital) can produce.

Capturing Realistic HDR Images. Dave Curtin Nassau County Camera Club February 24 th, 2016

CAMERA BASICS. Stops of light

Architectural Photography. Urban Landscapes

Advanced Photography. Topic 3 - Exposure: Flash Photography Tricks

Introduction to HDR Photography with Brian McPhee

HDR ~ The Possibilities

Blue Hour and HDR Tutorial by John Strung

HDR. High Dynamic Range Photograph

Dynamic Range. H. David Stein

Quick Tips for Taking Better Portraits

capture outside Capture Your Holidays with Katrina Kennedy It s cold outside! I m sitting At the end of this lesson you will be able to:

21 Go-to Shooting Settings

Understanding and Using Dynamic Range. Eagle River Camera Club October 2, 2014

Understanding Histograms

Landscape Photography

CHAPTER 12 - HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE IMAGES

PHOTOGRAPHY VIDEO 1 WHAT EQUIPMENT WILL YOU NEED? Gear Budget High End. eg. Canon Rebel T5 (1200D) Nikon D3200. Tokina 11-16mm.

VHT New Photographer Training

High Dynamic Range (HDR) Photography in Photoshop CS2

In the past year or so, just about everyone I know has gone out and purchased

PLANT + SHOOT GARDENER S PHOTOGRAPHY SERIES (GPS) GET GREAT GARDEN PHOTOS ON A CLOUDY DAY

OUTDOOR PORTRAITURE WORKSHOP

silent seat ecourse & ebook

Photography for the Lighting Designer

4-H Members Name: PHOTOGRAPHY Level 1

Fig. 1 Overview of Smart Phone Shooting

FOCUS, EXPOSURE (& METERING) BVCC May 2018

Page 1 of 9. Blending Multiple Exposures The Manual Way to HDR (High Dynamic Range) TJ Avery 7-Feb-2008

HDR Show & Tell Image / Workflow Review Session. Dave Curtin Nassau County Camera Club October 3 rd, 2016

Introduction to 2-D Copy Work

Raymond Klass Photography Newsletter

Aperture & Shutter Speed Review

Lesson 1 Course Notes

LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY TECHNIQUES, COMPOSITION, AND PROCESSING

SUPERFAST PORTRAIT RETOUCH SPEND LESS TIME MAKING YOUR CLIENTS LOOK AWESOME UNDER THE LOUPE DESIGN MAKEOVER


Failure is a crucial part of the creative process. Authentic success arrives only after we have mastered failing better. George Bernard Shaw

Flash photography basics. Timothy Swinson

To start there are three key properties that you need to understand: ISO (sensitivity)

Photographing your dog running towards you.

Take Better Portraits

1 / 9

As can be seen in the example pictures below showing over exposure (too much light) to under exposure (too little light):

Basic Image Processing for Digital Photography

ACTION AND PEOPLE PHOTOGRAPHY

From Advanced pixel blending

Take Control of Your Camera

Travel & Landscapes. Introduction

Post-Processing/Editing Page 1

METERING FOR A BETTER PHOTOGRAPH

Defocus Control on the Nikon 105mm f/2d AF DC-

What Real Estate Agents Need to Know About Photography

The Big Train Project Status Report (Part 65)

capture the tree Capture Your Holidays with Katrina Kennedy

TAKING GREAT PICTURES. A Modest Introduction

PTC School of Photography. Beginning Course Class 2 - Exposure

UNDERSTANDING LAYER MASKS IN PHOTOSHOP

Basic Camera Craft. Roy Killen, GMAPS, EFIAP, MPSA. (c) 2016 Roy Killen Basic Camera Craft, Page 1

We will look at two different, yet very popular, lighting techniques: high key and low key. High key lighting is just what you would imagine - very

Portraiture Creating and Editing. Aaron Taylor Aaron Taylor Photography LLC

Autumn. Get Ready For Autumn. Technique eguide. Get Ready For

AF Area Mode. Face Priority

Image Manipulation Unit 34. Chantelle Bennett

HDR and Beyond Seeing is believing! by Gavin Phillips

Luminosity Masks Program Notes Gateway Camera Club January 2017

Camera Exposure Modes

Creating a gritty urban monochrome - image Minutes

Using Your Camera's Settings: Program Mode, Shutter Speed, and More

The Fundamental Problem

Your objective: maximum control, maximum manageability

10 TOP TIPS TO INSTANTLY IMPROVE YOUR NATURE PHOTOS

Using Auto FP High-Speed Sync to Illuminate Fast Sports Action

TAKING BETTER PHOTOS ON ANY DEVICE

Techniques 02: Working with Light All images Paul Hazell

How This Works: Aperture size is counted in f- stops. i.e. those little numbers engraved on the lens barrel like:

Aperture & Shutter Speed Review

Photography Help Sheets

Zone. ystem. Handbook. Part 2 The Zone System in Practice. by Jeff Curto

Funded from the Scottish Hydro Gordonbush Community Fund. Metering exposure

Moving Beyond Automatic Mode

Jessica Grant. Photography Portfolio

Photographing the Night Sky

LOVED BY PROS. MADE FOR YOU. e - pl2

Photographing Marquetry Revisited Again By Dave Peck

Fun, friendship. President s Report

mastering manual week one

Working with your Camera

TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter One Camera Settings Image size and quality, JPG vs RAW, a word about memory cards, and color space.

Love Your Camera (Introduction to D-SLR)

Awesome Skies: Tips and Techniques for Photographing the Northern Lights

Digital Photography Assignment Portraiture

Transcription:

DECEMBER 7, 2012 82 COMMENTS MIKE KELLEY HDR vs. Flash for Interiors and Real Estate Photography I know that many of our readers are real estate photographers or have at least tried their hand at real estate photography. The most common method used to create good enough real estate photos is HDR: whether it is tone mapping or exposure fusion, HDR is definitely the most-used method for real estate and beginner interior photographers. In this post, I ll do a comparison between tone mapping, exposure fusion, single on-camera flash, and multiple off-camera flash, and show you the benefits (or disadvantages, rather) of each. I ve been shooting and writing about architecture, interiors, real estate, and generally everything that needs to look pretty but cannot be moved for a while now, and it seems every time I post an article related to my field(s), there are plenty of comments debating the use of HDR and the use of flash in the comments. Flash users insult HDR users, HDR users insult flash users, everyone cuts a knee open, and everyone goes home disappointed. It is as dependable as the sun rising and setting I honestly cannot remember any time when it hasn t happened. So on a recent shoot, I was presented with a perfect scene to demonstrate the differences between methods, and (here s the important part) remembered to shoot it with this article in mind. I bracketed for HDR, shot for the highlights, the shadows, shot with flashes, shot with flashes again, and then moved the flashes around and shot again, just because I wanted to leave no stone unturned. So let s get to it, shall we? I know this is real edge-of-your-seat entertainment, so hold on tight. The Scene Let s get a feel for what we ll be working with. I was recently contacted to shoot this neat apartment in Westwood, Los Angeles, CA for a client of mine. Now here s the fun part: I had an hour to create 10 images. That hour included unloading a huge Pelican case, scouting it, chit-chatting with the client to exchange ideas, and shooting it. I managed to

finish early which allowed me to set up my little test and spend ten or so minutes on just this scene. Here is a single exposure of the scene as my camera sees it. I dropped it on a tripod, spun the dials until the exposure meter was centered, and clicked off a frame. This is what resulted: Single exposure. It s about 2pm and sunlight is streaming in those floor-to-ceiling windows like crazy. No camera would be able to capture the deepest darks of that couch and the brightest bright of the exterior in one image in these shooting conditions. I d bet my business on it. If you re familiar with the LA, or any other high-end real estate market, you re well aware that the view here probably cost multiple millions of dollars, and letting it blow out isn t going to make anyone very pleased with the photos. So we ll need to make sure that we expose both the darkest darks and the brightest brights properly. Sure, we can just expose for the windows, but we ll get something that looks like this:

We can expose for the windows: And for obvious reasons, we can t deliver that, either. We can expose for the interior: Which might be deliverable depending on the circumstances, but really, it s quite far from anything that I would even consider delivering. This would at least be useful as a scouting photo, but it still fails to accomplish what we re being paid to do: to show off the interior and exterior views of this gorgeous apartment. So in order to show off this space in the best possible way, we ve got a couple options. Let s start off with Tone mapped HDR Loved by many, vocally hated by just as many, and used by everyone at least once in their careers, Tone mapped HDR is certainly one way to go about things. Tone mapping is what most people think of when the phrase HDR is mentioned: those radioactive landscape

scenes and, um, artistic renderings of city scenes are some popular applications for tone mapping: Apologies to all Tomcat lovers around the world for that one. Usually, tone mapped HDRs are created by shooting three or five exposures spaced one or two stops apart, which are then merged together using a program like Photomatix. Using tone mapping can create some passable results, but the images quickly fall apart under scrutiny or enlargement. Here are the three images I used to create my tone mapped interior shot. One is, according to the camera, two stops underexposed, one is properly exposed, and one is two stops overexposed. In other words, a typical, run-of-the-mill application of HDR. And after loading the three images into the Photomatix engine and playing with the result, this is what I was able to come up with: At first glance, it s not the worst thing in the world. We ve got details out the window, details in the interior, and we can tell what s going on. I guess if you were being paid $100 and the client expected you to shoot with a potato, you d be in the clear. But upon further inspection, things really start to fall apart. The sky is a muddy mess with clipping everywhere, and there s no real saturation or crispness due to the overexposed frame being entirely blown out in that area. The colors in the interior are incorrect (especially from the lights tone mapping loves to oversaturate warm colors) and the transition between the interior

and exterior around the windows is a bit rough. The shadow noise is also a bit unruly at 100%, but like I said, it s not the absolute worst real estate marketing photo ever. I also spent way too much time massaging it in post to get it to look like this, and I can imagine that it s very easy to screw something like this up if you aren t very familiar with Photomatix s controls. Exposure Fusion HDR Another popular method for photographing interiors is to use Photomatix s Exposure Fusion program. This (in very unscientific terms) uses a different blending algorithm to create a more natural result, but at the expense of creative control, which may actually be a good thing. Exposure fusion averages the exposure across the scenes and takes bits and pieces from each exposure to create a more life-like image. Using the same base exposures, I was able to come up with this: Which is a decent improvement from our tone mapped shot. Still, there are a number of issues with this shot. Try as I might, I wasn t able to pull out the window view to get it to look the way it really should (well-exposed, good visibility) for a property like this. I could split a few more hairs, as well: the contrast in the scene isn t really what I d call ideal, and it s kind of muddy overall. It doesn t really scream this is a high-quality, sharp, snappy marketing image that I d want to print out for a magazine article to sell my expensive piece of real estate.

Again, I spent some time in Photomatix pulling and pushing the sliders to get this to look as best as I could. If you were really devoted, you could bring this into photoshop and replace the exterior scene with a properly exposed one. But unless you re getting paid a significant amount, it s just not worth the time to mask out all of those details or pull out your hair dragging the pen tool around the screen for thirty minutes to do so. As Sweet Brown would say, nobody has enough time for that. A deliverable shot, to be sure, given the right budget and client. But as I said, there is a lot of room for improvement. So let s try another method: the flash. On-Camera Flash The single on-camera flash is another approach to this type of photography that I frequently see being used, oftentimes with utterly disastrous results. There are times where it can be perfect, however: in small rooms with white walls and big windows, a little kiss of light from an on-camera flash can really help to fill things in and add some sparkle to run-n-gun real estate photography. But in a challenging situation like the one we are faced with in this post, well, I ll let you be the judge: Okay. So it s a Xerox, essentially. All of the information is there, presented in a very ugly format. But it s there. There s some light on the scene, you can see what s going on, but dang! That window is still long gone. My flash is already at full power, ISO 320, f8, 1/80th, bounced right into the ceiling. I m letting some of the ambient light from outside fill in the scene to add some natural light and fill. But I really want to see that view, so what do I do? I bump up my shutter speed, which effectively puts me right at the edge of my sync speed and also kills all of the ambient light s filling effect. Which gives us this:

So there s our view, but we have completely destroyed any sense of ambience in the interior. Gorgeous, eh? Keep in mind that the flash is on full power here. That is one dark interior, and I can t go any higher on my shutter speed or I d cross the sync speed and lose a significant amount of flash power. I could bump my ISO or open up my aperture to increase my flash power, but again, I can t make my shutter speed any faster because of the sync speed limits, and that would negate all of the gains granted to me by bumping the ISO and changing the aperture. That light, though is just so ugly. Yuck! How can we improve it? By using Multiple Off-Camera Flashes Keep in mind that I had an hour to create ten images (plus details and vignettes, which I shoot with a prime lens, hand-held usually) for a client that called me at the last minute of the eleventh hour. This was a great client, so I wasn t going to say no, and I was compensated fairly for my time and expertise. Yet I still wanted to create the best results possible given the time constraints, without resorting to HDR or shooting single exposures. On my usual and ideal gigs, I usually shoot eight to ten images per day using multiple offcamera lights, and, often enough, I have an assistant helping out to speed things up. As

you can imagine, I wasn t able to spend that much time on each image here (2-3 minutes at most). But I think that the results speak for themselves: the window view is crystal clear, the interior looks relatively natural, the colors are all correct, and the shadows and transitions are natural and smooth, unlike all of the other methods I ve touched on. I will admit that I cheated a bit here: I had to crop out the edges of a pair of umbrellas and crop down from the top of the frame to conceal a minor hotspot. I pulled some shadows and pushed some highlights in Aperture, and of course added the usual contrast and saturation. In reality, I spent no more time in Photoshop/Aperture caressing this image than I did on the HDR images. All things considered, however, the minor cropping and cheating here produces a much better result: Of course, it s going to take time to be able to effectively light a dark interior in a way that captures every necessary piece of information in order to entice potential buyers. It s not an overnight solution, and there is always room for improvement. I m not 100% happy with the quality of light that I created in my final image here, but I spent all of ten minutes on this scene for results that, to me, appear to be the clear winner in the quality and deliverability categories. If I had more time I d love to play with the composition, different lighting setups, using scrims and cookies, and all of that fun stuff to make a really killer image. I might even kick around for a few hours until the sun started to set to get an amazing twilight shot, but alas, I did not have that liberty on this shoot.

Conclusions Four methods, all of them producing unique results. Do I believe that HDR and oncamera flash have their place? Absolutely. If you are just starting out, it might help to ease into interiors and real estate photography by using HDR to learn how to compose, get comfortable with the dynamic range and limitations of your camera, and realize how they can be improved. From there, slap a single flash in the hotshoe and master that. It might be ugly for a while, but it will only get better in time. From there, I d suggest making the jump to off-camera lighting. Can you create great images using HDR and exposure fusion or other methods that I haven t mentioned here (for example, manual blending in Photoshop)? Yes, and people do. I may or may not think that those people might be insane due to the amount of time they end up spending in post, but they do. I also enjoy the fine control I can have over a scene when I am the one who is creating the light and mood, rather than being the one who is trying to work within a set of boundaries imposed on me by the scene. The more control I have, the better, but that is another article for another time. If you re on a time limit and don t feel comfortable juggling five or more Speedlight s, then by all means get familiar with HDR and its Exposure Fusion engine. You ll need to know the limitations of the program and what kind of scenes it will struggle with, such as the one in this post. But don t let me mislead you: there are many situations in which HDR can be applied and used to great effect, it s just that there are some situations where it definitely would not be my first choice. Everyone has their preferences, and I ve tried to lay out each method in an unbiased format so you can make your own decisions about how you shoot your interiors or real estate photography. But for me, when it comes to quality, my time, and pleasing my clients, its off-camera flash every time. Do note that architectural and commercial photography differs greatly from real estate photography, and a bit beyond the scope of this article. Here s a side by side comparison of HDR and Flash, to wrap things up. Note the snappy contrast, which was only bumped the slightest bit in Aperture. The lack of bloom around the windows, the smooth transitions, controlled dynamics and life-like colors of the flashed version when compared to the HDR version.

If you would like to see more of my work using off-camera lighting techniques for real estate, architecture and interiors, head on over to my website at mpkelley.com or check out the strobist article detailing some more of my techniques and work. Those should give you a good idea of just what is possible with lights when it comes to shooting this genre of photography.