HDR and Beyond Seeing is believing! by Gavin Phillips

Similar documents
HDR ~ The Possibilities

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

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

Introduction to HDR Photography with Brian McPhee

Using The Nik Collection Plug-ins In Lightroom And Photoshop. Dan Lenardon

CHAPTER 12 - HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE IMAGES

PHIL MORGAN PHOTOGRAPHY

Lightroom- Creative Cloud Tips with NIK

How to capture the best HDR shots.

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

Movie 7. Merge to HDR Pro

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

Sincerely, Blake Rudis

Extending Exposure with HDR 307. When to Shoot HDR

PHOTOSHOP TUTORIAL 16 (Revised Version) Merge to 32 bit HDR Pro in Photoshop CC

Photomatix Pro 3.1 User Manual

INTRO TO HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE PHOTOGRAPHY

DIGITAL INFRARED PHOTOGRAPHY By Steve Zimic

Very High Dynamic Range Photography

High Dynamic Range (HDR) photography is a combination of a specialized image capture technique and image processing.

HDR Darkroom 2 User Manual

Bristol Photographic Society Introduction to Digital Imaging

A quick overview of the basics of my workflow in. Those gaps in Photoshop s Histogram indicate missing information.

Adobe Photoshop CS5. Oct 12, 19, 26 Nov 2 & 9 5:00 pm 7:30 pm. Goals:

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

HDR Darkroom 2 Pro User Manual

Photoshop Cs5 Hdr Manually Set Ev

High Dynamic Range Photography

Realistic HDR Histograms Camera Raw

Local Adjustment Tools

HDR Kanata Seniors Camera Club hdr presentation december 2, Saturday, December 3, 2011

LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY TECHNIQUES, COMPOSITION, AND PROCESSING

Post-Processing/Editing Page 1

Software & Computers DxO Optics Pro 5.3; Raw Converter & Image Enhancer With Auto Or Manual Transmission By Howard Millard March, 2009

PHOTOSHOP LIGHTROOM 5

Ian Barber Photography

Techniques 02: Working with Light All images Paul Hazell

Photomatix Pro User Manual. Photomatix Pro 3.0 User Manual

Module 1 Lighting. Lesson 1 Light, Your First Decision. What s the first thing you should think about when choosing a location?

Manual Update Camera Raw Plugin Cs5 Mac D800 >>>CLICK HERE<<<

Lightroom CC. Welcome to Joshua Tree Workshops. Astro & Landscape Lightroom Workflow w/presets

Dynamic Range. H. David Stein

photokaboom Learn Photography Home About Privacy, Etc. Ask Jim SarasotaPhotoLessons.com Menus Black-and-white Digital Photography

Editing your digital images:

High Dynamic Range photography software. Photomatix Pro 6.0

SHAW ACADEMY NOTES. Ultimate Photography Program

Blue Hour and HDR Tutorial by John Strung

lightroom vs. capture one pro

loss of detail in highlights and shadows (noise reduction)

Photomatix Pro 6 User Manual Table of Contents

Advanced Diploma in. Photoshop. Summary Notes

Appendix A ACE exam objectives map

HDR. High Dynamic Range Photograph

The Essential Guide To Advanced EOS Features. Written by Nina Bailey. Especially for Canon EOS cameras

My Inspiration. Trey Ratcliffe Stuck in Customs Klaus Herrman Farbspiel Photography

2017 HDRsoft. All rights reserved. Photomatix Essentials 4.2 User Manual

Part One Beginners Guide

An Introduction to Histograms in Photography

PSE contains an auto tool that you can try first, though seldom will an auto tool fix this kind of image the smart brush tool

Editing Using Photoshop CS5

Challenge Image: Blur the Background

DD IMAGES PHOTOSHOP TUTORIAL 7

Opening a File in Camera Raw

Each camera manufacturer has their own RAW file extension, but all are handled the same way through Photoshop and Lightroom.

Contents: Bibliography:

PHOTOTUTOR.com.au Share the Knowledge

Acknowledgements About this book Other Goodies Included with this Book Resources for Nikon Photographers. Part I: Capture NX2 2. Why Capture NX2?

Planning A Photography Trip. John Nixon, Master Photographer Fort Worth Camera Club Oct. 9, 2018

Syllabus: Photoshop Advanced

Movie 3. Basic Camera Raw workflow

Wooly s personal workflow in RAW & Photoshop

Teton Photography Group

Camera Exposure Modes

How to combine images in Photoshop

DOP 2000 Digital Photography Workflow Handbook using Photoshop CS and Raw Converters for the Digital Photography Workflow

What is real? What is art?

Rubbing your Nikon RAW file the Right Way

Histograms and Tone Curves

The Fundamental Problem

LAB and LAB Actions. By Mike Watson, based on publications by Harold Davis

PHOTOGRAPHY: MINI-SYMPOSIUM

Mullingar Camera Club Basic introduction to Digital Printing using Photoshop CC.

Diploma in Adobe Lightroom - Final Assignment

Landscape Photography

VSCO FILM 01 MANUAL FOR: LIGHTROOM 4 & ADOBE CAMERA RAW 7

PHOTOSHOP: 3.3 CAMERA RAW

These project cannot be made up after the due date. (Each exercise is worth 25 points)

PROCESSING LANDSCAPES

360 HDR photography time is money! talk by Urs Krebs

PASS4TEST. IT Certification Guaranteed, The Easy Way! We offer free update service for one year

Extract from NCTech Application Notes & Case Studies Download the complete booklet from nctechimaging.com/technotes

PHOTOGRAPHER S GUIDE TO THE PANASONIC LUMIX LX7

The A6000 is one of Sony's best selling mirrorless cameras, even with its successor

Essential Post Processing

Kent Messamore 3/6/2010

ADOBE VISUAL COMMUNICATION USING PHOTOSHOP CS5 Curriculum/Certification Mapping in MyGraphicsLab

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

Setting Up Your Canon 5d Mark Ii For Wedding Photography

Photoshop Elements 5 Sample Workflow

Lightroom Classic CC and Lightroom CC Updates

Transcription:

HDR and Beyond Seeing is believing! by Gavin Phillips

What is High Dynamic Range Imaging? (HDR) HDR is when you take 3-5 or 7 photos at different exposure settings, and then merge them into a single image using speciality software. What you get are beautiful photos with incredible detail, controlled lighting and accurate colour. You cannot reproduce an HDR image manipulating a single JPG or RAW image in Photoshop. Below is an example of a set of 7 images taken at 1-stop exposure increments. Then merged and tone mapped.

The benefits of HDR The human eye sees an outdoor or indoor scene quite differently than what can be captured with even top grade professional digital cameras and lenses. Not surprisingly, our eyes are far more complex. Our eyes adjust for harsher light and render colors and detail more accurately than any single RAW file can capture. With HDR you can produce wonderfully crisp images that have excellent detail and control of lighting. You do not need to worry about harsh sunlight or very contrasty scenes. Below is an example of my regularly exposed single shot compared to my 7-shot HDR version. When printed, the HDR version has far more detail and an overall richer look to the image.

You control your final image There is a lot of misunderstanding about HDR. As with all new creative techniques with so many creative opportunities available, we all tend to overdo it at the beginning. This is okay, it is our way of experimenting and finding what we like and don't like. For business applications, you can simply say what sells; although this may vary from client to client.

When would you shoot HDR? Landscapes Architectural and Commercial Interior shots Select wedding shots (church interior, vows) Some wildlife (animals standing still) Night architectural (need higher ISO 1600+) HDR in a Nutshell Take 3,5 or 7 shots at different exposures Merge bracketed sets into 32-bit images Tone-map in HDR specific software Finish in Photoshop HDR Camera Set-up Always shoot RAW. The RAW format is better for HDR than JPG. I have compared sets of JPG and RAW of the same scene and processed them in Photomatix and Artizen. The results are better with the RAW images than the JPG. Auto Exposure Bracketing Mode Put your camera into the auto exposure bracketing mode. This allows you to run off a sequence of shots at different exposures by simply holding down the 'shoot' button. It will depend on your camera as to how many you shoot in a sequence. Most DSLR cameras offer you up to 1-stop increments in bracketing mode. You would only ever

go to a maximum of 2-stop increments. I shoot sets of 5 or 7 at 1-stop increments. Some recent advanced compact cameras offer RAW shooting and Auto Exposure Bracketing. Two that I know of are the Panasonic Lumix G3. It offers up to 7 shots at a max of 1stop exposures. This is perfect for HDR. Also the Olympus E-PL3 offers RAW and up to 2-stops in AEB. These cameras are easy to carry around and offer a good introduction into digital HDR.

HDR Specific Software I Use All these software programs are Mac/Windows compatible and offer free trial downloads. Photomatix Pro Photomatix offers many features and an intuitive, easy to use interface. It s strength is outdoor daytime HDR. It really opens up shadows and produces very pleasing colours that are easily controlled with the sliders. The batch processing feature is a huge time-saver. Merging one set of three, five or seven images into a 32-bit image can take from 10 seconds to over a minute, depending on your computer speed and how many images are in the set. If you have more than a few sets of HDR, (at Yosemite I had hundreds of sets) this consumes a large amount of time. Photomatix s batching feature allows you to merge dozens/hundreds of sets of HDR into 32-bit images automatically while you do something else. You then open the 32bit image instantly in your software of choice and apply the tone-mapping, which is the only part that interests you. With interior shots, Photomatix often introduces a blue cast into sunlight coming in through windows. I often use Artizen or Dynamic Photo HDR for interiors.

Artizen I use Artizen for most of my interior HDR shots. Most of the time it gives me better results for what I'm looking for with interior shots. Dynamic Photo HDR I use DPHDR for some of my night HDR, and some daytime HDR as well. It depends how the image looks. It often creates more natural looking skies.

It s also great if you want to go in a different creative direction. You can get a great variety of different colour effects. But sometimes I see odd artifacts introduced into images; burnt skies or excessive noise. So I don t recommend this program as your only HDR specific software. It is good to give you different creative ways to go. HDR Efex Pro Like all Nik software, HDR Efex Pro s user interface is intuitive and easy to understand. I liked the variety of one-click presets, and it is easy to keep your HDR looking natural. I still prefer the colour in Photomatix for outdoor HDR though. Nik s patented U Point Technology is included. With this you can finetune very specific areas in your image without effecting the rest of it. Photoshop CS5 HDR New to CS5 are some basic HDR tone-mapping sliders and presets. I have worked with it on some sets of HDR and compared it to the tone-mapping I get in the other software. The results are far better in Photomatix, etc. However, I spend most of my time in Photoshop finessing the image and creating custom imagery.

Single-shot Pseudo HDR All the HDR software reviewed here give you an option to create a pseudo HDR out of a single RAW or JPG image. You really need RAW with single shot HDRs. The advantages are that you do not have to take multiple shots, and there will be no ghosting to remove of people moving in the image. However, you do not have the same dynamic range that you would have with multiple exposures. Pseudo HDRs tend to be noisy and you don t get the same detail. But when you have rapidly moving people, animals or vehicles, pseudo HDRs often look far more interesting than just working the image in Photoshop. And they are very quick to process.

HDR and People You can photograph people with HDR selectively. People posed, or a bride and groom standing still at the altar. Even if they are standing still there is likely to be some slight movement between the frames. This is referred to as ghosting. The colour of the peoples faces will be incorrect as well. To correct this I use one of the bracketed set of regular RAW images and Photoshop to mask-in just the people into the HDR image. It only takes 5-minutes. I only take a few HDR images with people in them. This captures the occasion in a way I could never achieve otherwise.

My HDR Workflow My HDR Work flow I download all my HDR sets into a folder. I sort the winning sets in Photoshop/Bridge or Lightroom, and move them to a Winners folder. Different sets must be kept together. Don t mix a set of three with a set of five or seven, it will completely mess up the batch processing. Batch rename the winning sets in Photoshop or Lightroom with a number sequence. If I have 20 sets of five bracketed images, it will be numbered 1 through 100. I then use Photomatix to batch my 20 sets of five into 20 single, 32-bit images. While Photomatix is doing this, I m in Photoshop or doing something else. When Photomatix finishes it s batching, I go in and open the 32-bit images in Photomatix for tone-mapping. The tone-mapping is very fast. Once I set-up the sliders for the first image, I usually stay pretty close to those settings for the other images. I then finish the image in Photoshop. Avoiding HDR Issues Halos can be an issue with HDR images. Halos are usually found where the sky meets buildings or trees in an image. It is a line, or band, of lighter sky. It does not look natural and is very distracting. You usually get if using extreme settings in your tone mapping, although sometimes you may still see halos even with conservative settings. In that case you may have to swap out the sky in your HDR image with the original sky in one of the bracketed images in Photoshop. Over saturation is easily controlled in all the programs I reviewed here. Once you have the settings the way you like them, you can save them as one of your custom presets. You have complete control over your image. It is easy to stay within a regular color

range, but still gain a significant advantage by using HDR. You have to watch you do not overdo it, particularly with skies. Finishing in Photoshop Although the HDR specific software is great for the merging and tonemapping stage of your HDR sets, there is no substitute for the final finessing of your image in Photoshop. I usually use a custom curves adjustment. You can use the brush tool on the curves mask to adjust how much of that curves is used in your image, and where it is used. Another excellent, but often overlooked adjustment layer, is the Shadow/Highlight.

There maybe areas of the image that require careful cloning out. Don t forget that sometimes you can use the spot healing brush to blend away something small in your image instead of always using the clone tool. Photoshop CS5 s new content aware brush option is very handy for fast clean-up as well. The last thing I do is selective sharpening. I use high pass sharpening for all my images that do not have people in the image. You find this under Filter, Other, High Pass. When people are in the image I use unsharp mask or smart sharpening. Creative Freedom HDR gets quite a lot of criticism because many of the images are over-worked. For that matter, any image can be overworked in Photoshop or any software, not only HDR. Some photographers have become so worried about being criticised for using HDR, their HDR images look exactly the same as a single image worked in Photoshop. HDR is different; it has a vibrance and detail that is great for certain situations. For some images I go further and use a full range of Photoshop adjustment layers, filters, masking and plug-ins to go in many different directions. We have so many creative tools to work with today; I m not going to limit myself to staying within a regular photograph all the time. As the late famous photographer Fred Picker stated, Photographers owe nothing to

reality. I offer my clients both types of images. Gavin Phillips offers HDR webinars and training movies. He also offers custom Photoshop actions and Lightroom Presets. See his website for more information. http://www.photoeffects.biz gavin@photoeffects.biz