Some drift shots
#23
very nice shots, but the burnt edges are far too intense for me. any chance you could tone them down in the first one for me? it'd be an awesome BG.
Sorry to the OP, but I must go off topic
i fail to see how you think HDR is only obtained by bracketing... that is one way yes, but shooting in RAW, and using various exposed images is another way.
an example of one of my MOTION hdr shots. taken hand held @ 1/15, f/7.1, ISO400, while hanging out of a van doing 120 km/h. the picture was shot in RAW, and HDR was obtained with 5 different exposures (-2, -1, 0, +1, +2). Processed and tone mapped in photomatix, then border + watermark was added in cs3, no other editing was used.
original:
hdr:
taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_range_imaging
Sums it up right there. It is used to obtain the varying degrees of light. if you'd like to discuss this further, please do so via pm.
Sorry to the OP, but I must go off topic
Originally Posted by BlindFiring
everyone just needs to jump off the hdr bandwagon. the hdr thread is a horrible representation of it.
no its not hdr.. true hdr is made up of different exposed shots. you have real shots. not one shot and mess with it like some people here do.
its impossible to have a true hdr motion shot because of the bracketing needed.
the photos are just stylized in photoshopped. thats it.. nothing more nothing less.
no its not hdr.. true hdr is made up of different exposed shots. you have real shots. not one shot and mess with it like some people here do.
its impossible to have a true hdr motion shot because of the bracketing needed.
the photos are just stylized in photoshopped. thats it.. nothing more nothing less.
an example of one of my MOTION hdr shots. taken hand held @ 1/15, f/7.1, ISO400, while hanging out of a van doing 120 km/h. the picture was shot in RAW, and HDR was obtained with 5 different exposures (-2, -1, 0, +1, +2). Processed and tone mapped in photomatix, then border + watermark was added in cs3, no other editing was used.
original:
hdr:
taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_range_imaging
In image processing, computer graphics and photography, high dynamic range imaging (HDRI) is a set of techniques that allows a greater dynamic range of exposures (the range of values between light and dark areas) than normal digital imaging techniques. The intention of HDRI is to accurately represent the wide range of intensity levels found in real scenes ranging from direct sunlight to shadows.
#25
Originally Posted by roxtarinc
not EVERYTHING that looks like that is HDR'd....
i dont think 90% of this forum even understands what HDR photography is.
i dont think 90% of this forum even understands what HDR photography is.
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