another way to do hdr is use shutter settings instead of exposure. Friend back home told me to do it that way instead but have yet to try it
another way to do hdr is use shutter settings instead of exposure. Friend back home told me to do it that way instead but have yet to try it
I read a very detailed article on Photomatix vs. CS3 for HDR work, I will see if I can dig that up for you. Bottom line is I use photomatix for the merging of the selected exposures, than CS3 to further edit and sharpen. One thing to note is the pic is pretty noisy, I haven't converted my noise ninja license from PC to Mac yet.
-Craig-
08 GT 500 white w/blue stripes
I think what you are trying to say is shutter adjustment vs. f/stop. And yes your friend is correct, if you adjust the f/stop the depth of field changes on each exposure which would hurt the overall detail of the final pic.
The key is to use a good tripod and adjust the shutter speed for the desired image exposure.
-Craig-
08 GT 500 white w/blue stripes
Ah thanks, I would be interested in reading that one for sure!
Yeah that's what I was thinking when I was reading about it... I think when I try my first ones I'll stick with using the shutter speed instead of the f/stop because of the depth of field change. Exposure changes shouldn't be a problem since you gotta use a tripod to get the shots anyway. Besides, that's what makes me love the wireless remote I've got for m camera.
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