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Post by Steve (FloppyDog) on Jun 15, 2011 23:48:50 GMT -5
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Post by Neva on Jun 16, 2011 22:05:17 GMT -5
Silly question: are the colors the result of the HDR, photoshop, or were the colors really this color?? I don't know enough about HDR's to know what it is or does; so I don't know.
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Post by droppey on Jun 17, 2011 7:41:36 GMT -5
@neva if you don't know something then it's not a silly question )
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Post by Steve (FloppyDog) on Jun 17, 2011 12:27:10 GMT -5
Not a silly question at all. Essentially an HDR is several images of the same thing at different exposures stacked together. So, the colors you're seeing are the different shades of each color created by several exposures.
Sometimes you'll notice that a shade of a certain color is different with a different exposure. A blue, for example, is a darker blue with less exposure, and lighter blue with more exposure. What you're seeing in an HDR are several shades of the same colors together. Hence, the brilliant and seemingly heavy saturation of colors.
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Post by john101477 on Jun 21, 2011 20:53:46 GMT -5
many people tend to over do the HDR effect leaving the image looking way over saturated. the last image above IMO opinion is near perfect for an HDR. Now I have also seen HDR images that include different focus points. I have always enjoyed the effect myself. almost a dream land feel to it.
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Post by Steve (FloppyDog) on Jun 22, 2011 9:55:55 GMT -5
Yeah, I'm still learning when/where HDR is the best call for an image. It's cool but in some cases people way overdue it and the image is indecipherable.
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Post by Neva on Jun 22, 2011 22:31:22 GMT -5
Okay, thanks for all the info! I've not ventured into trying HDR just yet....someday tho!! :-)
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Post by juanita on Jun 29, 2011 5:15:33 GMT -5
Those are awesome, Steve! Just dabbled a little but I don't think I understood it well. Sigh....me too, shall try again, sometime,
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