3 Responses to “We Are Nowhere And It’s Now – Hearn 3”
Striking and so alien! At the risk of sounding like a broken record….amazing!! I love this stuff Charles. I noticed in your last post, commentors mentioned HDR processing (?). I must know more!
Hey Dave, thanks. HDR stands for High Dynamic Range. HDR photos are a combination of three or more differently exposed frames into a single shot. ::: ::: ::: I heard that there is already a Kodak camera that can do this “in camera” and can automatically combine exposure bracketed shots into a single frame. I’m sure in the very near future more digital SLRs will have this feature. ::: ::: ::: For now you can do exposure bracketing on your new EOS 30D and then combine them into a single shot using PhotoShop CS2 “Merge to HDR” function or among others use Photomatix to combine your shots into an HDR image and apply a “Tone Curve” ::: ::: ::: I further process my shots by using image enhancing techniques common in forensics labs; mostly PhotoShop filters such as “High Pass”, “Emboss”, “Chanel Mixer”, “Calculations” and artistic effect filters such as “Lens Blur” and Layer Transfer Modes etc.
Striking and so alien! At the risk of sounding like a broken record….amazing!! I love this stuff Charles. I noticed in your last post, commentors mentioned HDR processing (?). I must know more!
Posted by Dave MacIntyre on April 5th, 2006 at 10:42 AMHey Dave, thanks. HDR stands for High Dynamic Range. HDR photos are a combination of three or more differently exposed frames into a single shot. ::: ::: ::: I heard that there is already a Kodak camera that can do this “in camera” and can automatically combine exposure bracketed shots into a single frame. I’m sure in the very near future more digital SLRs will have this feature. ::: ::: ::: For now you can do exposure bracketing on your new EOS 30D and then combine them into a single shot using PhotoShop CS2 “Merge to HDR” function or among others use Photomatix to combine your shots into an HDR image and apply a “Tone Curve” ::: ::: ::: I further process my shots by using image enhancing techniques common in forensics labs; mostly PhotoShop filters such as “High Pass”, “Emboss”, “Chanel Mixer”, “Calculations” and artistic effect filters such as “Lens Blur” and Layer Transfer Modes etc.
Posted by Charles on April 5th, 2006 at 11:28 AMWow there is so much detail in this it is amazing!
Posted by lee on April 5th, 2006 at 1:25 PM