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Photography Q&A
Best apertures for dark woods
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<blockquote data-quote="Bob Blaylock" data-source="post: 579014" data-attributes="member: 16749"><p>Looks to me like you need to employ a High Dynamic Range (HDR) method, in order to get a good picture here—that the dynamic range in this scene is just too much for the camera to take in in one shot.</p><p></p><p> To do this, you need to take three pictures; one where the darkest parts of the scene are properly exposed, one where the lightest parts are properly exposed, and one somewhere in between.</p><p></p><p> You then need to use some software on your computer to combine those three images into a single image. <a href="https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=52481" target="_blank">Microsoft's free <em>Geodesic High-Dynamic-Range Photography Tool</em></a> is one program that will do this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bob Blaylock, post: 579014, member: 16749"] Looks to me like you need to employ a High Dynamic Range (HDR) method, in order to get a good picture here—that the dynamic range in this scene is just too much for the camera to take in in one shot. To do this, you need to take three pictures; one where the darkest parts of the scene are properly exposed, one where the lightest parts are properly exposed, and one somewhere in between. You then need to use some software on your computer to combine those three images into a single image. [url=https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=52481]Microsoft's free [i]Geodesic High-Dynamic-Range Photography Tool[/i][/url] is one program that will do this. [/QUOTE]
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Best apertures for dark woods
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