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Do You Really Need HDR When You Have High Dynamic Range?
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 291711" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>And the nice thing is, you only eat hard drive space for the single image, which can save you a bunch when you get over 24MP's. LR will still create actual Tiff files on the export to your HDR program, but those are temporary. And the cool thing is that if you don't like it with the brackets you have, change the number of files and the values. LR will let you go to +/-5 on the EV slider, which is likely more than all but the higher end cameras can handle.</p><p></p><p><strong>And</strong>, I've added this in the HDR section above for late-comers, if you have a camera with a sensor that won't go +/-5EV on a single frame, you can shoot a 3-image series at +/-3EV straight from the camera, and then create +/-1EV copies <u>from each of those</u> and wind up with a 9-frame HDR series!!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 291711, member: 9240"] And the nice thing is, you only eat hard drive space for the single image, which can save you a bunch when you get over 24MP's. LR will still create actual Tiff files on the export to your HDR program, but those are temporary. And the cool thing is that if you don't like it with the brackets you have, change the number of files and the values. LR will let you go to +/-5 on the EV slider, which is likely more than all but the higher end cameras can handle. [B]And[/B], I've added this in the HDR section above for late-comers, if you have a camera with a sensor that won't go +/-5EV on a single frame, you can shoot a 3-image series at +/-3EV straight from the camera, and then create +/-1EV copies [U]from each of those[/U] and wind up with a 9-frame HDR series!! [/QUOTE]
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Do You Really Need HDR When You Have High Dynamic Range?
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