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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
First time auto HDR. Need advice
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<blockquote data-quote="sonicbuffalo_RIP" data-source="post: 294529" data-attributes="member: 21543"><p>David Busch's 5 Simple Rules For Shooting HDR:</p><p></p><p>1. Setup your tripod at dawn or dusk with a good view of a stunning panarama, preferably with dramatic clouds and a rising, or setting sun.</p><p>2. Mount an ultrawide angle lens on your camera (no longer than 10 mm on a camera like the D7100.</p><p>3. Rotate the camera to achieve a verticle composition, with lots of foreground and sky.</p><p>4. Use aperture-priority with a very small f/stop to maximize depth of field.</p><p>5. Make the exposures for a HDR composite photograph, exactly like all the others you've seen recently.</p><p></p><p>He goes on to say ....."that's not to say there aren't very good vertically composed, ultrawide dawn/dusk landscape HDR photos. You'll just have to be extra creative to come up with one that's truly original. He also says 4 to 7 photos is a good range of photos to shoot. He says mount the camera on a tripod.</p><p></p><p>2. Set the camera to shoot a bracketed burst with an increment of 1 EV to 3 EV. </p><p>3. Choose an f/stop - App. Priority Select an apperture that will provide a correct exposure at your initial settings for the series of bracketed shots. And then leave this adjustment alone. You don't want the apperture to change for your series., as that would change the depth of field. You want your camera to adjust exposure only using the shutter speed.</p><p>4. Choose manual focus - you don't want the focus to change between shots, so set the camera for manual focus, and carefully focus your shot.</p><p>5. Choose RAW files, which will give you the widest range of tones in your images.</p><p>6. Take your bracketed set. Use a remote if possible (or carefully press the shutter release or use self-timer) and take the set of bracketed exposures. You can use "bracketing burst" or set your camera to continuous shooting mode.</p><p>7. Continue with the merge to HDR Pro steps listed next, or you can use a different program such as Photomatix, if you know how to use it.</p><p></p><p><em><strong>Combining the images</strong></em></p><p></p><p>1. Copy your images to your computer. If you use an application to transfer the files to your computer, make sure it does not make any adjustments to brightness, contrast, or exposure. You want RAW information for merge to HDR Pro to work with.</p><p>2. Activate merge to HDR Pro. Choose file>Automoate>merge to HDR Pro.</p><p>3. Select the photos to be merged</p><p>4. Choose parameters (optional) The first time you use merge to HDR Pro, you can let the program work with it's default parameters. </p><p>5. Click OK - The merger begins.</p><p>6. Save - Once the HDR merge has done it's thing, save the file to your computer. </p><p></p><p>****Hope this helps you get started ****</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sonicbuffalo_RIP, post: 294529, member: 21543"] David Busch's 5 Simple Rules For Shooting HDR: 1. Setup your tripod at dawn or dusk with a good view of a stunning panarama, preferably with dramatic clouds and a rising, or setting sun. 2. Mount an ultrawide angle lens on your camera (no longer than 10 mm on a camera like the D7100. 3. Rotate the camera to achieve a verticle composition, with lots of foreground and sky. 4. Use aperture-priority with a very small f/stop to maximize depth of field. 5. Make the exposures for a HDR composite photograph, exactly like all the others you've seen recently. He goes on to say ....."that's not to say there aren't very good vertically composed, ultrawide dawn/dusk landscape HDR photos. You'll just have to be extra creative to come up with one that's truly original. He also says 4 to 7 photos is a good range of photos to shoot. He says mount the camera on a tripod. 2. Set the camera to shoot a bracketed burst with an increment of 1 EV to 3 EV. 3. Choose an f/stop - App. Priority Select an apperture that will provide a correct exposure at your initial settings for the series of bracketed shots. And then leave this adjustment alone. You don't want the apperture to change for your series., as that would change the depth of field. You want your camera to adjust exposure only using the shutter speed. 4. Choose manual focus - you don't want the focus to change between shots, so set the camera for manual focus, and carefully focus your shot. 5. Choose RAW files, which will give you the widest range of tones in your images. 6. Take your bracketed set. Use a remote if possible (or carefully press the shutter release or use self-timer) and take the set of bracketed exposures. You can use "bracketing burst" or set your camera to continuous shooting mode. 7. Continue with the merge to HDR Pro steps listed next, or you can use a different program such as Photomatix, if you know how to use it. [I][B]Combining the images[/B][/I] 1. Copy your images to your computer. If you use an application to transfer the files to your computer, make sure it does not make any adjustments to brightness, contrast, or exposure. You want RAW information for merge to HDR Pro to work with. 2. Activate merge to HDR Pro. Choose file>Automoate>merge to HDR Pro. 3. Select the photos to be merged 4. Choose parameters (optional) The first time you use merge to HDR Pro, you can let the program work with it's default parameters. 5. Click OK - The merger begins. 6. Save - Once the HDR merge has done it's thing, save the file to your computer. ****Hope this helps you get started **** [/QUOTE]
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First time auto HDR. Need advice
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