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General Photography
HDR
HDR or not HDR
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave_W" data-source="post: 114415" data-attributes="member: 9521"><p>The point of this exercise was to learn what triggers in people's minds the belief an image is an HDR vs. a non-HDR and I think I now have an idea. I think it's important to understand where the bottom limit is so that you'll know when you reach to top limit. There's an entire generation of photographers who simply hate HDR because of the unnatural look and feel of an HDR image and I guess I want to understand where that line in the sand is. HDR can be a powerful and useful technique but if used improperly it will turn off a very large segment of your viewers. And to that end, I've a couple images that I'm entering into an international photo contest that I want to win and I know if I enter it with an HDR-ish image I'll not have a chance. This is my true motivation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave_W, post: 114415, member: 9521"] The point of this exercise was to learn what triggers in people's minds the belief an image is an HDR vs. a non-HDR and I think I now have an idea. I think it's important to understand where the bottom limit is so that you'll know when you reach to top limit. There's an entire generation of photographers who simply hate HDR because of the unnatural look and feel of an HDR image and I guess I want to understand where that line in the sand is. HDR can be a powerful and useful technique but if used improperly it will turn off a very large segment of your viewers. And to that end, I've a couple images that I'm entering into an international photo contest that I want to win and I know if I enter it with an HDR-ish image I'll not have a chance. This is my true motivation. [/QUOTE]
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