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Photography Q&A
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<blockquote data-quote="voxmagna" data-source="post: 496135" data-attributes="member: 38477"><p>Thanks, I've got a 2 day vacation coming up so I'll play with center weighted. Incidentally, a Hoya 77mm Grad filter for my Nikon zoom lens is quite expensive! Have you tried the Nikon HDR mode with any success or afterwards in post and do the multiple shots have to be stable from a tripod to get the correct overlay?</p><p></p><p>OK I got some ideas to try out for landscapes. I can set up my D750 for multiple shots on the timer, bracketed 1 stop so I choose say 5 shots. In 32 bit post I can overlay them for one HDR image. In theory I can pixel stitch the images, so hand held bracketing might be doable on fixed aperture if I'm without tripod a sunny day and with a steady hand. Good job I have a fast PC to stitch 5 RAW images. I learned the camera internal HDR only works for JPEGS. Nikon didn't build in the processing power to merge RAW in the camera (shame).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="voxmagna, post: 496135, member: 38477"] Thanks, I've got a 2 day vacation coming up so I'll play with center weighted. Incidentally, a Hoya 77mm Grad filter for my Nikon zoom lens is quite expensive! Have you tried the Nikon HDR mode with any success or afterwards in post and do the multiple shots have to be stable from a tripod to get the correct overlay? OK I got some ideas to try out for landscapes. I can set up my D750 for multiple shots on the timer, bracketed 1 stop so I choose say 5 shots. In 32 bit post I can overlay them for one HDR image. In theory I can pixel stitch the images, so hand held bracketing might be doable on fixed aperture if I'm without tripod a sunny day and with a steady hand. Good job I have a fast PC to stitch 5 RAW images. I learned the camera internal HDR only works for JPEGS. Nikon didn't build in the processing power to merge RAW in the camera (shame). [/QUOTE]
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