How about posting your HDR images?

Rick M

Senior Member
I've found that the smoothing slider in Photomatix has the most impact on halos. negative values produce more halos, positive values (sliding to the right) eliminates them.
 

Rick M

Senior Member
You'll see the light moving about while you move the slider, I just watch the sky areas until I get the best balance. There are other more complicated solutions using photoshop, but I am not that advanced.
 

Rick M

Senior Member
Well, Rick, that's all fine and well...... but what about those winning lotto numbers?

You gotta read the fine print found between the lines printed in Russian. Any quick pick will do, if they do not come in, we will refund your full purchase price after the end of time.
 

Rick M

Senior Member
Adirondack Railway Locomotives


DSC_0066_2922_7_2923_8_2924_tonemapped.jpg
 

ABN Panzer

Senior Member
Recent gift sent our way, courtesy of the local insurgency.
Not the best of pictures. Grabbed my buddy's Coolpix P&S to take this one. Could have framed it a bit better but I was a little rushed.
VBIED - Vehicle Born IED just outside the Base. Only injury/fatality was the vehicle driver.
 

MrF

Senior Member
Here's one from my second attempt playing around with HDR:

dining_room_hdr.jpg


D7000 with the DX 35mm f/1.8G combined from three shots taken hand held using the auto bracketing feature. Combined using Luminance HDR.

I like the way that the detail in the arches and lampshade that was either too dark or washed out in the parent images became clear in the HDR.

I don't like the way the detail in the windows in the background is still washed out, even though it was clear in the darkest of the parent images. Based on what I've read, I think combining more images may have helped with this. I'm still pretty new to this though. Regardless, it wouldn't have helped me much here since tripods weren't allowed and the D7000 will only bracket 3 shots.
 
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