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General Photography
Low Light & Night
Post your Moon Shots
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<blockquote data-quote="Dangerspouse" data-source="post: 787402" data-attributes="member: 46690"><p>This was not taken by me.</p><p></p><p> It was taken by a Reddit user named "SolidGains71" and posted to the r/Nikon subreddit.It's an HDR shot of the moon in its crescent phase, so he first took a picture as we would see it with our naked eye, with primarily only the crescent portion visible. Then he took a series of shots, each progressively more exposed. That brought the dark portion of the moon into correct exposure, but at the expense of over-exposing the crescent. But blending them in an HDR program created a composite image where the shadows were brought out, and the highlighted areas stayed at correct exposure levels. In other words, just like any other HDR shot. But I thought this was pretty dramatic looking and I hope to try it myself sometime. </p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]377682[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dangerspouse, post: 787402, member: 46690"] This was not taken by me. It was taken by a Reddit user named "SolidGains71" and posted to the r/Nikon subreddit.It's an HDR shot of the moon in its crescent phase, so he first took a picture as we would see it with our naked eye, with primarily only the crescent portion visible. Then he took a series of shots, each progressively more exposed. That brought the dark portion of the moon into correct exposure, but at the expense of over-exposing the crescent. But blending them in an HDR program created a composite image where the shadows were brought out, and the highlighted areas stayed at correct exposure levels. In other words, just like any other HDR shot. But I thought this was pretty dramatic looking and I hope to try it myself sometime. [ATTACH type="full" width="30%"]377682._xfImport[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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