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Subtle HDRs
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 321414" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>The current Nikon sensors are very much capable of doing the types of shots you have here (very nice, btw) with a single shot. I did an <a href="http://nikonites.com/hdr/21994-playing-3-exposure-hdr-series.html#axzz3554VWu4J" target="_blank">HDR thread</a> where I used a single frame of a sunrise from my D7000 (previous generation to yours), grabbing a frame that was largely too dark but exposed properly for the sun, and then used LR and PS to pull out the details in the dark areas. The results were largely indistinguishable from the 3 photo HDR series it came from. The D7100 sensor is even better, so even if you don't shoot for HDR, the information you have in those RAW files are completely capable of giving you HDR-like results, and without the impact of ghosting and merging of separate images.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 321414, member: 9240"] The current Nikon sensors are very much capable of doing the types of shots you have here (very nice, btw) with a single shot. I did an [URL="http://nikonites.com/hdr/21994-playing-3-exposure-hdr-series.html#axzz3554VWu4J"]HDR thread[/URL] where I used a single frame of a sunrise from my D7000 (previous generation to yours), grabbing a frame that was largely too dark but exposed properly for the sun, and then used LR and PS to pull out the details in the dark areas. The results were largely indistinguishable from the 3 photo HDR series it came from. The D7100 sensor is even better, so even if you don't shoot for HDR, the information you have in those RAW files are completely capable of giving you HDR-like results, and without the impact of ghosting and merging of separate images. [/QUOTE]
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