Author | Thread |
|
04/09/2008 06:27:28 AM · #1 |
Hi,
I'm new to HDR need advise on how to improve.
Here my shot.
3 images of different exposure.
Using Photomaix for HDR process an Tone mapped
Final touch-up in Photoshop CS3. |
|
|
04/13/2008 02:52:26 AM · #2 |
I really like it. I, too am new to HDR, so maybe I'm just not jaded yet. I like HDR for landscapes because it seems to bring the photo closer to what I actually see when I'm there. |
|
|
04/13/2008 09:51:27 AM · #3 |
You've done very well here, actually. I have done a little tweaking in CS3, for what it's worth:
1. Made a shadow/highlight adjustment to mute the bright areas a tad and bring out a hint more detail in the industrial structures
2. Selected area lower right and applied a levels adjustment to mute it significantly
3. Made a hue/saturation adjustment layer that amped up the red and yellow a bit, and increased saturation overall about 10%
4. Used the skew tool (in edit>transform) to square up the receding verticals
5. In filters>distort>lens correction, added some vignette to contain & focus the image
6. Added a new, empty layer set to "multiply" mode and filled with white, then drew a gradient from black to transparent down from the top to about halfway, then faded that to burn in the top of the sky a little bit more
R. |
|
|
04/13/2008 09:59:16 AM · #4 |
looks good to me. a fine start. |
|
|
04/13/2008 10:35:04 AM · #5 |
That's very well done - it doesn't look overprocessed at all. As Robert suggested, a little work in PS is probably all that needs doing to it - a little dodge and burn (if permissable!) around the clouds near the horizon, perhaps. |
|
Home -
Challenges -
Community -
League -
Photos -
Cameras -
Lenses -
Learn -
Prints! -
Help -
Terms of Use -
Privacy -
Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2024 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 04/19/2024 03:37:47 PM EDT.