Brief Introduction
Learn how to significantly ramp up the visual impact of your photography with this high energy manipulation processDescription
One major problem with most digital cameras is that they cannot capture every tone in a bright, high contrast scene - which is why you often see pale washed-out skies instead of the deep blues we remember, or dark, moody landscapes instead of glorious detail.
HDR or high dynamic image making is a technique originally developed in the scientific community to record a wider range of tones in a photographic image than is normally possible from a single frame.Learn how to set up your camera to do this, how to choose the best software for post-processing, and how to troubleshoot your editing when the result is not exactly the way you wanted it to be ...
Requirements
- Requirements
- Students need to have a camera that can shoot RAW files as well as exposure brackets - that can be processed into fabulous HDR images
- Although it's not essential to have an HDR application, you'll have plenty of guidance on finding both free, and the best value paid HDR applications