Showing posts with label HDR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HDR. Show all posts

Friday, November 7, 2008

Old Barn


I created this from an old barn picture I had that I took right here in NC. I used the HDR method of course. Then I used some burning, dodging, and blending for this effect. I enhanced the red and yellow. I also used a grey layer for the clouds. Here is my result. I love North Carolina.

Friday, October 17, 2008

HDR Images







Here are more HDR pictures here at Slocum Pier in North Carolina. Slocum Pier is located in Cherry Point in the city of Havelock. It is a beautiful place to go if you are in that area. It is located on a Marine base. I used an HDR action on them to get these effects.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Bench Set

http://www.flickr.com/photos/hustonphotos/sets/72157607268232590/

Check out my Bench Set on Flickr! I used RyeDynamix HDR for the effects in these pictures!

This is how I came up with this set!

I was sitting at Abilene Regional Hospital visiting my mom who was very ill, I was looking at the benches at the pond located in front, and I could not help but think about all the lives that pass through this hospital. I was inspired to do this set. Think about all the people who sat on these benches visiting loved ones in the hospital. Some Made it and some didn't. I thought about it and felt a chill. That is what this set is about.

Monday, April 28, 2008

WUKONG HDR



I have requested to test this product. After seeing my pictures the makers have agreed to let me play around with it. I am still getting used to it but here are some of my results!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

HDR AND TONE-MAPPING

I have been studying HDR and Tone-Mapping software's on the Internet. I have found many interesting software's for these effect. I am in the process of acquiring some of these programs. One is called WUKONG. It looks like it would be a lot of fun to play with. It's not out yet but I do plan on getting it. Also another program I love is still the Dynamic Photo-HDR toll by MediaChance!

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Lake Pictures

















I took these pictures at Parris Lake, Diamond Valley Lake, and Lake Elsinore in California. They were beautiful. It was a little cloudy. I used LucisArt and Dynamic-HDR. I had a wonderful time.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

PAIR-A-DICE TATOOZ & BODY PIERCING STUDIO


Dan Kuns decorates his own shop. He created all the artistic effects in the shop like the volcano and elephant you will see when you go inside the shop. He has a creative talent. Hes also known for his tattoos. I recommend this shop for people in the Twenynine Palms area who are looking from a tattoo. You can't go wrong with this tattoo shop.

Friday, March 14, 2008

My Windmill Picture


This was taken out by Palm Springs CA at sunset! I used the Dynamic-HDR tool to enhance the picture. I like my result! I like the way the windmill look out that way. There are so many of them;-)

Friday, March 7, 2008

CHOAS


This came out interesting. I shot up the tree. It came out kind of cool! Have you ever had days like these. I have chaotic days sometimes. This pictures relates to that. I like the pattern of this tree. I used the HDR tool on this. You can find this image on my flickr page!

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Las Vegas - Photomatix - HDR



You can see the smog! This was taken at the Airport at the Las Vegas Airport! This made an interesting effect! Here is Las Vegas, NV!

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Barker Dam In HDR



Barker Dam is located in Joshua Tree National Park! Its nice! I took this picture then used the Dynamic HDR tool! I like how it came out!

This is a nice place for tourist if you are ever in the Twentynine Palms area!

Monday, February 25, 2008

Monterey Vaction - Bridge Beyond Beauty



This was another picture taken on our way back from our Monterey Vacation! This was one of my faves. I used the Dynamic-HDR tool for this effect.

It is important to be careful with HDR because you can get a cartoon effect if you go to far. In some of my first attemps you see that.

I enjoy waterscapes and this was one of a few I have taken!

Moments Captured In Time - My Flickr Name

7 Deadly Sins - Pride



I created a series on flickr dedicated to the 7 deadly sins! This picture indicates vanity!

Vanity or Pride is the excessive belief in one's own abilities or attractiveness to others. In many religions vanity is considered a form of self-idolatry, in which one rejects God for the sake of one's own image, and thereby becomes divorced from the graces of God. The stories of Lucifer and Narcissus, and others, attend to a pernicious aspect of vanity.

Philosophically-speaking, vanity may refer to a broader sense of egoism and pride.

In early Christian teachings vanity is considered an example of pride, one of the seven deadly sins.

I thought this was the best way to model vanity! A mirror shot of me pampering myself! I am happy with the way this came out. I used the Dynamic-HDR tool! I think it really brought out the colors in this shot!

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Dynamic-HDR Tool


This is a wonderful tool for HDR. I used two exposures for this! I changed the elevation in them and then used the tone mapping tool in Dynamic-HDR! Then in Adobe CS3 I went to image adjustments using the selective color I enhanced the green. Then I went to match color and used image intensity. I then went to the filters in the blur section and used the surface blur on the channels and knocked out some of the noise in the image! This was tthe end result. I perfer this to LucisArt!

Here is the link to the Software!

http://www.mediachance.com/hdri/index.html

It is by Media Chance! Its only $40! I would say it was well worth the money!
This picture was taken at the beach on the way back from out Monterey CA vaction!

Monday, February 18, 2008

The Amazing Joshua Tree

THE AMAZING JOSHUA TREE



JOSHUA TREES


These photos are about Joshua Trees! It is said they are the gates of heaven and hell! I wonder where we are located!

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

HDR METHOD

I took this picture in San Juan Capistrano. I took it right outside the mission! Then I used the HDR Method to make it look like this;-)

I used Photomatix! At the time I had Adobe CS2!

What is HDRI?

HDRI means High Dynamic Range Imaging. HDRI is today often used in 3D light rendering and also video post-production. Since Photoshop CS2 supports 32 bit HDR image formats also photographers start to experiment with HDRI. We do not plan to give an in depth explanation of HDRI but rather talk about the basics and show how HDRI can be used for artistic images today.

So what is HDR (High Dynamic Range)?

The dynamic range defines the contrast ratio the eyes can see, the cameras can capture or a print on paper can show. Best we state some numbers (mainly taken from here):

100,000:1 A scene showing the interior of a room with a sunlit view outside the window
1000:1 can be captured by some digital cameras (may even be optimistic if we recognize that the dynamic range is limited by noise)

256:1 Print on glossy paper with a dmax of about 2.4

50:1 Print on matte paper with a dmax of 1.6

Let's think of high dynamic range starting beyond 1000:1 (means beyond what any printer and even most digital cameras can produce).

What is the relation between bit depth and HDR?

If you have an image with high bit depth this does not mean that you automatically have also a
HDR image. Otherwise you would take low DR images and just convert them to a higher bit depth. But on the other side the bit depth limits how much DR you can represent in the data:

8 bit: 256:1 (clearly not a format usable for HDR)

16 bit: 65,000:1 or 32,000:1 (as we understand Photoshop is only using 15 bit internally)

32 bit: Here floating point numbers are used and for our practical purpose there in no real limit

How can we capture HDR images?

Right now most digital cameras capture only a maximum of 1,000:1 (as said this even maybe optimistic). While there are many developments to create sensors that can capture a higher dynamic range (e.g. Fuji in the S3) the main method today is to combine multiple exposures (2 - 10). As always this creates its own problems:

Moving objects (results in so called "ghosting")

Camera move (requires image alignment)

In case of stationary objects and a sturdy tripod quite good HDR images can be created.

Why creating HDR images when prints cannot reproduce the contrast?

Once you have created a HDR image you need to find a method to compress the high dynamic range in a way that it fits into the range of a print. This procedure is called Tone Mapping.

Tone Mapping

Tone Mapping is a way to reduce a high contrast image to a much lower contrast one. It always will be some sort of compromise. That is why there are many different algorithms for Tone Mapping and it is very much dependent on the concrete image how good some of these methods will work.

Photomatix by MultimediaPhoto is on the market for some time. We played with it also in the past but never got really excited for our own artistic work. This changed recently. We are not sure whether this is related to the new version 2.3 or a better understanding in how to use the software (likely both). The following will give an idea how we use Photomatix and is not a kind of manual.

Creating a HDR image in Photomatix

There are quite a few ways to create a HDR image in Photomatix. Normally you should have at least 3 exposures with about 2 f-stops difference (-2, 0, +2 should often work fine). Most of the time you convert the RAW files in your RAW converter of choice (make sure you have the same white balance for all shots) and later combine them in Photomatix. But there is also a way to start directly from the RAW files in Photomatix.

We use in our sample a three exposure sequence (Canon 1Ds, 4, 8, 20 seconds). The image(s) we use were photographed at Fort Point in San Francisco. The scene is really dark and it is quite a challenge not to overexpose the window. We may have gotten a decent result from one single image in the sequence but we would have a hard time to create the final look like in Photomatix.

We create the HDR file using the Automate->Batch feature:

In batch you can automatically process multiple sets of RAW files and create HDR images (even ready tone mapped TIFFs or JPEGs). In our case we only created one single HDR file. Once the HDR file is generated we open the resulting HDR file.

Looks ugly, right? What is gone wrong? Fortunately there is nothing wrong here. Without Tone Mapping a HDR image cannot show on screen properly because it can have a dynamic range way beyond the screen capabilities. Also an automatic Tone Mapping does not make sense because there is no single and even less automatic way to tone map an image.

Because we want to print the final image we need to process the HDR file in the Photomatix Tone Mapping dialog.

Note: We have reviewed before the Photomatix Photoshop Tone Mapping plugin. But we actually did not use the plugin for HDR files. This was not really tone mapping but should be called tone re-mapping. Nevertheless it is an effective way to improve images.

Photomatix provides today two different tone mapping methods:

Detail Enhancer

Tone Compressor

Both can be useful for certain types of images. For our image we want to get a certain gritty look and here the "Detail Enhancer" at 100% Strength is very useful.

Notes of caution using the "Detail Enhancer" method:

Some images may show halos at high contrast edges

The preview is not always 100% correct (but good enough for practical purposes)

Once the image is processed we save it as a TIFF file.

Monday, January 14, 2008

ME


Here is a self-portrait! I put this image in neat image a few times. I used the Dynamic-HDR tool on this photo. It enhanced the color. I smoothed it out some usinf the smudge tool in the Adobe CS3 photoshop. I also enhanced the colors and used the Overlay tool in blending options.
This is one of my modeling pictures. I used to model a while back. Now I am on the other side of the camera!

Thursday, December 27, 2007

A blogspot that can help tips, ideas, tutorials, and techniques!

I was messing around on my blogger and I found this site that is very helpful when it comes to photography and improving your work if any one is interested!

http://photoresources.blogspot.com/

Not sure who created it but I have read a few articles and is appears to be very helpful in many ways!