How or when do we decide how many bracketed images to get the most out of HDR? is 3 enough? or more the better?
thank you.
vinmunoz Cream of the Crop More info Post edited over 7 years ago by vinmunoz. (3 edits in all) | Jan 31, 2016 23:45 | #1 How or when do we decide how many bracketed images to get the most out of HDR? is 3 enough? or more the better? | SONY A7SIII(2) | A73 | A6000 | Sony A7IV | Sigma105 | FE1635F4 | Tamron 70-180mm F2.8 | Tamron 17-28 Tamron 28-75 | FE50F1.8 | Sony 16035F4PZ | SEL30mm F3.5 Macro | Canon 24mm TSE | Laowa 15mm Shift
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Feb 01, 2016 00:05 | #2 Optimally I bracket them 1 stop apart with as many as I need to cover the DR of the scene. Edward Jenner
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Feb 01, 2016 00:16 | #3 cool thanks. | SONY A7SIII(2) | A73 | A6000 | Sony A7IV | Sigma105 | FE1635F4 | Tamron 70-180mm F2.8 | Tamron 17-28 Tamron 28-75 | FE50F1.8 | Sony 16035F4PZ | SEL30mm F3.5 Macro | Canon 24mm TSE | Laowa 15mm Shift
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DavidArbogast Cream of the Crop More info | Feb 01, 2016 00:38 | #4 I agree that a one-stop difference between brackets is a good standard to go by. If there is too much exposure difference between brackets you can get bad transitions, particularly where there is any extreme backlit areas in the frame. These bad transistions can create an ugly halo effect or even a sort of double outline along the edges of backlit subjects. David | Flickr
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Feb 01, 2016 00:48 | #5 Thanks David. Yah mostly for real-estate. | SONY A7SIII(2) | A73 | A6000 | Sony A7IV | Sigma105 | FE1635F4 | Tamron 70-180mm F2.8 | Tamron 17-28 Tamron 28-75 | FE50F1.8 | Sony 16035F4PZ | SEL30mm F3.5 Macro | Canon 24mm TSE | Laowa 15mm Shift
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MalVeauX "Looks rough and well used" More info | Feb 01, 2016 05:01 | #6 vinmunoz wrote in post #17881099 How or when do we decide how many bracketed images to get the most out of HDR? is 3 enough? or more the better? thank you. Heya,
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MalVeauX "Looks rough and well used" More info | Feb 01, 2016 05:03 | #7 vinmunoz wrote in post #17881119 cool thanks. 1 follow up question.... is it okay to manually meter each area of the scene and shoot it one by one. That way the difference of exposures may not be the same or consistent, will it work? It's absolutely ok to do this if nothing is moving.
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Feb 01, 2016 06:39 | #8 MalVeauX wrote in post #17881243 It's absolutely ok to do this if nothing is moving. In a house? It will work just fine. In a scene with movement, like clouds moving, etc, it will not work great because you will have significant differences per frame which results in ghosting and a lot more clean up (so fast sequential shots are ideal). Very best, thank you very much for taking the time to clear this up to me with your experience. appreciate it, awesome. | SONY A7SIII(2) | A73 | A6000 | Sony A7IV | Sigma105 | FE1635F4 | Tamron 70-180mm F2.8 | Tamron 17-28 Tamron 28-75 | FE50F1.8 | Sony 16035F4PZ | SEL30mm F3.5 Macro | Canon 24mm TSE | Laowa 15mm Shift
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maxblack I feel like I'm in danger 2,051 posts Likes: 320 Joined Sep 2008 Location: NYC Area More info | Feb 01, 2016 10:03 | #9 Good article on the subject.
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Feb 11, 2016 18:57 | #11 For real estate interiors I use a 7 shot, 1 stop bracket. In post I only use as many as I need - usually 4 or 5 - but I always make 7 on site so I know I have the range covered. I am, of course, using a tripod (and tethered to my phone as a remote) so my results won't be the same as those of you who are hand holding. Canon 7d MkII, Canon 50D, Pentax 67, Canon 30D, Baker Custom 4x5, Canon EF 24-104mm f4, Canon EF 100mm f2.8 Macro, Canon EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5, 70-300mm f/4-5.6 Di VC
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maxblack I feel like I'm in danger 2,051 posts Likes: 320 Joined Sep 2008 Location: NYC Area More info | Feb 11, 2016 20:33 | #12 ^^^ Those are sweet rgs ^^^
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ChopperAl Senior Member More info | Feb 12, 2016 13:40 | #13 I really like the sunroom picture. Awesome!
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Feb 17, 2016 16:47 | #14 I use -2 0 2 for everything except shooting into a sun and then I go -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3
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Timza Member 131 posts Likes: 12 Joined Jan 2016 More info Post edited over 7 years ago by Timza. | Feb 22, 2016 05:32 | #15 I am new to this. My camera only automatically brackets three images. If I set the brackets at one stop apart. And then take the first set at -2 compensation. Then take three at +1 compensation. I get six images with the extra one on the lower side. You could do -1 and +2 compensation if you want the extra image on the high side.
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