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Thread started 02 Jun 2008 (Monday) 21:08
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Sunset/sunrise...

 
JPM ­ Photography
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Jun 02, 2008 21:08 |  #1

What is the best way to photograph a sunrise or sunset?
I would like to get the foreground's exposure and the sky/sun's exposure correct...

Thanks for any of your tips and suggestions!


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coralnutz
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Jun 02, 2008 21:21 |  #2

Maybe like a graduated neutral density filter, or could try hdr/exposure blending in pp.


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yogestee
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Jun 02, 2008 22:51 as a reply to  @ coralnutz's post |  #3

Early in the morning or late afternoon..;)

Expose for the sky not the ground..


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blackcap
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Jun 03, 2008 00:23 |  #4

I find a 3- or 4-stop graduated ND filter very useful for sunsets and landscapes in general where the sky is bright. You can do the same thing in post-processing by taking multiple shots and blending them, but I find the filters help minimize the amount I need to do.


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Jun 03, 2008 04:45 as a reply to  @ blackcap's post |  #5

When your taking that sunset/sunrise, don't forget to look over your shoulder.
Sometimes the best shot is behind you.


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argyle
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Jun 03, 2008 07:02 as a reply to  @ chauncey's post |  #6

GND filters are your friends in these situations.


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hommedars
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Jun 03, 2008 07:17 |  #7

Another option is take 3-5 bracketed exposures (at least ±2 stops), then combine in editing or HDR software.




  
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yogestee
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Jun 03, 2008 09:58 |  #8

hommedars wrote in post #5648959 (external link)
Another option is take 3-5 bracketed exposures (at least ±2 stops), then combine in editing or HDR software.

hommedars,,,I'm very interested in HDR..Can you post an example please??


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hommedars
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Jun 03, 2008 10:14 |  #9

yogestee wrote in post #5649767 (external link)
hommedars,,,I'm very interested in HDR..Can you post an example please??

Sorry, I don't post photos on the Internet, but here is a link to the best HDR software I know of with lots of examples.

http://hdrsoft.com/ (external link)

Also a lot of examples on this site (good and bad). Search on HDR.

You will find, that when properly done and not overdone, HDR, exposure blending, and tone-mapping can produce results that virtually impossible to produce using any other method.

BTW, if you already own Photoshop CS3, it has HDR (exposure blending) built-in. File -->> Automate -->> Merge to HDR... I don't think that CS3 is as good as Photomatix, but it's not bad.




  
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Laramie
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Jun 03, 2008 14:42 |  #10

Do a google search for "painting with light" in photoshop. Pretty neat tool/technique.


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