***** Challenge no. 129- Natural HDR!- *****

I really love "natural" HDR and the photos you guys have provided are the reason why. Some really great pictures so far.
 
Only a +1 and -1 stop HDR with a Tokina 11-16mm lens on D7000 with Marumi Super DHG Circular Polarizer.





Mack
 
By definition this may be an improper entry as had I taken it in natural lighting conditions....the more natural look would be very dark :) But here goes...Onondaga Cave. 3 manual exposures using Nik Software.



 
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If you never stop learning, you will never stop seeing the possibilities. ...
 
First off, there are some incredible entries here. In fact, I like every image entered so far.

High Shoals Falls

3 shots, 1EV apart processed in Photomatix pro.



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http://gregp.smugmug.com/
 
NIKON D90, Nikkor DX 10.5mm Fisheye, 11 exposures tonemapped in Photomatix.





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Harri - My blog: flatulated.blogspot.com
 
This is Fern Falls in the Idaho Panhandle. This was taken with the D7000 and 16-85VR. It is 3 exposures that were blended in Photomatix and finished in Lightroom 3.4

There are some really great photos in this thread!!

Ron



--
'The question is not what you look at, but what you see'. Henry David Thoreau
http://ront.smugmug.com/
 
I don't quite understand this statement in the rules:

"Attention! "False" HDRs are not accepted. By "false" I mean only 1 tonemapped photo or HDR from extracted exposures from 1 RAW file!"

Does it mean I can only use a single photo? Or multiple exposures of the same scene?
 
What the OP means, he doesn't want to see pseudo HDR where one takes one image file and uses a HDR plugin to make it look like overdone HDR.

Multiple, different exposures of the same exact scene, that shows drastic dynamic tones where all areas are properly exposed after merging or fusing the resulting frames.
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Dez

http://dezsantana.com

 
What the OP means, he doesn't want to see pseudo HDR where one takes one image file and uses a HDR plugin to make it look like overdone HDR.

Multiple, different exposures of the same exact scene, that shows drastic dynamic tones where all areas are properly exposed after merging or fusing the resulting frames.
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Dez

http://dezsantana.com

Ah, ok, thanks Dez!
 

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