EvanRavitz Well-known member Messages 237 Reaction score 6 Location Boulder, AK, US Feb 8, 2010 #1 Atop a hidden waterfall near Boulder, a spring in winter: -- http://evanravitz.com/photos
G Gentry44 Member Messages 18 Reaction score 0 Location US Feb 8, 2010 #2 EvanRavitz said: Atop a hidden waterfall near Boulder, a spring in winter: -- http://evanravitz.com/photos Click to expand... Is that in camera processing?
EvanRavitz said: Atop a hidden waterfall near Boulder, a spring in winter: -- http://evanravitz.com/photos Click to expand... Is that in camera processing?
J joecan Veteran Member Messages 3,983 Reaction score 105 Location Winnipeg Mb., CA Feb 8, 2010 #3 HDR and missing detail in a snow.? That is not HDR. At least in most of our interpretation. The setting indeed is way to colorful for my taste, or the PP was a bit heavy. Is a good article here to read about HDR: http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/hdr-plea.shtml Regards Joe http://joecan.smugmug.com/
HDR and missing detail in a snow.? That is not HDR. At least in most of our interpretation. The setting indeed is way to colorful for my taste, or the PP was a bit heavy. Is a good article here to read about HDR: http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/hdr-plea.shtml Regards Joe http://joecan.smugmug.com/
EvanRavitz Well-known member Messages 237 Reaction score 6 Location Boulder, AK, US Feb 8, 2010 #4 Yes, it's in-camera single-shot HDR, using the new LX3 firmware, with very little PP in Picasa. The blown snow highlights were probably my fault in not setting exposure compensation properly. -- http://evanravitz.com/photos
Yes, it's in-camera single-shot HDR, using the new LX3 firmware, with very little PP in Picasa. The blown snow highlights were probably my fault in not setting exposure compensation properly. -- http://evanravitz.com/photos