Make one exposure to protect highlights and a second tip capture detail in the shadows. Blend in your photo processing app of choice. QED.
Makes the assumption that
a) you are on a sturdy tripod
b) nothing changes in the scene
The OP does landscape photography. Anyone serious about landscape photography is almost certainly using a tripod. There's a good chance, they're using filters to help knock down glare or even the overall scene DR. Bracketing exposures and blending is a
common technique.
Indeed common and tripods are not as necessary as one might think. Yes, if you needed a tripod without multi exposures, you need it with. But if you didn't need it before, you probably don't need it now.
That limits the genera this might work in. For land scape without much foliage on a calm day - it would work fine. Even with landscape if water is present - depending on how one wants to render the water - it would work or not work.
Yes exposure bracketing is a work around in some limited applications. However, it is just that that, a workaround for insufficient DR in the sensor.
People who do landscape photography call bracketing, a technique. It's something they use along with filters to capture a scene with as much or more dynamic range than can be captured in a
single exposure with another body. I bracket with APS-C and full frame bodies.
No sensor has the DR to completely capture many of my shots. Granted, a higher DR sensor might look better overall, but I still see myself bracketing even with a high DR sensor like the D850.
Like it or not, current sensor technology has about the same dynamic range of negative photographic film.
Mostly, yes. I think there are some BW films that give 14 stops? But no matter if more or less than film, film is more graceful with highlights. I prefer that aspect of film all day long.
God love the long smooth shoulder on good old TriX sheet and 120 film. BW film has almost infinite selectable dynamic range. TriX with a high energy developer like HC110 solution A and aggressive agitation, will give you about 6 stops and extremely high contrast. TriX with HC110 solution B with give you about 10 to 12 stops. Reduce the agitation rate and you are up to 14. With sheet film, agitate and them put the hanger in a water bath you can get up to 16.
Then change of to highly dilute Rodinal (1:75) with a low agitation rate you are talking up to 20 stops.
However, the key with film is that long smooth slopping shoulder rather than the linear response of digital. A photo detector is nothing but a linear photon counter. When it runs out of fingers and toes to keep count on - it stops counting no matter how many photons hit it. Film is not linear in the top end which if exploited give the long glowing highlights that is the trade mark of an Adams print or a Minor White print.
I have to admit that the one thing that drove me out of film after I moved to Florida has nothing to do with digital. It has to do that everywhere I lived before Florida the water coming out of the tap was about 65 to 68 degrees. In Florida it seldom gets below 70 and for much of the year it is in the upper 70's to 80. That really throws a monkey wrench in developing film. I screws up your time, it screws up your agitation.
I talked to Clyde Butcher and his darkroom he has a chiller that keeps his cold water at 60 degrees and he adds hot to bring it to 68 for his developer. He also uses a water bath around his takes to keep the temp at 68 during the development.
I finally gave up the ghost and closed down most of my dark room. I do still use my 4x5 and RB but I save the film for developing during the winter when I can better keep the developer temp at 68 to 70 degrees.
However, I really miss the beautiful long sloping shoulder of B&W film.
I still do take 4x5