Digital Nigel
Forum Pro
I think that makes the ceiling too bright. Even though it's going through an HDR process, we don't want completely uniform, unrealistic lighting; the dimly lit areas should remain in relative shadow.
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I think that makes the ceiling too bright. Even though it's going through an HDR process, we don't want completely uniform, unrealistic lighting; the dimly lit areas should remain in relative shadow.
Yes, both the lens and the body are stabilised, but I still prefer not to drop below 1/30.Well, your originally posted shots all indicated 1/125”. In any case, they still only varied 2 stops (1/30" - 1/125") - which is probably what happens when the bracketing function hits a SS and/or max ISO wall. So you're right, not only ISO bracketed, but mostly. The single RAW of greater exposure (1/30”) would likely be better alone than combined with two noisier lesser exposures (that don’t bring any extra DR to the table).No, as you can clearly see, that's not the case. The shutter speeds varied a lot.These are all shot with exactly the same exposure - the same SS, the same aperture.How would you know that from a single shot?If all your shots weren't all at ISO 6400, and all share the same SS and aperture, you didn't "exposure bracket" but, more likely, ISO bracketed - which doesn't really offer any advantage whatsoever over a single (non-clipped) RAW. Proper exposure bracketing for a low light scene like this would typically be on a tripod at base ISO with varying exposure for each shot. That doesn't appear to be the case here.Yes, I probably could make the single shot look more like the HDR stack. In fact, the single shot image is probably more accurate, but I like the look the Affinity 'Dramatic' preset achieved with the tone-mapped HDR stack.The HDR looks better in some key ways here, but there's no reason why the single RAW shouldn't look as good or better with different processing - it looks like the necessary data is all there.
I shot handheld, but was exposure bracketing, as I said. The ISOs varied from 400 to 25600. These were the two shots at the extreme ends of the five-shot range:
Lowest exposure
Highest exposure
Yes, but only over a 2 stop exposure variation here (and the less exposed ones won’t improve the DR at all).The point is that highlights are used from the darkest shot, and shadows from the brightest.The darkest one had way too little ISO brightening applied, the brightest one had way too much.
Why not? The 10-18 is stabilized, no?No, that wouldn't be optimum with a handheld shot. It would also be very under-exposed.So long as a single RAW is shot at an ISO that doesn't clip any important highlights, you will have all the same detail to work with that is contained in all these variably brightened alternates. Ideally, the optimal RAW would have enough ISO applied in camera to bring the highlights just below clipping, but if even if you're down 2 or 3 stops it won't make much difference with most modern invariant sensors.
A single RAW at 1/15" and around ISO 800 probably would have probably yielded the best results here.
I wouldn't have considered going below 1/15 handheld, and that's only one stop more than I used. And I don't think that was necessary.1/15" at 10mm should have been easy and would get you twice the exposure of you're brightest shot (1/30"). At 10mm with stabilization you probably could have gone with a much slower SS and increased the exposure even more.




As you can see from the photo, 23 November.Well done.
When were you in Fira?
Yes, my A6500 has IBIS, and so do most of my lenses.We were there in 2019 and have the interior dome as my screen saver on my iPad.
I bracketed three images 0, -2, +2 with my Canon 16-35 f/4 L IS Hand Held. Having IS is Key as my 5D Mark III’s DSLR’s don’t include IBIS.
Strangely, there was no-one at the door or visible inside. I had the church to myself. There was a sign saying that non-flash photography was allowed outside services, which I respected.The “Yia Yia”at the door took one look at me and gave me a few finer points of the Cathedral as she knew I was Greek. Yia Yia’s know.

Agreed.Do you need HDR for natural looking photos?
I was still fairly new to HDR so I might be able to get closer results in a second round of testing.
But ever since, I have operated on the assumption that a 3-5 DR exposure spread won't hurt if you have the time, but won't automatically be better than a single good exposure.
This is vastly improved. Unlike your first HDR, I do not see halos around the chandelier lights. I thought the halos might be from camera shake, but decided not, because no other movement flaws were visible. Ranking:
Why no EXIF?
The dilemma I have is that the HDR version looks good because it's illuminated the dark areas of the unlit cathedral to be almost as bright as the sunlit area opposite the ooen front door. You get bright colours and clear details. As such, it's pretty, but is a rather unnatural, artificial image. The single frame image is more realistic, if less attractive. The shadows have been lifted a lot, but still look shaded, not sunlit.This is vastly improved. Unlike your first HDR, I do not see halos around the chandelier lights. I thought the halos might be from camera shake, but decided not, because no other movement flaws were visible. Ranking:
- the above
- your first HDR attempt with chandelier problems
- your one-shot Raw development
- x
- x
- x
- x
- x
- out-of-camera JPEG
In your OP, you said the church was dark. Neither processed image depicts a dark church.Agreed.Do you need HDR for natural looking photos?
I was still fairly new to HDR so I might be able to get closer results in a second round of testing.
But ever since, I have operated on the assumption that a 3-5 DR exposure spread won't hurt if you have the time, but won't automatically be better than a single good exposure.
In fact, the danger with HDR is that you overdo it, and end up with a low contrast, flat image. So you need to be careful to maintain reasonable contrasts between the brightly lit and shaded areas, rather than making them look equally bright. You want to lift the shadows moderately, not eliminate them altogether.
The single frame image does show shadows, obviously lifted quite a bit.In your OP, you said the church was dark. Neither processed image depicts a dark church.Agreed.Do you need HDR for natural looking photos?
I was still fairly new to HDR so I might be able to get closer results in a second round of testing.
But ever since, I have operated on the assumption that a 3-5 DR exposure spread won't hurt if you have the time, but won't automatically be better than a single good exposure.
In fact, the danger with HDR is that you overdo it, and end up with a low contrast, flat image. So you need to be careful to maintain reasonable contrasts between the brightly lit and shaded areas, rather than making them look equally bright. You want to lift the shadows moderately, not eliminate them altogether.

Hi,The dilemma I have is that the HDR version looks good because it's illuminated the dark areas of the unlit cathedral to be almost as bright as the sunlit area opposite the ooen front door. You get bright colours and clear details. As such, it's pretty, but is a rather unnatural, artificial image. The single frame image is more realistic, if less attractive. The shadows have been lifted a lot, but still look shaded, not sunlit.