But a number of posters are trying to point out to you, that you haven't invented the wheel. The wheel is nice. Good to have around. But you didn't invent it.Maybe it's not much but I easily get an extra stop and a half out of my camera's RAW files, so for me this is single shot HDR. This is best seen in the shadows to the left of the tree that is at the base of the building, port-side.And I guess we'll have to let "tone mapping" stand as a complex mapping, whether global (like histogram equalization) or local (burning and dodging, Fatall's "gradient domain", Mantiuk's local contrast enhancement, etc).
The confusion comes from the fact that you can tone map a "normal" dynamic range image, or even a very low dynamic range image, if you want, but you pretty much must tone map a high dynamic range image, or it will look unnaturally flat.
Tone mapping doesn't automatically imply HDR, but HDR pretty much implies tone mapping.
And getting back to the purpose of this post I would suggest defining an ssHDR image as one that has:
1. been shot in RAW format, but single shot ie just one exposure! That means no exposure bracketing done in-camera and no JPEG output used from the camera. This will distinguish ssHDR from HDR as it implies that HDR is multiple camera exposures. (I like to street shoot, so ssHDR means no tripod and not having to worry about any movement of anything within the composition. HDR is definitely slower, harder and more equipment intensive!)
2. RAW conversion of this single shot to 2 or more exposure bracketed TIFFs. Okay, you will get better highlight and shadow recovery by using multiple camera exposures, but in any case a single shot RAW has more dynamic range than a camera JPEG. Noise is also higher for a single shot HDR, as can be seen in the images I posted. Personally I'm exploring ways to use this noise instead of fighting it, so no slick-magazine pixel-perfect marketing-makeup results for me! I want to celebrate dead/hot pixels, and imperfect noisy images in an imperfect noisy world! (stepping down from my soapbox, now).
3. Steps 3 and on are just everybody's favorite HDR work flow. So from here on it's just standard stuff, loading bracketed TIFFS, generating extended radiance files or whatever your software may call it and pushing all the sliders to taste.
So does it deserve a name? I think so, and if my opinion mattered (now stepping onto soapbox again) I would also like ssHDR to be associated with imperfect noisy images, pixels dead and hot, cameras old and of low-class resolution. Surely, if photographers can find beauty in an imperfect world then viewers can also find it in an imperfect image.
Michael
Now I'm not the most knowledgible, but some very knowledgible posters have tried, apparently without much success, to point out this simple fact.
Dave