- HDR stands for high dynamic range and it is a technique in photography that is used to produce a more vibrant, crisp picture. It includes 3-7 photos of the exact same landscape with different exposures. The photos are then layered on top of each other to add the exposures together. This technique is achieved by beginning by taking a photo using a tripod, in perfect exposure. After that you take a couple over exposed and a couple underexposed photos of all different lightings. To alter the exposure, the shutter speed must be the setting that is changed because it determines how much time there is to let in light.
- One photo that inspired me: It inspired me to want to shoot trees and greenery because the HDR technique works really well with brightening and saturating nature.
photo by: Trey Ratcliff |
image 1: ISO 100, f/4.0, ss 1/4000 image 2: ISO 100, f/4.0, ss 1/1025 |
Talk to me about the shot on the bottom. What were the exposures you used to create this? The top image - who did this one and what is the difference, visually, between that shot and the one I'm assuming you took on the bottom. It looks like some of the punch is missing - what do you think?
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