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Learning by example

posted by Roberto Ballerini - traveling
Posted on Monday September 24, 2007 at 23:43. 663 visits. ( permalink )
I think not all our Ipernity friends know exactly what's HDR.
HDR stands for High Dynamic Range.
The problems: film and sensors haven't the same ability of the human eye to record high luminosity differencies. A typical JPG image has a range of 256 different tones for each of the three R(ed)G(reen)B(lue) colour components. Digital sensors can have 16 to 256 times this range. Human eye has greater range. So, in a typical scene with a dark subject against a light background, in a traditional LDR shot we have to choose if we want details in the highlights zone or in the shadows zone.
The solutions: film and modern sensors capture a much higher range, but this only partially solves our dilemma --> the standard image formats are 8-bits ones (256 tones x component).

First step: capture a wider range --> the RAW formats have 12 to 16 bits per component;

second step (optional): capture a more wider range --> use the bracketing: mount the camera on a tripod and capture the scene on different shots, changing the exposure value (3 to 15 different exposures are usually employed)

third step: combine the different exposures with specialised softwares (Photomatix and QtPfsGUI are the more common) with a technique called tone-mapping: use details from the lighter exposures for the shadows zone and from the darker exposures for the highlights zone (if we don't make the second step, we have a pseudo-HDR and data from teh same exposure are combined to obtain the pseudoHDR shot).

A visual example:

- original shot (directly converted to JPG):
"Roar" by Roberto Ballerini [?]
Roar by Roberto Ballerini


- (pseudo)HDR shot (tone-mapped and converted to JPG):
"Roar (HDR)" by Roberto Ballerini [?]
Roar (HDR) by Roberto Ballerini


As you can see, there is a lot more detail in the lion's face, particularly in the ears, but the sky looks too saturated and a little bit unnatural.

8 Replies

Doomshammer says:
Great summary about HDR. Well done Roberto.
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
Roberto Ballerini - traveling pro replies:
Thanks
Posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
M a d . P h o t o . W o r l d says:
The reason that you can create a (pseudo)HDR(i) is that most digital (DSLR) cameras capture -1,+1EV (more or less in RAW mode) when you shoot one exposure at 0EV.

If you use your camera inhouse jpg conversion, the camera will just throw away the -1, +1 :(

Always shoot RAW ;)
Posted 22 months ago. ( permalink )
Roberto Ballerini - traveling pro replies:
I always shoot RAW+JPG

--
Coming from a group home page (?)
Posted 22 months ago. ( permalink )
M a d . P h o t o . W o r l d says:
I can understand the RAW, but why also the JPG ?
Posted 21 months ago. ( permalink )
Roberto Ballerini - traveling pro replies:
Because it is showed on every computer (differently from CR2, Canon's RAW), so I can use it as a thumbnail, searching shots everywhere.
And sometimes the JPG is just fine for sharing and I haven't to convert it to a more "standard" format.

--
Seen in a group discussion (?)
Posted 21 months ago. ( permalink )
Chris82 pro says:
I agree to Roberto, I shoot RAW+JPEG for the same reason :-) With a 4 GB CF I can easily store 200+ photos with my 400D which is usually enough for one session without the need to offload the pics to a hdd.
Posted 20 months ago. ( permalink )
M a d . P h o t o . W o r l d says:
Well.. i shoot around 5-9 exposures each time so i run through my memory cards as a kid in a candy shop :)

Since i only unload on my stationary or my laptop i have no need for the jpg, but i can understand that others might.
Posted 20 months ago. ( permalink )

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