When out taking photographs for my landscape shoots, I tried out exposure bracketing, which is when you change the exposure. This means that you have a selection of photographs, of the same subject, at different exposures, going from over exposed to under exposed. Using exposure bracketing means that you can merge them together, on Photoshop, to create a highly detailed and impressive image, that you would not be able to create with a single shot.
hdr image one
These are the images I used to create this merged image.
I feel this image, that was produced, was the best, as it has the full range of tones, and was exactly how I pictured it to be when i took the photographs.
hdr image two
Here are the images that I merged together to create this image.
I don’t think this turned out as well as the first, and this is purely down to the fact that the images the I took to make this HDR image, are not the greatest and are lacking interest and colour. This means that the image produced, is not going to have a full range of colours.
hdr image three
Here are the images that I merged together to create the image above.
I think this image, that was produced, could be improved, meaning when I take my next of images, I need to quick in taking the photographs, at different exposures, because then the clouds won’t move as much, and the light will not change dramatically either. If I did this next time, then I think the strange orange space will disappear.
Overall, I would definitely do HDR imagery again, using exposure bracketing, because you get some very interesting and intense photographs produced.