Exposure bracketing and HDR imagery

When should you use exposure bracketing?

Exposure bracketing is where you take a sequence of photographs with different exposure levels, and then blend them together to create a photograph with a much higher dynamic range. It gives you all the details you will ever need in your photographs so you can create the exact image you had in mind.

if the scene has a high level of contrast, or you’re just really not sure that your exposure settings are even in the right ballpark, adding to the number of bracketed shots or setting a higher exposure compensation value increases the exposure range the camera captures for a wider range to choose, therefore it should be used every time your trying to achieve this certain style of photography.

What is HDR in image?

In photography, HDR stands for high dynamic range. Dynamic range is simply the range of the lightest tones to the darkest tones within a photo. Put another way it’s a measure of the light intensities from the highlights to the shadows.

What is the difference between exposure bracketing and HDR?

AEB stands for Auto-Exposure Bracketing. It is the method used to obtain HDR photos. It consists in taking several photos of the same scene at different exposure levels. HDR, High Dynamic Range, is the technique that superimposes the different photos to create a new, final photo.

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