marine1
Honorary Master
Mirror up? What does that mean please?
Edit bulb?
Edit bulb?
Last edited:
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Mirror up? What does that mean please?
Edit bulb?
Sure you can. A tripod helps but resting it on something is more than feasible - as I freehand. TBH you can also do it from one RAW file - but it wont be nearly as good.Marine1, here is my quick and dirty guide to shooting HDR pics, seeing as you are too lazy to read the manuals,:
1. Put your camera on a tripod - you cannot do HDR photgraphy properly with hand-held shots, ok? And forget about doing HDR from 1 exposure - you need at least two or 3.
on many cameras doing that pulls you into a world where you can only shoot jpg - raw is always the better option. Here's the important thing - keep your DOF (aperture) constant for each shot.2. Set your camera to auto-bracket. Use a Scenery preset shooting mode. Don't worry about depth of field, for now. Get out the manual of the camera, and read the section on auto-bracketing. Set the brackets as far apart as your camera allows. (-1 - 0 - +1 on mine)
Which is great if you're shooting low light or taking long exposures but really not that necessary for HDR (unless you're doing a long exposure).Some cameras have a function to lift the mirror up and keep it up. You do this after composing your shot. Lift the mirror, wait a second or two, then squeeze (remotely) the shutter (or time it). The shutter on its own causes less vibration than the mirror going up and down.
Shoot faster (open your aperture)? Also try three (instead of 5) at +2 0 -2.You are dead right Bwana, Moving subjects is a problem. Is there a way around this?
I dont know where exactly to put this, its not an HDR, but it was made with photomatics.
Just wanted to see what would happen if I put two different pics into photomatics and I think the effect is quite amazing. Check this out! http://www.flickr.com/photos/just_ice/3040690321/
Has anyone here experimented with turning image stabilizing off for HDR? I want to try it to see what difference this makes.
Lens based stabilisation moves the image around, relative to the sensor. If you half press the shutter, so it locks on to something, then move the camera around - notice how the image moves?
So if you have IS enabled and do three shots - they might not be exactly the same image.
How exactly does IS work, anyway? Is the updating of the CCD delayed, or sampled less often?
Nope - I dont have any IS glass.My toy camera does not have a remote cable, but it does have a 2-second self-timer. But even with a tripod, jitter is still a problem. I have never been able to get a really sharp HDR image. The slightest breeze causes tremors and feathering of edges in the image.
Has anyone here experimented with turning image stabilizing off for HDR? I want to try it to see what difference this makes.
Nope - I dont have any IS glass.