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#3
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Your either supposed to have 2-3 exposures of the same image (long, middle, short) or a raw image file from a good camera. Using a raw image file from a cheaper camera will make a really grainy HDR image.
#5
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Has nothing to be with being lazy. A true HDR has at least 3 differently exposed shots. Not to mention we have a sticky at the top of the page specifically for this stuff.
#6
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3 differently exposed images of the same thing, not different angles.
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software
#7
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3 differently exposed images of the same thing, not different angles.
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software
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#8
3 differently exposed images of the same thing, not different angles.
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software
They are usually used in pictures where the camera can not capture all the detail, like sunsets, the camera cannot properly expose both the car and the sunset, so you expose for each subject and flatten them with HDR software