Threshing machine

Haven’t seen one of these machines since I was little :), so I had to take a photo. If somebody doesn’t know what this is, it’s a threshing machine and it’s used for the separation of grain from stalks and husks. HDR from three shots, taken with Canon 450D with Sigma 10-20mm lens from a tripod.

Threshing machineHaven't seen one of these machines since I was little :), so I had to take a photo. If somebody doesn't know what this is, it's a threshing machine and it's used for the separation of grain from stalks and husks. HDR from three shots, taken with Canon 450D with Sigma 10-20mm lens from a tripod.

So this blog is not just about my photos i will try to add from time to time a HDR tip which i came across while creating my own HDRs. So here is the first one:

HDR tip #1:

Problem: Sometimes when I take my bracketed photos in a hurry it can happen that the darkest photo (usually -2 EV) still has some overexposed areas or the lightest photo (+2 EV) has some very dark areas.

Solution: This helps quite often. Just take the darkest photo into any RAW editor (Camera RAW, Lightroom…) and underexpose it by an additional 1 or 2 EV, same with the lightest photo and overexpose it by 1 or 2 EV. Save the results to separate files and when creating a HDR image, just include the new files with the taken photographs. Like this you will have 5 available exposures instead of 3.

This works as RAW files have more information than you can see, but this usually doesn’t work with JPG files. Hope this helps someone :). If there are any questions just leave me a comment.

In a dark place

I usually take photos of landscapes and architecture, so it’s nice to have something else. HDR from three shots, taken with canon 450d with Sigma 10-20mm lens from a tripos.

In a dark placeI usually take photos of landscapes and architecture, so it's nice to have something else. HDR from three shots, taken with canon 450d with Sigma 10-20mm lens from a tripos.

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