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Flip Flops Prohibited

Red Rocks Amphitheater is just down the hill from my house, so I visit it quite a bit. It’s my personal Landscape photography training ground. Today the light was barely gracing the tops of the rocks and I wanted to try a couple new techniques in post. I decided to find a reasonably interesting foreground object and go for it.

A couple readers have asked for a quick “101″ lesson regarding HDR images and the tools used to create them. I am still working on more substantial content, but until it is finished, I will outline a basic example here.

Here are three images from the seven bracketed images I captured (+3,+2,+1,0,-1,-2,-3) to create the above photo. Obviously one is exposed for the rock and sky, the other is exposed for the cactus, the middle one is what the camera meter decided was a good average of the light in the scene. However, no one image has an exposure that is adequate for both foreground and background. That is where Photomatix Exposure Fusion comes in. You might be able to achieve a balanced exposure outside of software, but it would require either filters or flash, maybe both. But if you are traveling light, then this might be the way to go for you? You can read more about Photomatix here:
http://www.hdrsoft.com/

YucaLight

Foreground exposure +3 on the meter

YucaMeter

Metered

YucaDark

Background exposure -3 on the meter

Processing: Caputre (7 Images) -> Import -> RAW Conversion to .tiff (applying NX2 landscape picture control) -> Photomatix (Exposure Fusion attenuated) -> NoiseWare -> Photoshop (contrast/saturation boost, sharpened) -> flickr

Tip: Even if the weather is nice, if you are planning on making some image near cactus, make sure you bring something other than your flip flops.

Room With A View

Room With A View, originally uploaded by LightAsMagic.

While preping for a 14er (14,000ft peak for those of you who don’t live in Colorado) I was trying to imagine what the view would be like and what gear I should bring. When climbing a 14er, gear and weight decisions take on new meaning. I had discussed this with my wife and she quickly reminded me that 14ers are just “boulder fields with panoramic views”. Very true.  I decided to take a very friendly summit friendly kit: a wide light lens (Tokina 11-16 2.8) and my GT1541T. I am glad I did. Not because of the summit, it was far too windy to shoot, but because of the abandoned mine along the way. It is the journey and not the destination, right? Heck of view these folks had.  If you are interested this is a five exposure (-2 through +2) HDR image taken directly from the Photomatix 3.2 output.

Interesting HDR tip: Becuase of the dynamic range of the exposure I had to spot meter for the sky, then manually set the exposure for about 3ish stops below the spot metered exposure. This allowed me to capture the inside of the cabin. I knew I could brighten the sky in post-production if necessary. Apereture priority ended up with exposures that were still underexposing the interior walls. Lesson learned. In the future, for efficencey sake, it might just be easier to use exposure compensation. Either way I was happy with the hike and the image. 

The 14er in question is Mount Sherman.