Posts Tagged ‘high dynamic range’

Lifeguard Tower in Cancun | Mexico Travel Photography

Friday, June 25th, 2010

Here’s an image from the beach in Cancun, Mexico. I was there earlier this month shooting a wedding so I didn’t have to time to do a whole lot of exploring. I did manage to get some shots around the resort we were staying at however, the Gran Caribe Real. I had to do what I would consider some pretty extensive post processing to this image. I actually edited this one on a plane ride from Houston to Miami and I didn’t finish until right before we started our decent. So it probably took a good two hours of clean up. The original image was quite messy actually, and to the left you can see one of the RAW images straight from my camera. Sometimes you just have to work with what you’ve got. I waited a little while for the people to move but I quickly realized they weren’t going anywhere. There was also a lifeguard giving us the stink eye when we started to move the floaties and junk from the left side of the tower. We did however move them from the right side to the left at least. Before doing my normal processing of the image, I used the new “Content Aware Fill” option in Photoshop CS5. While I can’t see myself using this feature a great deal, and I think there is definitely a lot of perhaps over-hype about it, it does come in handy sometimes. It runs an algorithm that looks at the surround pixels of an area and fills in the space that you want to delete with pixels that match horizontally and vertically from the surround image. So I simply drew a line around the people with the lasso tool, hit Shift+Delete with Content Aware selected and clicked OK. CS5 deletes the people and fill in the blank space with the shoreline and water. This would noramlly take quite a bit longer because you would have to use a combination of clone stamps with different levels of softness and opacity, followed by various healing brushes, spot healing brushes, and a lot of time. So what used to take ten minutes, now takes ten seconds. And that is a big deal for work-flow! If the people kissing would have been closer to the guard tower or my lens, I may have left them in there, but because they were far out and took up so little real estate I saw them as a distraction that needed to be removed. You’ll see I also removed the floaties on the left side of the guard tower and the person poking up from the right side.

Canon 1Ds Mark III, Canon 24-70 f/2.8 , 24mm, f/13, 1/125th, ISO 125, 7 Exposure HDR



Follow James on Twitter

Photomatix Pro Review and Tutorial | HDR Photography

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Coupon Code

Before we get started, go to the HDRsoft (the company that makes Photomatix) and download a trial version to run along with this post. That way you can try it out for yourself before you buy it. If you plan on purchasing Photomatix Pro or any other software from HDRsoft, be sure to use the coupon code “JamesBrandon” to receive a 15% discount off your purchase. You can go directly to their purchase page or their home page if you want to find out more.

Photomatix Pro Review and Tutorial (Current Version 3 and BETA Version 4)

Photomatix Pro is a stand alone software program that takes bracketed exposures from your camera and combines them to create an HDR (high dynamic range) image. The main reason you would want to create an HDR image is when there is too much contrast in a scene to capture all the light that can be realized by the human eye. Take for example the image below:

If you simply took a picture of this plane, with a normal camera, in broad daylight, it would look like this:

You see how it’s not about the camera? Anybody could take this picture. I didn’t have special access to this plane, I was a tourist with a camera. I walked up to the plane, set up my tripod, and fired off three shots of this jet.

Now, this is where Photomatix comes in. Photomatix Pro will take my three exposures and run a complex algorithm on them to pull out the best light from each image. When you set up for an HDR image you take anywhere from 3-7 images of the same subject at different light levels. When I took this image, all I needed was three. There wasn’t enough contrast to warrant any more than that.

The first image is properly exposed, the second is two stops under exposed (to gather detail from the sky), and the third image is two stops over exposed (to gather light in the shadows). Take these three images from Lightroom, Aperture, or whatever program you might be using, and open them up in Photomatix Pro. No matter what program you use to send your images over, you will get a pop-up window that is going to ask a few questions.

If you’re a beginner, some of these options might be useful to you. I don’t use any of them because I can fix any faults of the image later in Photoshop.

Align Images – If you aren’t using a tripod while you take your 3-7 images, you will have to click this box. The best way to align is by correcting horizontal and vertical shifts in the images. Having Photomatix crop the resulting image is probably a good idea too if you took the shots hand held.

Reduce ghosting artifacts – This is an option that will attempt to fix issues with moving subjects. If you take a picture of a sky while birds are flying across it, you will find that Photomatix won’t be able to tell which image to blend in to the final product. All 3-7 images will have birds in 3-7 different locations so you will get these weird, blurry streaks across the image. This is especially a problem with long exposures.

Reduce Noise – If you don’t have any other means of reducing noise, you can check that box as well. I use Topaz DeNoise 4 to reduce noise at the final stage of my editing, so I don’t want any other noise reduction until then. Why? Because noise reduction removes details and I want to preserve as much detail as I can until the last step.

Reduce Chromatic Aberrations – This is a complicated one for most people. Chromatic Aberrations are these colored distortions that you get in your image when your cameras lens fails to focus all the colors at the same convergence point. If you take a picture of a sky and there are trees in the frame, the camera can’t compensate for the extreme contrast between the sky, and the tree. This is because there is too much dynamic range of light between the two subjects.

Show intermediary 32-bit HDR image – Don’t worry about this one.

Automatically re-import into Lightroom library – This is obviously if you are using Lightroom. I don’t use this option ever.

Now that you have checked or unchecked all the boxes, click “Export.” Now you just have to wait a minute. Photomatix Pro is working through a complex algorithm to decide which light from each image to include in the final version. Depending on your system and how many images are involved, this can take anywhere from 1-5 minutes, maybe even more. Once Photomatix is done processing your image, a box may pop up that doesn’t look like an HDR image at all. This is another confusing part to some people but just click tone mapping to get to the next part. When you do you will be taken here:

The image in the window above is the final result I got after moving the sliders around to the left. You may notice that this image doesn’t look the same as the final product I showed you at the beginning. Well, Photomatix isn’t the last step :-) . I like to say that Photomatix gives me a rough draft. It gets me about half way there, if that. A few tips on the sliders…

  • I keep strength at 100% almost all the time
  • Color saturation should be pretty high most of the time as well. It just depends.
  • Luminosity will control how bright the image looks. The further right you go, the more HDRish the image will become. This can be a bad thing.
  • Microcontrast will control contrast of the image but only in a subtle way.
  • Smoothing probably has the greatest effect over the image. The further left you go, the more psychedelic the image is going to look. Also, the further left you go, the more problems you will run into with haloing (I’ll get into that more in another tutorial).
  • Under “Tone Settings” there are sliders called White Point, Black Point, and Gamma. These sliders control the amount of light and shadows in the image and as you move these sliders around, you will see the histogram on the left being affecting by moving right or left. Histograms are a whole other blog post, so stay tuned! Just know that the histogram needs to look similar to the one above, with no data bunched up on the right or left side. It should look a bit like a mountain where the bottom of the mountain is on each side of the chart.

The rest of the sliders are either self explanatory, or make very minor changes to the image. You will have to go through each slider and play around with them to get a feel for what does what. I never leave the sliders in the same place for every image. They are all different and they all call for different tones, vibrance levels, saturation, etc. Once you are happy with the look of the image click “Process.” You’re done! After Photomatix processes the image it appear as a finished version and stay on the screen. To save it somewhere, go up to File>Save As and create a unique name for it and place it in a folder that you will be able to find.

Summary

Photomatix is a very powerful tool for creating HDR images. I have used a few other programs and this is the best in my opinion. You won’t be able to get into HDR photography without purchasing custom software that your computer doesn’t come with. Remember, if your going to purchase Photomatix, you can get 15% off by using the coupon code “JamesBrandon” at checkout. Here is a link again to their ordering page and website. If you aren’t sure yet, you can simply download the trial version and try it out. What do you have to lose!? If you have any further questions, tweet me at @jamesdbrandon and I will get to the question as soon as I can. You can also leave a comment in this post. Have fun!

Quick Overview of Photomatix 4.0 BETA

Photomatix has recently released a private version of their BETA 4.0 software to select Photographers. While this version isn’t public yet, if you purchase version 3 right now, HDRsoft will provide an upgrade when the final 4.0 is released. I can tell you that 4.0 is great! It has a lot of really good improvements and it is a LOT faster! There are also options for semi-manual ghosting correction, options for presets, and better noise reduction to name a few. I am using it exclusively right now but still used the previous version for this tutorial to avoid confusion (since the new version looks slightly different).



Follow James on Twitter

The End of the Line | Florida Keys Travel Photography

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Coupon Codes Coming

There are a few pieces of software I use almost all the time for my travel images. In the coming weeks I will be doing full reviews of these software packages, and including coupon codes so you can receive a discount if you choose to buy these programs to try for yourself. Most discounts will be around 15% so that will take off a nice chunk of change if you want to dip your feet in the world of HDR and/or Travel Photography. Stay tuned!

What do you think of the blog?

Lately I’ve made quite a few changes to how this blog functions and works. I added the bar at the bottom to help you navigate different parts of the site, get important news updates, and to make it easier for you to share these images with your friends and family as well. I also added a new facebook comments section and facebook like button. The facebook like button has gone over pretty well so far but if you have a few extra seconds, go ahead and just leave a comment and let me know what you think of the image! Comments let me know if I’m bringing good material to the set, and what I may or may not need to change in the future. Anyways, I’d love to hear your thoughts on the recent changes and whether they are easy to understand and use, or not. There are probably a lot more changes coming in the next few months so watch out!

The End of the Line | Bahia Honda State Park in the Florida Keys

After a long flight from DFW Airport to Houston Bush, then to Miami, then waking up at sunrise to drive 6.5 hours to the Florida Keys, I have finally arrived! I can’t believe how much driving we have been doing! I talked to a man on my flight from Houston to Miami that lived in the city and had been to the Keys plenty of times. He told me a few places to check out and that Bahia Honda State Park was a great place for pictures, and that it had a really cool bridge. All along the Keys, there are these old and abandoned bridges right next to new and shiny bridges. I don’t know why they had to build new ones, but it’s amazing how fast structures fall into disrepair when nobody takes care of them. This bridge is just outside of Bahia Honda and I couldn’t take my eyes off of it!

Bahina Honda State Park



Follow James on Twitter

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway | California Travel Photography

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Update on Gallery Night

As many of you have read, my work is being featured in an art gallery this Saturday night at Main and Vine Art Gallery in Keller Texas. I just wanted to say that I got all my prints in and all the selected images for the gallery night are now on display and ready to go! So, if you can’t make it by Saturday night for whatever reason, you can stop by any time now to view my work. I’m pretty excited about the gallery night and hope to see you all there, hopefully I will be able to meet some of you I haven’t met before face to face. Any prints purchases that night or any time through my website will come with a “Certificate of Authenticity” as well as a brief “Story Behind the Image.” You can keep these with the picture or with your other important documents.

Cancun Next Week!

Wow this trip is coming up fast! I got some emails and phone calls from a few people with tips on what to do while in Cancun. I figured out I will only have one full day to travel around. Every other day is either the wedding, or a half day where I am flying. If I have time to make it down, I will go to the Myan ruins at Chichen Itza. I have been to the ruins at Uxmal on a cruise I got to do a few years back, but Chichen Itza is supposedly where it’s at for ruins. I keep reading that you need to stay there for about 3 days to see everything there, but I will just have to cram what I can into one day. Other than that I won’t have a lot of time to focus on travel images. Which is perfectly fine because Daniel and Laurens wedding is going to be amazing and I can’t wait to shoot it!

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway

My family has a great history of serving in the armed forces. My Grandpa and his brother on my Mom’s side served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War. He served on submarines and did all kinds of cool. My Papa on my Dad’s side was an MP in the second World War, but I never got a chance to meet him because of his passing when I was about three years old. My sisters husband even served with the US Rangers, although I don’t know much about what he did. Maybe I can find out one day :-) . Most recently my cousin Brandon (also on my Dad’s side) served in Iraq with the 101st Airborne as a medic. He was with them when they marched in and I truly admire his bravery and courage, as I do with both my grandparents. To everyone who served or serves in the US Military, thank you from the bottom of my heart. You are all heroes and your courage leaves me in awe. We are forever in debt to your sacrifice.

The aircraft below is none other than the famous F14 Tomcat. You know, Top Gun? The F14 flew from December of 1970 all the way through September of 2006 when it was officially retired. What’s really interesting about this jet is that Iran owns about 44 of them today! During Nixon’s presidency, back when the US had good diplomatic relations with Iran, the US decided to offer Iran access to our military technology. They needed aircraft to defend themselves against Russia and they decided the Tomcat would fit the bill. After relations started going south, the US embargoed much of their shipments to Iran and even began destroying remaining F14′s to make sure they didn’t fall into the hands of the Iranian air force. To this day, Iran still has 22 working F14 Tomcats. The US Air Force will not sell scrap parts of the F14 either because of the same fear, like they do with other aircraft.

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway

F14 Tomcat Aboard the USS Midway



Follow James on Twitter

Low Tide at Carlsbad State Beach | HDR and Travel Photography

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

I love finding an image in my library that I have looked past and discarded multiple times, and then realizing it’s potential and bringing life to it. The obvious photos are great, but these little hidden gems have a special place in my portfolio :-) . On our recent trip to California, my wife Kristin and I were driving back to Orange County after a rather disappointing trip to San Diego. We drove to San Diego to scout a place for sunset and I could not for the life of me find a good place. Now, you can take snapshots anywhere, but an HDR or landscape photograph has a lot of criteria to meet before it becomes worth taking. There has to be something unique or intriguing in every part of the frame. So after visiting the USS Midway and having a corn dog at Hot Dog On A Stick (we ate there during our honeymoon so it’s tradition :-) ), we bailed on San Diego in hopes to find somewhere on the way back the OC. There were a lot of unique challenges in taking pictures of the beach. I have become very picky on what I take pictures of and it can be frustrating at times. Everybody has seen the typical picture of a beach with the sand, the waves, and the sky behind it. So I always try and bring something extra into the sides of the frame when I can. This could be a pier, a bluff, some rocks, people, etc, whatever makes the shot interesting.

When I took this image, there was nothing to bring into the frame besides the sand, the waves, and the sky; the typical image. But to me, there was something unique about this one. The waves would crash and pour in about 5 feet past where I was standing every few minutes. And every time the waves receded back they would pull this deep, buried, black sand with it along with the usual sand. This black sand I guess was native to the beach but was buried underneath the normal sand. What was so cool about it was the veiny streams the waves carved out to reveal the darker sand beneath. Pair that with the incredible colors the sunset provided and the distorted lines of a 15mm fisheye lens, and you have the image below. You may also be interested to know that the only reason the sand is reflecting the colors of the sky is because a wave had just receded back to the ocean and the sand was wet and water was still streaming through the veins down to the ocean. The HDR process brings these reflections out and makes them pop, so the sand is like a mirror image of the clouds and sky above.

Low Tide at Carlsbad State Beach, California

Carlsbad State Beach, California

P.S. I put my heart and soul into making these image. If you like what you see, or don’t like what you see, let me know! Comments are how I gauge whether or not I’m creating images that people love and remember. Cheers!

P.S.S. After I took this shot, we visited a place called Harbor Fish Cafe right on the beach. They had some of the best fish n’ chips I’ve ever had. And I am complete sucker for good fish n’ chips. They served the fish on a cardboard plate with a roll of paper towels. Brilliant! Can’t wait to go back!

P.S.S.S. Now I’m really hungry :-)



Follow James on Twitter

Why I Love HDR and What the Heck It Is

Monday, February 1st, 2010

WHAT IS HDR PHOTOGRAPHY?

I have received a lot of questions lately from people wanting to know what HDR photography is and why it looks so much different than a normal photograph. I figured I would write a blog post about it and explain from my point of view why HDR is so amazing and what makes an image an HDR image.

HDR stands for “High Dynamic Range.” An HDR image combines all the available light in a scene into one image. You may have noticed that when you take a picture on vacation (I used to do this all the time), it never quite does justice to your memory of that scene. I specifically remember driving to Table Rock Lake in Missouri back when I was knee high to a grass hopper. We drove up to a place on the side of the road marked “Photo Opportunity” and from that point you could see for literally miles. The lake looked as if it went on forever. The sky was bright blue with dramatic clouds. The scenery went on forever. I grabbed my camera and snapped off a picture before driving to our destination.

I remember getting my film developed at Wal-Mart and eagerly anticipating that one picture. I could still remember it so vividly in my head. I grabbed my pouch of images from the desk and opened it with great anticipation, but when my eyes finally found the image a frown came across my face. “That’s not what it looked like at all,” I muttered to myself. My camera could not capture the full dynamic range of light in that scene. It was just too great a spectrum: The intense light coming from the sun, the reflection off the water combined with the deep blues and greens of the lake. The bright greens of the trees along with the dark shadows cast by them.

HDR processing fixes this problem! Now I can take an image and capture the exact emotions and mood of the scene on that very day! I can bring in the dramatic tones of the clouds and the streaks they make across the sky, as well as the captivating textures of the water crashing against the shore line, and at the same time get every detail in the greenery. But how is this possible you might ask? Is there some new camera out on the market that nobody knows about yet? Hardly! HDR processing starts with the same camera I use to shoot weddings, families, seniors, etc. The difference is the set up of the shot and the post processing of the image after-wards.

An HDR image starts with taking multiple shots of the same scene. It is ideal (and required in some cases) that you use a tripod for this step. Any movement of the camera can cause more work in post or ruin the image completely in low light situations. In most cases, three images of the scene are enough to capture the full range of light in a scene. However is some cases it may require five, or seven even. After composing the scene, simply take three images: one at the “correct” exposure for that scene, one 2 stops under-exposed, and one 2 stop over-exposed. So -2, 0, +2. In rare instances, like shooting into the sun; -2, -1, 0, +1, +2 and so on. Some people even take 9 exposures but I’m not sure my computer would like that! Your images will look something like this:

SO WHAT’S WRONG WITH THOSE THREE IMAGES

Glad you asked! If we start with the first one (underexposed) you will notice that the detail is primarily in the sky behind the aircraft (C-1 Trader) as well as the front of the aircraft. In photography you don’t want to lose any detail in the image. So if parts of an image are too dark, that part of the image turns pure black, which is BAD! We call it “blowing your shadows,” or “blowing your highlights” if you are referring to pure white being present. Pure black or white means parts of the subject are lost. In the under exposed image the shadows are consumed by pure black inside the engine and around the letters on the side of the plane. Since it is pure black, there is nothing to see!

In the middle image, the properly exposed image, the plane is exposed for the most part. There are some blown highlights at the top of the plane due to it’s finish and the harsh sun light from that day. You notice a lot more detail in the plane itself, but there’s one thing missing. One thing that will make you think, “Well that’s not what it looked like.” The sky! Because there was such a big difference between the light falling on the plane and the bright sky, the sky has been nearly lost in this image. The is barely any detail in the clouds at all. But the clouds were so beautiful that day, I guess you just had to be there :-( .

The third image is 2 stops overexposed. This means two steps brighter than what the camera thinks the image should be. I should also note that when shooting a scene for HDR, you cannot be using your camera in an automatic mode! Stay away from the green box on your camera! When you take a picture in automatic you aren’t really taking a picture, Canon is, or Nikon is! You are letting your camera decide how to create the look of the image. You let the camera decide your depth of field, your sensitivity to light, your white balance, your shutter speed, your metering, etc. You are just the middle man who holds the camera for them! If you really want to become a creative photographer you must learn to work in the creative modes. And HDR is done best in “Aperture Value” mode, or “Aperture Priority.” This means you set aperture (depth of field) to one place and that setting never changes during your three images. In manual, shutter priority, or automatic the depth of field would change in every frame and that would mess everything up. But I digress: You will see in this third image that the sky is completely lost. No detail at all, just pure white. In fact, the majority of the image is lost. The plane almost seamlessly blends into the sky behind it, as well as the ground beneath it. But there is a few parts of the image that I captured brilliantly. Look at the incredible detail in of the propellars and mainly the details of the engine! You can see everything in there! There is also great detail in the tires of the C-1 and the inner workings around the landing gears. This image would be great if all I remembered was the engine.

But I remember the beautiful, dramatic sky with slightly present storm clouds appearing. I remember the shiny finish of the C-1 Trader and beautiful curves of the planes body. I remember seeing the city of San Diego behind the aircraft carrier and how the ocean was just to the right of us. I remember there were dummy’s dressed up in flight suits sitting in the cockpits of every plane, and how that kind of bugged me sometimes. It seemed to ruin a couple of shots I wanted to get.

After reading Trey Ratcliffs book on HDR photography, I completely agree that we remember scenes in a sort of fantasy-like way. Some things are slightly exaggerated; colors, saturation, details, etc. The further away from the present the event becomes, the more captivating that fleeting moment becomes. So what if you want to capture every part of that image? The details of the C-1 Traders motor and it’s inner workings, the slightly intrusive dummy in the cockpit, the brilliant finish of the aircraft and it’s curves, the incredible drama of the clouds in the sky as well as the Pacific Ocean to the west of the scene…that’s where HDR processing can bring to us an image like this:

HDR Photography

SO HOW DO YOU COMBINE THE MULTIPLE EXPOSURES TO GET THESE RESULTS

HDR is a ground breaking process. HDR software crunches your multiple images using advanced algorithms and scans the photos on a pixel to pixel basis in an attempt to find the best light sources from each image. There are a number of programs out there that you can use, but the most widely used (and best in my opinion) is Photomatix. I believe it costs somewhere around $120 for the bundle for Lightroom or Aperture.

Now I find that Photomatix usually give me a “rough draft” to start with. The real magic happens in photoshop. Photomatix is not a perfect program and runs into issues with things like movement in the scene. If you are shooting a beach with waves or a flag blowing in the wind, the software will fail at the part of the image and produce what’s called “ghosting.” It also causes a side effect called “haloing” around high contrast areas. Halos can be very hard to fix sometimes but it can be done. Once I have the image in photoshop I bring in all three images from the camera, the “RAW” files. If Photomatix failed anywhere in the image, I can mask in the parts of the image I want to bring back or remove. I would say that this part of the HDR process takes the most skill. There are a lot of things in photoshop that require a lot of training and additional hours to become used to. If this overview of HDR receives feedback from my readers I will elaborate on the steps in photoshop at that point.

The last step once I work my magic in photoshop is to run it through a filter. The filters in photoshop are nice, but they just aren’t enough sometimes. My favorite plug in for HDR filters is by Topaz Labs. I would suggest buying the photoshop bundle package for a little more. It comes with a whole suit of filters to help make your image stand out. It also includes a noise reduction filter which is essential for HDR. The HDR process can bring a lot of digital noise into a picture, even taken at ISO 50.

I hope this brief overview has shed some light on what HDR photography is. Since diving into it, I can never look at a landscape image the same way if it’s not HDR. A normal photograph just doesn’t do it justice in almost all cases. There are always exceptions though. Like I said, depending on the feedback I get from this I will be more than happy to dive deeper into the details of my workflow. If you have any questions, leave a comment below. If you follow me there are a number of ways to contact me besides here, via facebook or twitter. Thanks for digging my work and God bless!