Woody said:Diltiazem said:When i first got my D600 I was lifting shadows right, left and center (and more). It was like an obsession. I was intentionally looking for scenes that would need shadow lifting. After some time it wasn't fun anymore. Soon though, couple of things occurred to me. a) I wasn't doing photography anymore, I wad doing experiments only. b) In my kind of photography I very rarely needed extreme shadow lifting that Canon couldn't handle. After the realization fun in photography has returned and more than 90% of the time they are done with Canon gears.
So, I would say if someone's work involves lot's of shadow lifting and if someone is not willing to do other techniques (filter, exposure blending etc), then Exmor will do a much better job than Canon. But don't expect miracles. Better doesn't mean perfect.
100% in agreement
Also, I find that for flower photos, the best ones usually are side-lit or front lit in order to make the colors pop. Sunflowers tend to face the east, so sunrise photos make most sense. Sunset photos of sunflowers are typically dull because the colors are washed out. Unless there's some compelling background, I don't see any benefit to shoot into the sun for sunflower shots; such is the case for the posted photos.
Lee Jay said:I have sunflowers right outside my office.
In very rough terms, this is how I think your image should look, compared to yours. I didn't mess with the sky or colors, just the tonality.
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Jack Douglas said:mustafaakarsu, lovely! Wish I was there that moment.
Jack
You absolutely do not need HDR techniques for shooting "indoor under subdued lighting" and rarely for "shooting at night" either. HDR is not about getting detail in a dark image, it is about getting detail when there is a big difference between the lightest parts of the image and the darkest.mdmphoto said:Thank you jrista for your comprehensive and lushly illustrated and demo'd breakdown of your fantastic HDR image. As I fancy shooting at night or indoor under subdued lighting I have been eager to incorporate hdr into my workflow but haven't been able to grasp the technique by reading up, you-tubing, kelbying, and ps-usering the subject. Your verbosity, along with the gifs and annotated gifs have opened my eyes quite a bit more than before. Thanks much...

climber said:2x 4 shots manually blended. Both two sets were same, except in second 4 shots I put my hand in front of the sun to prevent the flare. (It almost worked)
climber said:2x 4 shots manually blended. Both two sets were same, except in second 4 shots I put my hand in front of the sun to prevent the flare. (It almost worked)