HDR comparsion - need your opinion
I am doing some evaluations and I would greatly appreciate your comments. Please do not read other commentors posts before making up your own minds (I want to avoid the herd mentality and get unbiased views).
Which one looks better 18 votes
HDR PhotoStudio
38%
7 votes
Photomatix TC
0%
0 votes
Photomatix DE
38%
7 votes
Photomatix DE extreme
22%
4 votes
0
Comments
Each HDR technique, be it in Photomatix, Hydra, Bracketeer, etc, is just one of the steps in postprocessing. After HDR tonemapping a session in Photoshop or Lightzone is advisable.
So if you want us to choose the best HDR program...much depends on the final result after postprocessing in PS or LZ.
BTW: I have applied basic post processing steps to each of the images, but I have applied the same amount to each.
So while you may not agree with my method, I think it should be fairly easy for everyone to pick a favorite!
I think its obvious to tell the last one is the most surreal and the first one the most color neutral. Please use your intuition and forget about technical things. I made the mistake to show which programs I used, so I can understand the confusion.
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I did not vote on this poll, because I am of a mixed opinion myself.
Generally I prefer images that look "normal" without the radical haloes of the far out HDR look. Generally, but then again, not always for every image. And my opinion may change from day to day.
I have the same dilemma myself as I edit images - how neutral shall I keep them, or how far can I push the processing to look more like I saw the image in my minds eye when I tripped the shutter.
If I had to choose, probably #3
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Thanks Pathfinder. Coming from a pro like yourself this really means a lot to me.
I noticed the halos too, but I didn't really want to state my opinion until the poll results are in (tomorrow). I think I could edit them away easily.
I also noticed the tendency of HDR images to look extremely processed, but I am not convinced either way. I am not a big fan of the airbrushed look myself, but I want to see what the overall perception is.
Thanks for your comment! Maybe I can convince you to vote after all.
Just think about which one you would rather hang on your wall. As long as you make the decision with your gut and not your photographers mind it will be exactly what I am looking for.
Thannks
Andre
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Nikon | Private Photojournalist
- the near ground (snow? sand?) from HDR PhotoStudio
- the inside of the rock formation from Tone Compressor
- the distant ground from Details Enhancer
- and the sky from DE extreme settings (remove the halos in the process)
But, I do acknoledge everyone's right to like what they like.
If you were wanting a photo that was close to what you captured with your eyes, then I'd say the first one.
I'd say the third pic is what you hoped it would look like out of the camera.
If your wanting a pic that's more art, the last one is a clear winner. (And my choice)
YMMV
Thanks for the discussion. I agree with you Randy, it all depends on the objective.
I think the "HDR look" is a bit overused and prefer if it isn't as much in your face, but I agree that the extreme processed images have a certain wow factor.
Here is another try I did this evening, immediately after downloading the HDR Photostudio successor, HDR Expose.
The tool has come quite far since my last tests. I could get this result very fast and I loved some of the new settings.
What do you think?
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