Very tame HDR, not enough contrast, could the scene have been captured in one shot by exposing for the sky and using exposure compensation?
My first impression is that it is way too grainy?
Welcome back, Randy...you've been away far too long I suppose...nice shot here of the slide...A bit of contrast might help. I had not done HDR at all so what do I know...???
Thanks, John......I'm not sure about the sky, it just doesn't look right. I'm thinking of adjusting it to better compliment the pool? .....I will say this, I'm learning a bit more about Photoshop CC with this exercise.
Hi Randy, I like your second edit
Its a bit too busy for me with no real focal point.
I have just started playing with hdr, but I don't have a decent attempt yet to post! I do like the contrast in your second photo better, even though I am a total novice in hdr...
I actually like the first better. The first needs some work on tonality, e.g., to bring out contrast in the rocks, which you did in the second. However, at least on the awful laptop monitor I am looking at, the second is edging into the distorted colors that are a frequent characteristic of HDR photos. e.g., The sky seems almost turquoise on this monitor. It may be the monitor, not the image, but it was exactly this sort of sky that ended my brief attempts with HDR Pro in photoshop. Since then, I have only used exposure fusion, which simply selects well-exposed areas from each image, without tone mapping. This also tends to produce low-contrast images, but the lack of contrast is easy to fix.