I just started experimenting with HDR imaging. When I decided to try HDR, I knew the first place I'd head - the neon sign and brick wall outside Steve's Soul Food (predictable, but I've got to learn somewhere ). The colors are great at night, and there's a view straight down to Detroit's skyline.
After working on the HDR conversion, I ran into a file format problem. Didn't realize that there are dedicated formats for displaying HDR images. TIFFs and PSDs can do it, along with a few proprietary formats, but how do I get an HDR image, like my enormous 125MB TIFF, into a web-friendly format? Is it possible to produce a JPEG version with something more elegant than a screenshot of the TIFF? Converting the current image to 16-bit color, which I suspect would open the door for JPEG converion, completely borks it. Should I simply convert to JPEG before post-processing? Not sure where to turn from here. Guidance appreciated.
Incidentally, Magic Lantern turned a 7-shot AEB burst into a straightforward affair. Programmed 7 shots 1EV apart from each other, set the camera to -0.3EV, went click, and bummed around for 30 seconds or so while it took the shots automatically. Even if you don't do a 7-image composite, this strikes me as a nice, easy way to make sure you walk home with lots of dynamic range in your pocket.