Hi Canonman13 (what's your first name by the way?),
We can't see your photo - the properties of the placeholder appear to point to a folder, not an image.
To show, images need to end in "filename.jpg"
As it stands it has great potential, but it's totally flat (no blacks).
I achieved most of this by simply raising the black clipping point ...
(Note: My version still needs a bit of fine tuning).
I'm curious as to why you needed to use HDR techniques to capture this scene in the first place though - it doesn't look like the dynamic range was particularly great.
I have to agree with Colin here. The first image felt like a scene out of Shrek. Great detail, but everything was washed out.
- Bill
Last edited by g3ck0; 4th May 2011 at 09:11 AM.
Thank you dude,
Are you using Merge to HDR Pro? If so, have a look at this youtube video, it really helped me-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsaS5vgzlek
Glad i could help
Just remember, HDR should be used to highlight images. Give them that extra pop, however it should be what looks good to you and not everyone else!
Have a play around and see what you like!
If you like going all out, go for something like this -
If you like subtle, go for this -
That's the joy of HDR, you can go mental and make it look what some might say OTT, or you can use it to bring out the tones/highlights in pictures.