asterroc ([personal profile] asterroc) wrote2007-08-14 07:21 pm

Photography

I have heard it's possible to take multiple photos at different light exposure levels and combine them, and thereby get an image closer to what the human eye sees (since we can perceive both the bright things and dark areas at once, while a photo meters for only one or the other). I've seen these done by otheres, the prime example being the inside of an unlit church w/ light streaming in through stained glass windows; let me know if you know the artist's name.

Anyone have a suggestion on how to do this in P-shop or a similar program? What I have is a series of three photos that my camera took automatically bracketting one f-stop (or shutter speed) up and down, one right after the other. I'm thinking along the lines of having a background that's solid white (or black, or gray), then adding three semi-transparent layers, one for each image, and then adjusting the amount of transparency for each until I get something pretty. To make the issue more complicated, some of the images I'm thinking of playing with are of flowers that were swaying a bit with a breeze, so a good combined image might not be possible at all, or will require offsetting of the three images so that the flower looks good but the background does not.

[identity profile] q10.livejournal.com 2007-08-15 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
do humans really have significantly better dynamic range than good film, or is it just a trick?

for example, i suspect that our excellent subjective depth of field is in large part an illusion. after all, you notice that something is out of focus mainly when you give it your attention, and when we give something our attention our eyes refocus on it. a shot that's already been exposed once doesn't have this luxury, so if our attention shifts we know how much is out of focus.

could our subjectively good dynamic range be in part due to something like that? when we're attending to the darker parts of our field of view we can enlarge our pupils, and we can shrink them again when we attend to the brighter parts.

sorry i don't have any actual help. i have heard of that sort of thing but have never tried it. i suspect it's more in demand these days as most digital sensors have significantly worse dynamic range than film used to.

[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com 2007-08-15 03:09 am (UTC)(link)
I believe it's called HDR photography, although it's not the same as the film-making technique. This is just one pool on Flickr - http://www.flickr.com/groups/88604496@N00/pool/ Some of it is good, some of it is bad :-)

If you Google HDR and Photoshop, I'm sure you can find tutorials or info.

[identity profile] framefolly.livejournal.com 2007-08-15 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
Dunno any of the science behind it, but I know that film (the kind with emulsion, not digital) has a lot less range for brightness and hue than human eyes do. Someday I should learn how digital image capture works...

As for Photoshop or similar, I suspect that in addition to adjusting transparencies, you'll need to make a series of mattes and play a bit with the curves -- but you probably already knew that.

[identity profile] kelsin.livejournal.com 2007-08-15 02:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah the other post about HDR is what to google. Photoshop can handle it in CS2 and above I think:

http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/high-dynamic-range.htm

There is a good tutorial it looks like. Just google HDR and photoshop and you'll find more.