#photography #tut 8 Tips for Taking Sports Photos Like a Pro: Are you looking to shoot better sports photos, and m... http://bit.ly/aUEvol
Mon, 06 Sep 2010 18:50:33 +0000
#photography #tut The Rule of Thirds Revisited - Use the rule of thirds for great photos!: The Rule of Thirds Revi... http://bit.ly/bQXXFv
Mon, 06 Sep 2010 17:49:35 +0000
#photography #tut Digital Photography Tips and Techniques: Digital Photography Tips and Techniques http://bit.ly/bS1riZ
Fri, 03 Sep 2010 14:12:52 +0000
#photography #tut Adobe Camera RAW for Beginners: Basic Adjustments: Adobe Camera RAW???s basics adjustments can m... http://bit.ly/c3vh45
Fri, 03 Sep 2010 13:12:06 +0000
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blend
Sample and examples for "blend"
| An Introduction to Exposure Blending with RAW
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| (http://photo.tutsplus.com/tutorials/post-proc...) |
| If you regularly shoot landscapes, you and #8217;ll soon make a discovery that seems obvious when you think about it and #8211; the sky is much brighter than the land. This is a real problem when you and #8217;re taking photos of sunsets, especially when the sun is still above the horizon. The sky is so bright that if you expose for sky, anything on land goes black. If you expose for the land, the sky is washed out and you lose the beautiful sunset that you set out to photograph. |
| Tags: landscape exposure over |
0 Votes | 46 Views | Photography / | Monday, August 30, 2010 |
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| Exposure blending tutorial
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| (http://photodoto.com/exposure-blending-tutori...) |
| After posting Getting the Exposure Right, I received a quite a few questions about how I achieved the HDR (High Dynamic Range) version of the mailbox photo (last photo in that article). This photography tutorial will walk you through the basics of creating the same look by hand. All you need is camera and photo editing software that supports layer masking (you can follow these steps in Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro, and The GIMP, among others). |
| Tags: exposure photoshop HDR |
0 Votes | 56 Views | Photography / | Tuesday, June 08, 2010 |
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| Top 10 Tips to Improve Point-and-Shoot Travel Photography
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| (http://photo.net/learn/point-and-shoot-photo-...) |
| Do you flip through your photo albums and/or online gallery and sigh at the fact that all your photos look the same? The vacations all might blend together into an array of similar photos. It’s easy to fall into a rut of taking the same types of travel pictures, especially when our point-and-shoot cameras seem to do all the hard work of shooting. That’s the fun of it though. Rather than photographing the same old pictures from summers past, try out some of these improvement techniques from our top 10 tips for using your digital point-and-shoot this travel season. |
| Tags: camera tips ray |
3 Votes | 72 Views | Photography / Travel Photography | Thursday, August 13, 2009 |
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| HDR Tutorial: How to create ‘High Dynamic Range’ images using Photomatix
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| (http://www.vanilladays.com/hdr-guide/) |
| The main aim of this photography tutorial is to help people use HDR techniques to produce photos with a higher dynamic range than they normally get in a standard out of the camera photo. I will show you how to take a shot from the one on the left, to the one on the right.
HDR means ‘High Dynamic Range’. Using software like Photomatix you can create images with a more detail in the highlights and shadows than you can with a normal photo from todays digital cameras. Its similar to the old technique of exposure blending. Taking one photo for the sky and one for the ground, then merging them both together in Photoshop. HDR takes it a step further by increase the amount of detail in the image and allows you to create some unique photos. You can use it carefully to create natural looking photos or you can use it creatively to create atmospheric and emotive photos. The choice is yours as to how you process the end result. |
| Tags: HDR exposure low light |
1 Votes | 35 Views | Photography / | Wednesday, July 22, 2009 |
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| Howto Panoramas and Digital Stitching
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| (http://www.mikemcfarlane.co.uk/techniques/vie...) |
| How wide is wide? Not wide enough? Panoramic formats like 612 and 617 are great, but sometimes they just aren’t wide enough. Sometimes a 180° view is needed, sometimes 360°, even 360° x 360° fits the bill. Everything the eye can see, any way you turn, the full visual experience captured. This article will provide an overview of the panoramic making process, mainly digital stitched and blended panoramas, covering the software (mostly PC, but also Mac and Linux) and the hardware required to produce high quality panoramas suitable for printing. |
| Tags: blend Digital panorama |
0 Votes | 27 Views | Photography / | Monday, July 20, 2009 |
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| Digital Blending
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| (http://www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/d...) |
| In nature when doing landscape work that includes sky, especially early or late in the day, the contrast range encountered often exceeds that which film or imaging chips can handle. It's therefore necessary to find a way to reduce the contrast range to something that the camera can handle so that the highlights don't burn out and the shadow areas don't turn inky black. |
| Tags: camera contrast landscape |
0 Votes | 44 Views | Photography / | Monday, April 27, 2009 |
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| Blended Exposures
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| (http://www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/b...) |
| Colour transparency film has a useful dynamic range of about 4-5 stops between the lightest area with any detail and the darkest. Beyond that is found featureless black or transparent white. Colour negative film has a couple of additional stops and B and W film another stop or so. But, nature can present the landscape photographers with scenes having a dynamic range of 10 stops or more — double that which slide film can handle. |
| Tags: landscape dark nature |
0 Votes | 50 Views | Photography / | Monday, April 27, 2009 |
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