DEATH wrote:Really? I really liked the shots of the sunset, the colours are nice and the composition pleasent (with the water and trees).
The colors are really very pale - I would go so far as to call them sub-pastel - and there aren't even that many of them. Maybe it looked a bit better before HDRing weakened it, but all I see are a watery yellowish fading through a grey-pink and grey-orange to a grey sky with a hint of purple.
Composition isn't what is in the picture, but rather how the stuff in the picture is arranged. Composing requires attention to balancing shapes and tones, leading the eye toward the subject, and showing depth. What you've got here has more in common with a theatrical backdrop - flat and "as you found it" - than a well-composed photo. You might want to go back to the comments I made in your earliest threads and re-read what I told you about composition, subjects, and scenes, or pick up a decent how-to photography book and read the same thing from someone with credentials.
I wanted to try to get a larger DR of the light from the sun. Didn't think about the other applications of it. (I liked the sun, its light and the shapes of the trees and their reflections).
You can't get a larger dynamic range of one kind of light; light is light is light. Dynamic range is the ratio between the whitest
and darkest light
that your camera can measure. As I've said before, mapping a really high dynamic range onto a standard digital image is going to decrease the contrast between light and shadow in that image, which means your trees are going to look brighter (they do) and the sunset will look weaker (it does) and the visual impact of the image is going to be reduced even more (it is).
I think you need to study up a lot more on HDR before you go on experimenting with it, so you at least use it where it is appropriate and don't think of it as a 'more color' tool, which it really isn't as you can plainly see. Since HDR as a photography tool is irrelevant to me, I'm not the guy to tell you where and how to use it properly. There are books out there, but for starters you should read these two pages:
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutori ... -range.htm
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutori ... -range.htm
They are technical guides with technical explanations, so pay attention - it's high time you got down into the nitty-gritty of how your tools work, since you are trying to use them in a serious fashion.
(Actually, you might want to go through all of their tutorials - it looks like handy things to know.)
Also, check out the HDR Pool on Flickr. It has lots of photos, including examples of appropriate, skillful HDR use and examples of inappropriate and clumsy HDR use. Heck, there's enough to make a Right Or Wrong And Why quiz game out of it.
But, it's easy to do HDR
. If possible, experiment, at least that's what I was thinking then. Still, point taken, I have been letting myself run away with this, blame the lure of easyt bracketing..
Yeah, see above as well. It's easy to shoot totally in automatic mode as well, but that's another situation where ease and good results aren't always compatible. Anyone can take pictures - I was doing it when I was 6 and I'm not the only one - but if you want to make
good photographs, you have to work at it.
You don't drink bottled water, do you
. (And part of my family does something similiar and make a nice mint off of it, so it does work
)
Twenty dollars per liter is alcohol territory, boyo.