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HDR - Good or Bad??

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  • HDR - Good or Bad??

    We recently went on a Canaries cruise. I took my E-M1iii, 12-100, 100-400 and Laowa 10mm (the latter two because I couldn't bring myself to NOT take them ). It wasn't really a 'photography' trip so I was just taking 'holiday snaps'. I found myself using the HDR setting for pretty much all of the images. I know it's down to personal preference, but is it possible to overuse this function? Are there any downsides? Just interested to see if other people use this function much.
    Lots of gear; Little idea
    https://www.flickr.com/photos/194528883@N06/

  • #2
    It's more occasional for me - usually when there's a huge contrast in lighting/shadow. However, I often end up using the middle of 3 and adjusting that in post anyway! I don't use it for gig photography, things move too quickly for that.
    Carol | Flickr

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    • #3
      Definitely occasional use for me as well. Issue is that HDR takes multiple images, which is not what I want for moving subjects.

      Gary

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      • #4
        Yes; HDR only really works well on static subjects; which I noticed more when I got home and downloaded onto my tablet. I was mindful that viewing on the camera was not going to give me the best impression of IQ.
        Lots of gear; Little idea
        https://www.flickr.com/photos/194528883@N06/

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        • #5
          I quite often shoot a 3-frame, 2-stop HDR series for landscape/architecture and IR images, especially when there’s a lot of contrast.

          It’s so easy and quick to merge these into a linear DNG in Capture One that it’s a bit of a no-brainer. I only do it when I’m concerned over dynamic range, and the CO defaults usually give a pretty natural-looking result, which can be edited to taste. It copes with a bit of subject movement, but if the image is for critical use it’s a good idea to check for artefacts in things that may move (eg leaves).

          For images where the middle shot has coped well with the dynamic range on the CO histogram, I don’t bother.

          I only ever aim for a result that looks real - the ‘HDR look’, so popular a decade ago, is just ridiculous.
          Regards,
          Mark

          ------------------------------
          http://www.microcontrast.com
          Too much Oly gear.
          Panasonic 8-18 & 15.
          Assorted legacy lenses, plus a Fuji X70 & a Sony A7Cii.

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          • #6
            I sometimes bracket and merge to HDR in Lightroom later, but not in the camera.

            Ian
            Founder and editor of:
            Olympus UK E-System User Group (https://www.e-group.uk.net)

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            • Bobblejack
              Bobblejack commented
              Editing a comment
              I'm curious why you don't use the in-camera merge options.

          • #7
            Never tried it and nothing I've seen has ever made me want to.
            Not keen on HDR televisions either, prefer the more natural colouring look.

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            • #8
              Depends what you mean by “HDR”.

              If you mean the in-camera JPEG feature, then I personally avoid it like the plague - for the simple reason that I never shoot JPEGs.

              If you mean heavily over processed images with obviously fake tones, then for obvious reasons I’d avoid that too.

              But if you mean shooting a bracketed EV burst in raw for later stacking to deal with DR beyond the sensor’s capability, then I’m all for it and use it a lot (maybe 50% of my images are EV stacked bursts).
              Paul
              Panasonic S1Rii and S5 with a few lenses
              flickr
              Portfolio Site

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              • #9
                The one I'm referring to is in-camera merging, presumably just on the jpeg.
                Lots of gear; Little idea
                https://www.flickr.com/photos/194528883@N06/

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