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2010-07-29
, 15:32
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Posts: 601 |
Thanked: 549 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ Redditch, UK
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#102
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2010-07-29
, 15:44
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Administrator |
Posts: 1,036 |
Thanked: 2,019 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
@ Germany
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#103
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Does anyone else think it's kinda silly that this amazing open source, collaborative industry/academic, revolutionary camera project that was first released on a linux phone only supports a raw format that proprietary ($@%#) Adobe windows software can handle?
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2010-07-29
, 16:52
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Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 172 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Canada
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#104
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NO need to buy CS5..i got it FREE..hehe. Anyway, when i used the merge to HDR in CS5 with the raw images or the jpg from N900 gallery..it doesn't look nice like the one captured by the standalone HDR Capture. I try playing with different tuning and settings...it's just never the same and in situation, it's worst. I got 3 pics that i combined....and it didn't look good to me.
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2010-07-29
, 18:21
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 114 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#105
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That's because Photoshop's "Merge to HDR" feature is far from automatic. It is however very powerful if you know a bit about how to use it..
Here are a few basic tips:
- When you first load a set of images into Merge to HDR, you are presented with a dialogue showing your source images down the left, a large preview window in the centre, and a histogram over on the right. The only thing to really fiddle with here is turning on/off the various source images to see their effect on the HDR image. Otherwise, just click OK in this dialogue -- adjusting other settings here isn't really very productive.
- After a moment, you'll be presented with your HDR image. You'll notice it basically looks like crap. This is because it's a 32-bit-per-channel image, and your monitor almost certainly cannot show you all the image data it contains accurately. You need to down-sample it to 16-bits-per-channel.
- Go to Image --> Mode --> 16 Bits/Channel... you'll have a new dialogue. The pick-list at the top allows you to specify a variety of methods for Photoshop to use in the conversion. If you select "Local Adaptation", you'll be able to adjust the curves directly from this dialogue (you may need to expand the dialogue to display the tone/histogram controls). Pick whichever looks best -- I generally find either Highlight Compression or Local Adaptation to give me the initial results I'm looking for, but YMMV. Adjust the curves if applicable (you can always do this later), and click OK.
- Now you will have a 16-bit-per-channel image that is much MUCH easier to work on. It still contains an enormous amount of image data, so filesize will be quite large, and adding layers can really add up quickly, so keep that in mind if your machine is short on RAM. You can, however, do some very dramatic edits to the image without breaking up the histogram, which is the beauty of working in high-bit.
- Tone the image any way you see fit until you've got something you're happy with. Don't forget that you'll need to down-sample it again to 8-bits-per-channel if you want to save it as a JPEG
There's obviously MUCH more to know about all of this, but I hope this helps with getting an HDR image that looks the way you imagined it should in the first place
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2010-07-29
, 20:48
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Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 172 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Canada
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#106
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I don't know what version of Photoshop you're using, I didn't have to go through the step of down-sampling to 16bit from 32bit. It already present me with 16-bit per channel HDR.
And all I have to do then is fiddle with the tools such as ghosting, details...Local adaptation...ect.. But no matter what i do....i am not getting the same result that i am getting from HDR Capture app itself.
In fact, i even took out the 3 same input images from the phone and use photoshop to see if it give the same result that the phone give me....NOPE. Not the same fine print like the phone give me.
You mention down-sampling to 8bit before saving to jpeg, it didn't matter i save it under 16-bit and it looks no different to me. Size is about the same as the phone would give me 1.2mb.
You say, "when you first load a set of images into Merge to HDR, you are presented with a dialogue showing your source images down the left, a large preview window in the centre, and a histogram over on the right." Well, when i first load a set of images Merge to HDR, i am presented with the EV manual dialogue settings. This is the part i don't understand because i expect the program to know all the values and calculate by itself. I expect it just load these 3 images and merge them into HDR.
Don't get me wrong...the HDR that photoshop produce is okay but not the one i expected. I can not get the fine smoothness of the one you get from HDR Capture on N900. The one produce in Photoshop, i feel like i can just take one picture (rather than 3) and fine-tune it and still come out the same as with 3 picture merged. That's why i am not impressed with the HDR in Photoshop.
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2010-07-30
, 01:00
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 114 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#107
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2010-07-30
, 02:32
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Posts: 515 |
Thanked: 259 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#108
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2010-07-30
, 03:38
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Posts: 31 |
Thanked: 35 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
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#109
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2010-07-30
, 03:46
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Posts: 3,159 |
Thanked: 2,023 times |
Joined on Feb 2008
@ Finland
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#110
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I have played with fcam a bit and think this application has a lot of potential, but I have a few comments
Delay Timer. Badly needed.
The FCam app needs a delay timer badly, especially with all the newly unlocked abilities to do long shutter speeds and multiple exposures that need to be exactly aligned. Pushing the shutter button moves the camera ever so slightly so it is difficult to avoid camera shake.
I would like to have the standard 2s/10s delay shutter, so I can focus and trigger the shutter, then take my hands off the shutter and keep it stable so it can take pics undisturbed.
As a more advanced option I would propose a accelerometer-triggered shutter, I press the shutter but the camera waits for the shake to stop first.
Histogram
There is really no reason to have the histogram stretch across the entire image. A small icon-sized histogram would be sufficient (like in normal cameras).
Smart Focus
Accelerometer-aided focus: if the camera is pointed in the same direction and has focused once then is moved forward or backwards relative to the sensor plane, it should add the movement to the focus distance before focusing again.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not a fanboy of Adobe, but I certainly do enjoy working within their application suites, albeit in a Micro$haft Windoze environment, and when you get to learn the applications inside-out you realise the incredible effects you can get out of them.
Most people on deviantART work within these applications and put out incredible works, which just goes to show what the benchmark actually is.....