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@sigsegv111Ай бұрын
:D you're crazy
@OriginalWatchcowАй бұрын
This works if you can use a tripod and your primary subjects don't move much in the frame. Good for landscape and other static scenes, but less useful for most wildlife and portraiture.
@patrickmcmahon818Ай бұрын
Ah, once again another great video. I’ve recently tried exposure bracketing for some pics that go beyond my dynamic range. Going to apply some of your tips and see if there is an improvement. Like you, I really trust my histogram over the image on the back of the camera or even my blinky’s. I know how far over I can go into the highlights before I lose info. Shadows are a little different, you are 100% correct when you try bringing them up, sometimes causing the noise to become a distraction in those areas.
@Photography-ExplainedАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video Patrick. On my Sony I adjusted the Zebras to a point where I know for sure I have clipping. Depending on the camera system you're using you could perhaps adjust them so you feel more confident in them?
@kevfretsАй бұрын
Very cool! It would be interesting if you explained your luminosity masking exposure blending in a future video. 👍👍
@Photography-ExplainedАй бұрын
Hey Kev, thanks for taking the time to comment. No worries. I'm not an expert in editing (or anything else...) but I can for sure explain my process.
@mosfearАй бұрын
Thanks for posting. To confirm, at 3:40, I believe you mean to say exposure bracket rather than focus bracket.
@Photography-ExplainedАй бұрын
Well spotted :D.
@jameschetwyndАй бұрын
Exposure bracketing is creating photo from multiple shots Not for me Keeping camera in exact same spot I dought I can do Will make do with 10 stops for my pictures If you can do this more power to you