Nice ! You solved my problem with darks using LR/enfuse, which is similar blending as Photomatix. After decreasing contrast, dark parts are not lost ! Great, thanx.
You're windows are still blown out in the final - -why not use the information from the under exposed image to get some clarity in what's outside the windows?
Yeah we tend to process so that the windows are a stop brighter than inside to keep it looking more natural. Unless of course the view is amazing in which case we can do a quick window pull. But for the most part a lot of the houses that we shoot - you don’t want to see the outsides lol.
WB them all to the plus one exposure. 2) Increase the shadows of the dark exposures and slightly increase the brightness. 3) Reduce the highlights of the overexposed images 4) Shoot 5 exposures with 2 stops apart. 5) I use SNS-HDR software, export them as TIff-16bit then process the HDR.
Yes but the benefit of photomatix is the batch processing which is a lifesaver for workflow. And I think the quality and options in photomatix are far superior.
This short video is soo helpful thanks for sharing!! One quick question how do you correct the blue reflection on the floor and the sharpness of the lights ? Thanks
terrible video for gatekeeping the last part.
Wait are you only bringing the contrast down on one photo or all
Nice ! You solved my problem with darks using LR/enfuse, which is similar blending as Photomatix. After decreasing contrast, dark parts are not lost ! Great, thanx.
Curious. All your windows are blown out on the final image?
You're windows are still blown out in the final - -why not use the information from the under exposed image to get some clarity in what's outside the windows?
Yeah we tend to process so that the windows are a stop brighter than inside to keep it looking more natural. Unless of course the view is amazing in which case we can do a quick window pull. But for the most part a lot of the houses that we shoot - you don’t want to see the outsides lol.
WB them all to the plus one exposure. 2) Increase the shadows of the dark exposures and slightly increase the brightness. 3) Reduce the highlights of the overexposed images 4) Shoot 5 exposures with 2 stops apart. 5) I use SNS-HDR software, export them as TIff-16bit then process the HDR.
I bought your course, VERY helpful. One thing, where do I find how to do the "Secret Sauce?" Can't find where you teach it!
PLEASE DONT DO THIS AGAIN THIS CAPTION SO DISTRACTING
Never type in all caps!
dont need tip 5 save money! Just watching more youtube videos.
loving it
Thanks!
Why windows are still overexposed?
I have a video on how to fix that too without doing a window pull.
also, can lr or ps hdr process with post on those images do the trick instead of photomatix?
Yes but the benefit of photomatix is the batch processing which is a lifesaver for workflow. And I think the quality and options in photomatix are far superior.
Very helpful, thanks! I have been adjusting my photos before processing. I found from your video to drop contrast. Worked Great!
The content was great. The subtitles were annoying.
Thanks for the feedback Mark - I will let my editor know and will change it up for the next video!
This short video is soo helpful thanks for sharing!! One quick question how do you correct the blue reflection on the floor and the sharpness of the lights ? Thanks
That is all in my course! Check it out. You’ll be able to do 40-70 photos in less than 30 minutes on site and 30 minutes in post.
Thanks for the vid. what do you do about window views? a window pull?
Yep window pulls which I cover in my course or I also can do a gamma offset method which I also made a video about.
Tip #5 is the best one
Yes tip 5 was the best. I had to watch it 5 times - it was so rich in content.
@@pfidelusyour comment made me watched Tip 5 again😂
Great video, tons of good info and easy to follow, thank you
Thanks Tristan!