Today’s trip to High Rocks had me better prepared than last time. Â I did some work on my shoes and replaced the battery sling on the Gigapan and set out. Â My shoe laces broke and the Gigapan went apeshit, 0 for 2 so far. Â So instead, I opted to practice some other techniques:
Thing 1 – Tonemapping
HDR (High Dynamic Range) photography is where one overcomes the limitations of a camera’s dynamic range (difference between brightest and darkest part of the picture) by taking multiple exposures at different light levels. Â So, great, you’ve got an HDR image, the problem is that this simply passes the buck to our monitors which are also not HDR. Â So one uses a process called tonemapping to compress that dynamic range. Â Tonemapping can create something that looks closer to what the world looks like or blow it out to something a bit stranger.
So, here’s a starting picture:
Here’s the tonemapped version:
For starts you can simply make out more detail in the very bright areas (the sky) and very dark areas (rock crevasses). Â Sometimes it just looks like you used a lightwash (flash) but the vividness is cranked up in a way adjusting saturation won’t manage.
So here’s a look at the types of tonemapping. Â Here’s a source image:
Here’s a trippy/acidy/blownout/overdone version that it sometimes associated with tonemapping:
You’ll note that the very dark areas and very light areas are brought in such that the sky now appears less bright.
Here’s something more reasonable:
Tonemapping also has some limitations like when it’s rendered to jpeg. Â Jpeg’s lossy and I should probably stick to TIF to reduce the compression. Â The following image looks more apocalyptic and less poorly painted in the original. Â I think the sky’s acceptable:
I generally don’t like black and white photos and am not very good at taking them. Â I don’t have the eye for color value which is what actually shows through. Â Below is an exception:
Here’s the root image:
Here’s the tonemapped version:
I think a little rotation made the photo a lot more interesting:
Action Merges
Action merges are where one takes many pictures of a particular action and merges them into a single frame. Â This is a mediocre one of Mike Blewitt repelling:
I did a sloppy job with merging the rope.
Here’s a better one of Sam climbing the face: