
This HDR Tutorial has helped tens of thousands of people, so I am sure it can help you too. Remember, YOU can do this stuff too. Yes, YOU! :)
I am constantly evolving my techniques. HDR is still a young art form. I’ve been lucky enough to travel around the world and meet some of the greatest HDR Photographers in the world. I share techniques, we shoot together, post process together, and we all work together to drive the art form forward. I am happy to share my techniques here with you guys and gals.
Now, I know a great many of you come just to nab my Photomatix Coupon Code - it is “STUCKINCUSTOMS“, which gives you 15% off. If you’d like to order it or give it a free trial, just go to the Photomatix webpage. The nice people there were swell enough to give my fans the best discount code, so I am happy to share it since I believe in their product. I’ve tried all the others… I still keep coming back to sweet Photomatix!
HDR Tutorial and the Texture Tutorial
This tutorial below on HDR is free. Free as a bird… I love hearing your feedback, and I can use it when I improve the HDR Tutorial in a few months… I try to keep it fresh with little and big updates to show the latest tricks and tips with the process.
I have a second tutorial on textures that is over a gigabyte with a video and included textures. You can get to that textures tutorial right here.
What is HDR?
HDR is short for High Dynamic Range. It is a post-processing of taking either one image or a series of images, combining them, and adjusting the contrast ratios to do things that are virtually impossible with a single aperture and shutter speed. I would say that about 75% of my images use the technique, and if you are new to it, then you may notice a slightly different “look and feel” to my photographs. You should also probably note that HDR is a very broad categorization, and I really hate categorization. My process starts with using basic HDR techniques, but then there are many more steps to help the photos look more… let’s say… evocative.
I can talk a little bit more about the philosophy behind the photography style here for a quick moment. You might consider that the way the human brain keeps track of imagery is not the same way your computer keeps track of picture files. There is not one aperture, shutter speed, etc. In fact, sometimes when you are in a beautiful place or with special people and you take photos — have you ever noticed when you get back and show them to people you have to say, “Well, you really had to be there.” Even great photographers with amazing cameras can only very rarely grab the scene exactly as they saw it. Cameras, by their basic-machine-nature, are very good at capturing “images”, lines, shadows, shapes — but they are not good at capturing a scene the way the mind remembers and maps it. When you are actually there on the scene, your eye travels back and forth, letting in more light in some areas, less light in others, and you create a “patchwork-quilt” of the scene. Furthermore, you will tie in many emotions and feelings into the imagery as well, and those get associated right there beside the scene. Now, you will find that as you explore the HDR process, that photos can start to evoke those deep memories and emotions in a more tangible way. It’s really a wonderful way of “tricking” your brain into experiencing much more than a normal photograph.
