Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven

It’s funny how sometimes the last shot of the day, the one you aren’t really expecting to be that special, turns out to be the favourite. This was taken at the end of brief walk in and around Swithland Woods one lunchtime in February this year. It had snowed a few days before but it was all gone now, leaving water lying in the fields and paths. This still water had been my original reason for going out, but as I had a few minutes to spare and no shots that I really liked I ventured into the woods and noticed how the bare branches of the trees filled the view above me.

After finding a suitable spot and waiting for a plane to pass overhead I took 3 bracketed shots. These were then processed in Photomatix to produce a black and white HDR which I then toned Lightroom.

The title, which is borrowed from a Godspeed You! Black Emperor album, was the first thing I thought of when taking the shot.

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Leaning Tree, Bradgate Park

One of my first experiments with monochrome HDR photography and still one of my favourite images. This shot was taken about 30 minutes to an hour before sunset on a sunny but bitterly cold and windy winter afternoon out with Dan in Bradgate Park, Leicestershire. The angle of the sun lit up the grass, and the shadows added depth in front of the tree – I’ve been back to this location since but I’ve never found the light as favourable.

Three shots were used, each two stops apart (-2EV,0EV,+2EV). Processing was done with HDRSoft’s Photomatix Pro, with the black and white image then being split toned to give it an antique look.

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Frosted Barbed Wire

Another old image that I was never entirely happy with. This was taken on chilly morning excursion out at Beacon Hill with Dan and was one of the few shots I got – the rest being spoilt by the lens misting up all the time.

Whilst I liked the original image at the time I thought the contrast could have been better.

For this newer version I went back to the original shots (3 exposures, each 2 stops apart) and reprocessed them in Photomatix. This resulting image was then desaturated and had contrast adjustments.

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Visit http://www.hdrsoftwaretutorial.co.uk/ for tutorials and a discount code which will give you 15% off the purchase of Photomatix.

Winter Tree

“Winter Tree” was my first real attempt at creative processing, rather than just using Photomatix to make a shot look extravagantly real (I was going to put “hyperreal” here but I couldn’t bring myself to do it). The initial version was an accident – one of those rare “I wonder what happens if I…” experiments that gives a pleasing result. Unfortunately though my inexperience at the time though led me to overlooking some serious flaws with the original image – the contrast was all wrong and the image was noisy.

The poor contrast in the original version was due to my monitor being poorly set up – it was far too dark – and whilst the noise level isn’t that obvious in the version elsewhere on this site (http://www.andystafford.co.uk/winter-tree/) it is painfully apparent on the large version available on Flickr (http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3340/3194854394_305882a0a9_o.jpg).

Why was the image noisy? Because my Microsmoothing setting in Photomatix was too low (0). It made the clouds look more dramatic but I didn’t see how badly it was affecting the quality of the image as I neglected to look at it at full size.

If I was ever going to make this image available as a print I knew I was going to have to go back to the original raw files and reprocess it. Details of this process can be found here http://www.andystafford.co.uk/winter-tree-and-photomatix/

Visit http://www.hdrsoftwaretutorial.co.uk/ for tutorials and a discount code which will give you 15% off the purchase of Photomatix.

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Birstall Weir, Leicestershire

After six months of having a camera I decided it was about time I went through my previous shots and tidied them up, both in terms of organisation and correcting past mistakes. A couple of people commented on this image recently – I was really happy with it at the time but my preferences and skill have changed somewhat since taking it so it became the first one to have a bit of a facelift.

At the time it was taken I was interested in the effect it was possible to create with running water and Photomatix, and even though the shot was taken during the day I still managed to get managed to get a 2.5s exposure by choosing a shaded location and a small aperture.

The three bracketed shots (at 0.6s, 1/6s and 2.5s) were then combined in Photomatix and the resulting image was desaturated and had some contrast tweaks to enhance the molten glass look.

The Winter Tree shot was created using 3 bracketed exposures, shown below. Most DSLRs can be set up to take exposures like this – the camera will take 3 shots (or more depending on the camera) each at different exposures. In this instance they were taken at 0, -2EV and +2EV so that I end up with 3 shots that are all 2 stops apart.

I found the idea of “stops” the most complicated part of getting to grips with photography, but basically a stop is the doubling or halving of the amount of light hitting the sensor – so if we had a 1 second exposure, the next stop down from that would be 1/2s and the next stop up would be 2s. ISO and aperture settings also affect the amount of light hitting the sensor and therefore their adjustment can also be measured in stops, however when taking bracketed exposures these two remain constant – only the shutter speed changes. (A more detailed explanation can be found here – http://www.andystafford.co.uk/exposure-control-stops/)

Having set the camera up to take my 3 shots, I pressed the shutter release and this is what I got…


1/125s

1/500s

1/30s

The numbers underneath each shot are the exposure times – see how the second is 4 times the first, and the third is 1/4 of the first (give or take some rounding). This is due to the 2 stops difference between each shot.

You’ll notice that the shots (apart from the final one) look quite dark. There are three reasons for this:-

  • I wanted to keep as much cloud detail as possible so I metered off the brightest part of the sky to make sure I didn’t get any blown highlights.
  • It was slightly windy and I didn’t want too much tree movement in the shot so I tried to keep the shutter speeds as fast as possible. (1/30s is still quite slow really considering there was moving foliage but I got lucky in this instance). Photomatix can align movement but better to try to limit the problems at source.
  • Accident. I would also have taken a brighter set but I was running out of time.

Once home I loaded the images into Photomatix as follows (Note: if you want to try this there is a link to the source images at the bottom of this article):-

These aren’t the default settings – I find that different combinations of alignment methods work better for different shots. I left Align Source Images set to “By correcting horizontal and vertical shifts” just in case the wind blew the tripod at all and turned off “Attempt to reduce ghosting artifacts”. Movement, especially clouds and running water, can cause problems in Photomatix and I’ll often try different options in these instances.

Once Photomatix had finished its initial processing I pressed the Tone Mapping button and tweaked the settings until I got something that I was happy with.

If you’ve not used Photomatix before don’t be alarmed by how the image looks at the moment – what’s on the screen is only a rough guide. The finished product will look much better :)

The settings that made the major difference to the image were those to do with saturation. With the main Colour Saturation slider set to 0 the image was black & white but changing the Saturation Highlights slider re-introduced colour in the the brighter elements of the shot – the clouds.

If you want to have a go yourself, the source images are available – Source images (3.2MB).

I’m afraid they are jpegs rather than the original raw files, due to space and bandwidth considerations, but they are good enough quality for trying out this example.

Visit http://www.hdrsoftwaretutorial.co.uk/ for tutorials and a discount code which will give you 15% off the purchase of Photomatix.

Winter Tree

At the start of year, after a couple of months of not going out on my bike due to cold weather I decided I should start again. Unfortunately though, now that I have a camera I find it hard to actually get any amount of cycling done as I’m constantly stopping to take pictures of things. In this instance I got almost as far as the next village before deciding to get a few shots of this tree.

The tree actually looked like this…

Winter Tree (Original)

The brown and green at the base of the tree were why I stopped originally – but the image just left me a bit cold, for obvious reasons really as whilst the tree looked interesting there is nothing special about the composition.

So I set to work, trying to make the most of the interesting clouds and the slightly nightmarish tree.

The actual effect was achieved in Photomatix by increasing the highlight saturation and decreasing the shadow saturation. A more detailed description of this process, along with source files to try it yourself can be found here

http://www.andystafford.co.uk/winter-tree-and-photomatix/

Visit http://www.hdrsoftwaretutorial.co.uk/ for tutorials and a discount code which will give you 15% off the purchase of Photomatix.

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