Hi guys,
just discovered a new function available in lightroom. the hdr tonemapping. And in a really interesting way.
here is an example done with 9 shots taken with magic lantern hdr functions:
(http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8147/7489929016_4b53d94b47_b.jpg)
The workflow is quite simple, and those of you that are using lightroom and photoshop for tonemapping will find this workflow very similar to what you already do.
Open the shots in lightroom, select all the shots you want to join in an hdr, and then click with right mouse button, and in the modify menu you can find something like "join to hdrpro in photoshop" (i have the italian version of software).
So now that you are in photoshop, don't tone map here, but join the photos in a single 32bit tiff. Save the image and edit it in lightroom like every other image. And that's it. You can simply lower down the hilights and up the shadows and you have a perfect natural hdr. If you want a more hdrish look simply go up with clarity and with saturation ;)
more things I can do with LR more I'm happy :D
@scrax: you are right ;)
Hi screamer, nice workflow! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing screamer! It's really useful since I do loads of HDRs and use LR to manage photos.
i'm doing some other tests today, and can admit this is really a smart workflow, and achieving the "natural looking" result was never so simple.
(http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7259/7493987040_9b0fb95642_b.jpg)
photomatix
(http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7243/7107936575_eb78c6ea95_b.jpg)
new workflow (lightroom, photoshop, lightroom)
here is another test i've done today with old 3 bracket, compared with the old one tonemapping in photomatix (yes i know, the old one is really exagerated, but anyway interesting comparison :D)
Thanks for sharing. This is awesome.
Is there any good way of masking treelines against a bright sky (which I wish to lower the exposure on) without getting ugly edges like you do when you use auto-mask?
Your first HDR is amazing! I favor the Photomatix HDR, however, in your comparison photos. The fringing on the LR/PS version is way more noticeable
fringin in LR4 is removed in snap too, there are new tools for that, and they are quite intuitive
I didn't like 4.0 but I think I'm keeping 4.1