I walked out of Whoa Nellie Deli on Saturday and I could see that he only clouds were sitting over the Sierra Nevada, not out over Mono Lake, so I headed for a canyon which would take me back towards the clouds. Oddly, even though there were hundreds of photographers in the area, there was almost no one there!
Shooting straight towards the setting sun was going to create some major exposure challenges, so I started bracketing exposures to pick up more detail in the shadows and highlights. The first thing I tried was Photomatix HDR software, in Tone Mapping mode. What I often find using that mode is that it can produce weird light halos around objects, like over the mountain on the left. The detail in the shadows is good, but it's a little blue-green in color, particularly on the left side. So a reasonable compromise might be to layer the best single exposure of the sky over this result in Photoshop, and replace the wacky HDR sky, and do the same with in the shadow of the mountain.
Maybe I'll try a simple average of the 5 exposures first. That does extract more shadow and highlight detail, without creating weird colors or halos. I often say that adjusting images in post-processing with the intention of producing a realistic image is like walking a tightrope: it's really easy to fall off before you reach the desired end point! With the damaged color and sky, this result has fallen off, but it's hanging on by one hand. I can either try to haul it back up by merging in more accurate photographic data in areas with problems, or I can start back at the beginning of the tightrope and try again with using a different technique. I think I'll try the total redo first.
To see all three versions side by side, try this album view:
https://plus.google.com/photos/107459220492917008623/albums/5786200310326351313
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Comments
lakes mirror , fantastic
Fantástico …………imagem .
Love the reflection
You may want to give Nik HDR Efex Pro 2 a try.
Thanks +John Lackey, I will.
super!
Beautiful
Wow that's amazing the colors are impeccable
moc pěkné
Thanks for sharing the nice image and the dilemma. Although I am regrettably very familiar with them, it is hard to see the problem areas you speak of at this image size. Perhaps you could show some larger images or crops. Anyway, what you show is very nice, I think.
nice picture
Sierra Nevada, for the win!
you can try both for this pic and let's see which one looks better #JeffSullivan
+Jeff Sullivan The image you posted looks a lot better with more contrast. I tried "strong contrast" on a level in CS6 and while it was a bit too much, it illustrated the point if you want to try it.
It's beautiful… love the reflections
Your eye for life wow is all I can say keep them coming please nonie g
realy cool,,like this
I think it looks pretty good, but I know what you mean about Photomatix Pro.
hermoso "
So beautiful! Great reflection!
I much prefer non-HDR. Way too many HDR creations look garish and oh-so-obvious.
Paraiso e logo ali
Beautiful!
WOW….. wow….wow…. one more…wow! 🙂
GORGUS,I DNT KNOW HOW TO SPELL
ummmmm bonitho
Cool!
HDR
Very nice. We were at mono lake that day, and I shot a lone cloud. 🙂
Fantastic shot
…..fantastic….
Very nice!
We saw that cloud +Swee Oh!
beautiful
magic picture congratulations
beautiful………….which place is this……..
HDR is the best 😀
Nice shot…I agree with you concerning the the redo. 😉
wowowowowowowww
I understand the critique. But I think the photo is well done.
HDR is OK.. as long as it's believable.. this is just over the top..
Wonderful
Picture perfect.
very wonderful place
I have to agree +Kerry Smith. If the process takes center stage and becomes more noticeable than the subject, the processing is a detriment, and what was the point of taking the photo with that subject in it at all? The photographer could save a lot of time and simply take shots in their kitchen of spoons and forks all day that effectively deliver the message of mainly saying in the loudest possible way, "Look, I found HDR!"
There are so many options sliders in post-processing software, and anyone can grab one move them in an extreme direction and destroy the realism of a photo, the unique and special character of that irreplaceable moment, in a fraction of a second. It's far more challenging and rewarding to take the poor, flat, lifeless representation delivered by a digital camera and restore the life to it.
I used Photomatix HDR software to create this, but it doesn't have the most obvious, distracting and annoying processing flaws of 99% of HDRs produced. The subject takes center stage. What a concept.
+Jeff Sullivan. You said it perfectly. Yet, look how many +1s this image got. I suppose if I'm gonna be successful at photography (at least online) I will have to max all my LR sliders out.. 🙁
this is lovely
I think I like the single image edited in lightroom the best.
美
Where is that place..
I want to go
This is in California's Eastern Sierra near Mono Lake and the town of Lee Vining. +Md. Zikrul Ahsan Shawon
The exact location will be disclosed in my upcoming guide book to California landscape photography (sorry, I have years of time and 40,000 miles of travel to recoup the costs of). http://www.phototripusa.com/