High, high contrasty HDR image.
Soft enough blend??
C&C solicited and welcome.
Rico
greymule wrote:
High, high contrasty HDR image.
Soft enough blend??
C&C solicited and welcome.
Rico
I Like :thumbup: :thumbup:
Looks great.....nice job.
Excellent capture....excellent pp!
Super shot, excellent tonemapping on the HDR, my only suggestion would be that the composition would have been better with a large item in the near foreground to lead the eyes into the frame, as it is a bit confusing to view as it stands.
Regards Mike.
Great shot love those colours
It came out great...if you hadn't have pointed it out..I might not have known....that's a good thing in my opinion.
It looks like just a well done shot, well exposed and sharp.
Mike is spot on about his suggestion to make sure you get foreground interest...look at his lighthouse shot....it's very well done.
Very nice. In my uninformed "what is the world do I know opinion, this is another technique that is often over used to the point of being abused - but at least for me this is an excellent balance, and shows what what can be done when the right tool is applied to the right job, with a great eye. I wish I could give you my vote or some money, but alas I have neither.
rpavich wrote:
It came out great...if you hadn't have pointed it out..I might not have known....that's a good thing in my opinion.
It looks like just a well done shot, well exposed and sharp.
Mike is spot on about his suggestion to make sure you get foreground interest...look at his lighthouse shot....it's very well done.
.....but the lighthouse isn't in the foreground, is it?
I usually see "HDR" and pass over the post... but in THIS case, I'm glad I checked it out.
You did a fine job!! :thumbup:
Don't know anything about HDR, but I like what I see
Beautiful and inspiring :thumbup:
An interesting comment about a foreground element. There is a darker pathof stone that leads the eye into the image on the lower left, near mid frame a reddish patch continues leading implying a "S Curve". Lastly the light on the hills near the horizon take over. Hell, it's a wonderful photograph!
Every picture doesn't need a foreground element to set the stage, just as every picture doesn't need to have the subject placed on an intersection of the lines of the thirds.
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