Thanks to you and Chris for your compliments. I had intended to shoot
it much earlier in the day when there was a lot of high overcast. But I
had other things to do and I couldn't get there in time.
Had I been paid to do the job I'd have taken a lot longer and much more
care. But this was a quick job for friends who had looked at the house
the day before and I wanted them to be able to remember what they had
seen. I also didn't want to disturb the owner very much who was kind
enough to give me 1/2 hour to take the photos.
Given that you can rarely control the time or conditions under which you
do the job I think HDR is the right solution. All of us can't wait for
3 weeks to photograph the Snake River in perfect light like St. Ansel.
I've just been lax in pursuing good HDR solutions since I thought I was
done with this sort of stuff. I assume that PhotoShop *can* do good HDR
but I certainly don't know how to use it... maybe because I haven't
studied it??? In any case I was impressed with the way the E-M1 (and I
assume the E-M5 as well) is able to pull detail out of the severely
underexposed murk.
Chuck Norcutt
On 3/31/2015 7:31 PM, Mike Gordon via olympus wrote:
Nice Job, Chuck. It will certainly do the job admirably well. I wonder what
Jeff K , who shoots real estate images routinely,
handles the window highlight issue. Perhaps shooting early or late in day or ?
HDR as you mention.
Mike
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