Thanks, Bob. I don’t use LR, although there might be a similar tool in Capture
One. However, I have long tried to get the photo that I want before I get to
the fiddling stage. Whether I succeed is always another matter, of course :-)
Chris
> On 20 May 16, at 14:55, Bob Whitmire <fujixbob@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> If you use Lightroom, there's a devastatingly effective graduated ND filter
> available that, with a little bit of practice, can transform the way you
> work. It's much more usable than it first appears when opening it. For
> example, I have had occasion on a number of shots from top to bottom, then
> overlaid from bottom to top. You also can go side to side, or at angles.
> Takes a bit of getting used to, but it will cause you to put your ND
> filters on eBay. (Hyperbole Alert!)
>
> --Bob Whitmire
> Certified Neanderthal
>
>
> On Fri, May 20, 2016 at 8:31 AM, ChrisB <ftog@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> <mailto:ftog@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
>
>> You might be right, Chuck. I went on a photo tour for 3 days on my
>> retirement from the RAF (www.imageseen.co.uk <http://www.imageseen.co.uk/>
>> <http://www.imageseen.co.uk/ <http://www.imageseen.co.uk/>>)
>> and the lovely lady who runs that recommends grad filters. I didn’t
>> quarrel, as I wanted to try the process, but I haven’t compared it with
>> using bracketing and HDR post-processing, although I have done each
>> separately on different occasions.
--
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