TdC
Trem's hunky sex love muffin
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2003
- Messages
- 30,925
two points of interest folks:
A) panoramas are allowed. the rule no merging of more than one photo does not apply to panoramas, the rule means do not 'shop a shark's mouth into a kitten and suchlike. By panorama we mean several different pictures of the same environment merged into a larger single picture with normal colour and detail definitions. An effect replicating a panorama camera/lens, but not a wide angle lens.
B) HDR photos are allowed. the rule no merging of more than one photo does not apply to HDR images, the rule means do not 'shop a shark's mouth into a kitten and suchlike. By HDR (High Dynamic Range) we mean the merging of two (or more) pictures with different and specific lighting levels to create an spectacular visual effect. High range DSLR cameras often have a feature to do this, and you usually need special software to merge the RAW files. You can see a tut about the first option here and a "poor man's HDR" from jpgs here.
Discuss.
For my own choice, I will say that I will allow option A. I will not allow option B because it is too specialist for most of us. I am willing to set up a separate HDR competition if you want to show your work, because I think HDR pics are absolutely spectacular and your stuff deserves to be shown.
A) panoramas are allowed. the rule no merging of more than one photo does not apply to panoramas, the rule means do not 'shop a shark's mouth into a kitten and suchlike. By panorama we mean several different pictures of the same environment merged into a larger single picture with normal colour and detail definitions. An effect replicating a panorama camera/lens, but not a wide angle lens.
B) HDR photos are allowed. the rule no merging of more than one photo does not apply to HDR images, the rule means do not 'shop a shark's mouth into a kitten and suchlike. By HDR (High Dynamic Range) we mean the merging of two (or more) pictures with different and specific lighting levels to create an spectacular visual effect. High range DSLR cameras often have a feature to do this, and you usually need special software to merge the RAW files. You can see a tut about the first option here and a "poor man's HDR" from jpgs here.
Discuss.
For my own choice, I will say that I will allow option A. I will not allow option B because it is too specialist for most of us. I am willing to set up a separate HDR competition if you want to show your work, because I think HDR pics are absolutely spectacular and your stuff deserves to be shown.