My name is Brandon Sarkis, on behalf of Expert
Village. Today, I'm going to give you an overview and introduction to HDR, or High Dynamic Range
Photography. All right, so now let's show you how to set your camera up for Auto Exposure
Bracketing. So you take your camera, and on this particular model, there's just a button
on the back for auto exposure bracketing, which is really handy.
So, you turn it at
the top, you just hold down that button, and you'll see right here it says off, and you
can turn this through, and it will do five exposures, or three exposures. So I'm going
to go with three; that's what I usually do. And this button will actually select the exposure
spacing, so I can do a half, a whole, one and a half, or two entire marks out from where
I'm where the base exposure's at. I know that Canon and Nikon cameras, which this is not;
it's actually back here.
It'd be in the menu settings, back here in the back, under Auto
Exposure Bracketing, but each camera is going to be a little bit different. But this one
does it on top, and I know that some of the I know Pentaxes do it on top, as well, so
that is that. All right, so I've set up my camera to take a shot here. When shooting
HDR you want to make sure you use static stuff that isn't moving, because it has to align
the composite images.
So, let's look here on the top of the camera. You can see that
I've got set up for triple exposures, at a spacing of two. So, I'm going to go ahead,
and hit this once, okay. And what we're going to do is we're just going to hold down the
button, and you'll hear it, you'll hear it click off all three shots.
There you go, and
next I'll show you what the photos, the differences in the actual photos. So, if you look here
on the screen, you'll see there is one photo, there's the other, and there's the other.
Let's keep looking at the same photo, just you can see their how the F-stop, and the
aperture speeds have changed automatically on each photo. So, that's how you shoot in
HDR..
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