RE: BASIC RULES FOR PHOTOGRAPHING ARCHITECTURE. PART III
Great tips, thanks @xaviduran
It is interesting to apply your recommendations when visiting the museum. It's been a long time since I've been to a museum... :)
By the way, about shooting with double exposure. In principle, this can be done without a tripod, if you maintain relative immobility. The function "Combine photos into a panorama" in the Lightrum program does this. If you slightly shifted the camera when shooting the second time, then the HDR result will have uneven edges that can be cropped.
I often use this technique for HDR and panoramas when there is no tripod.
Thank you for your advice.
Отличные советы, спасибо @xaviduran
Интересно применить твои рекомендации при посещении музея. Давно я не был в музее... :)
Кстати про съёмку с двойной экспозицией. В принципе, это можно сделать и без штатива, если сохранять относительную неподвижность. Функция "Объединить фото в панораму" в программе Лайтрум делает это. Если вы слегка сместили камеру при съёмке второй раз, то на HDR результате будут неровные края, которые можно обрезать.
Я часто пользуюсь этим приёмом для HDR и панорам когда нет штатива.
Спасибо за ваши советы.
Hi @bambuka
Many thanks for commenting.
I do not know Lightroom and I have never heard about this capability. I use Capture1 to process the raw files.
On the other hand, regarding to double shots, while shooting panoramic format is relatively easy do it by hand, but when you talk about to integrate two images exactly in one, in the same frame, it is completely different. I do not think there is a software that get a high quality image matching exactly two pictures taken without a tripod.
Please, tell me something about your visit to the museum.
Now I will give an example of getting a panorama from two pictures without a tripod.
Here are two initial photos without processing
Then I opened them in the Lightroom and applied the union to the panorama
It remains only to trim and process in the desired style
I was shooting with an OKS 1-21-1 lens (wide angle).
Ok. This is a kind of panorama.
Have you tried to do the same with a double exposure image?
Double exposure means, the correct exposure for inside and other picture with the right exposure for outside, as we may see in the last instance of the entry.
Please show me the final result.
I do not use an exposure meter and do not determine exactly the two correct exposures. But when I feel that I lack dynamic range, I take several pictures with different shutter speeds. Usually without a tripod.
Why do I combine these photos in HDR in the same way as the panorama. Here is an example:
And here is the result after pruning: