The response curve will change similar tones everywhere. For example you want to darken the sky, but some of the foreground has a patch of something the same general brightness of the sky, you don't want to change that. Just changing the curve will effect both, in this hypothetical you need at least two layers.
Igor Roshchin wrote: > Yes, I shot them in RAW. > What I've done in the shot quoted is essentially changing the > response curve - compressing some regions and bringing up others. > > Do you think what you suggest would be much different? > > It is the same information that would be used, so the only difference > would be that the algorithm used for the HDR by PS is better then > what I did by hand based on my intuition. > > Question for those who have experience with HDR images: > How many images and what exposure steps do you use usually? > > Igor > > > Thu Dec 6 00:19:02 EST 2007 > P. J. Alling wrote: > > >> If you shot them in RAW you could convert them with different exposure >> compensation for each conversion then combine. That works rather well. >> >> Igor Roshchin wrote: >> >>> I was able to "pull" one of the photos: >>> http://www.komkon.org/~igor/PHOTOS/Argentina/IMGPa9855.jpg >>> > > -- The difference between individual intelligence and group intelligence is the difference between Harvard University and the Harvard University football team. -- P. J. O'Roarke -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

