My (Lisa's) favorite quote from this article is ..."If you remember only one thing from this article, let it be this: HDR doesn't have to look artificial."
A Plea For HDR By Alexandre Buisse
"Recently, the results of the UK Landscape Photographer of the Year Award were published. BBC News made an announcement on their website, and a very interesting thing happened. Most of the readers commentswere not praising the winning images but complaining about one thing: they looked like "HDR". By that, they meant overly contrasted and saturated images that appear unrealistic (on a sidenote, I am fairly sure that only one of the eight winning photos actually was HDR). The technique has indeed a very bad press, especially in the "fine art" community, and to be fair, much of the criticism is justified. But the point I would like to make here is that, well used, it can be very powerful and look perfectly natural, and is sometimes the only way to capture a scene as our eyes see it. Because there are so many widespread misconceptions about HDR, and because most online resources focus on how to achieve this overcooked effect that so many of us hate, I would like to briefly make myself its advocate. Do not expect a detailed tutorial but rather a general presentation of the technique."
Alexandre Buisse is a mix of mountain climber, landscape photographer, world traveller and computer science PhD student, in fluctuating proportions. When not climbing, he lives in Copenhagen, Denmark, a country whose highest mountain rises at an astounding altitude of 171m. Alexandre is also an editor of the photo website 1x. The images in this article come from the recently (self) published book about his trip to South America, Bottom Up.
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