Derrel
Mr. Rain Cloud
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 48,225
- Reaction score
- 18,942
- Location
- USA
- Website
- www.pbase.com
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
Points taken and they make great sense from a technical point of view and you may be right, let me hang it up for a couple of months and I may hate it, but initially it is pleasing to me. What is the opinion on the tone mapped hdr directly to he left of the processed one ?
Looks flat and dull. The tone-mapped HDR shot to the left of the processed one suffers from the aforementioned, "Light from nowhere" syndrome in a very significant way. This scene was captured on a day with strong side-lighting, but the shadows are so bright that hundreds of thousands of years' worth of human brain evolution screams, "FAKE!" The front of the building is in full sunlight, but the left side of the building is about 3/4 of a stop dimmer....which looks utterly,totally IMPOSSIBLE to "see" in the real world. The shadowed side of the building is far too light...we can literally SEE strong, sidelighting on the front of the building, and yet...the entire side of the building that ought to be in shadow, because of a blue sky and DIRECT sunlight, looks....faked...off...impossibly too bright...implausibly bright...
"The light from nowhere syndrome," is the main issue when we take hundreds of thousands of years of human perception and human brain development, and start re-inventing the rules of how light behaves.