Dikkie
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2005
- Messages
- 887
- Reaction score
- 259
- Location
- Belgium / Brussels
- Website
- linktr.ee
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
Some camera's have built-in editing possibilities.
For example: image overlay.
You create some kind of double exposure of your RAW photos, with a RAW as output:
Image Overlay: Combining Images Together In Camera from Nikon
I'm just playing with an idea, it gives probably a bad photo, but anyway...
Situation, at night:
A photo at a wide aperture F1.8, focussed on an object so you have a nice blur in front an on the back of the object.
Combined with, the same photo, but shot at small aperture F16, so you'll have starformations in your street lights and moving vehicles...
If you combine those 2 photos to 1, you can maybe have a nice effect? Maybe both advantages in 1?
You would have a high(er) (non-dynamic) aperture range photo, or something like that (HAR).
Anyone tried this before?
Anyone can show us a photo of this?
I'm going to try it sooner or later when I'm out shooting some night visions.
I'll let you know!
For example: image overlay.
You create some kind of double exposure of your RAW photos, with a RAW as output:
Image Overlay: Combining Images Together In Camera from Nikon
I'm just playing with an idea, it gives probably a bad photo, but anyway...
Situation, at night:
A photo at a wide aperture F1.8, focussed on an object so you have a nice blur in front an on the back of the object.
Combined with, the same photo, but shot at small aperture F16, so you'll have starformations in your street lights and moving vehicles...
If you combine those 2 photos to 1, you can maybe have a nice effect? Maybe both advantages in 1?
You would have a high(er) (non-dynamic) aperture range photo, or something like that (HAR).
Anyone tried this before?
Anyone can show us a photo of this?
I'm going to try it sooner or later when I'm out shooting some night visions.
I'll let you know!