Digitally Blending Photos With Adobe Photoshop

Written by Aijaz Ansari. Filed under Photography. Tagged , , , . Bookmark the Permalink. Post a Comment. Leave a Trackback URL.

I’m interested in tinkering with High Dynamic Range photography, but before I get Photomatix, the software that’s recommended most often, I thought I’d try out a technique that’s a very crude approximation of HDR.  It involves taking one image that’s underexposed, and one that’s overexposed, and merging them in Photoshop.  The technique is described in this article at luminous-landscape.com.  Essentially, you put the underexposed image in a layer above the overexposed one.  Create a layer mask on the darker layer, and copy the brighter image to the layer mask.  Apply a Gaussian blur to the layer mask, and you have your blended image.

I took 3 shots, one underexposed, one overexposed and one correctly exposed (the Programed Auto setting on the camera).  Then I blended the first two images and compared the resulting image with the correctly exposed one.  I like how the blending brought out the dark areas, and lessened the washed out highlights.  I can’t wait to try this outdoors, when the weather gets a little warmer.  It’s a very quick and simple technique, and might work out well for some kinds of landscape photography.

What do you think?  Is the blended image decent?

The Underexposed Image

The Underexposed Image

The Overexposed Image

The Overexposed Image

The Blended Image

The Blended Image

The Correctly Exposed Image

The Correctly Exposed Image

2 Comments

  1. Mehul
    Posted March 10, 2010 at 9:26 pm | Permalink

    That looks like the New Orleans Saints playing on that Samsung of yours ! :)

    The blended one is a little darker then the correctly exposed one, but seems like natural lighting. One of these days I’ll get around to groking the gimp and try it on there.

    • Aijaz Ansari
      Posted March 10, 2010 at 9:31 pm | Permalink

      Before my next vacation I really want to get myself a tripod and the Photomatix software. I’ve seen the stuff you can do with that, and it’s just amazing.

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