Redondo Beach

  1. HDR Photography, how far to push it?

    One of the big turn-offs in photography right now is bad HDR. And the many bad HDR photos out there have really given this style of photography a bad rap. Some people just hear the term HDR and are instantly turned off. I say this because I use to be this way until I started to see some examples of good HDR.

    What is Bad HDR?

    Bad HDR is really subject to the viewers opinion. I could say bad HDR has terrible halos, looks too flat or doesn't look real, but I've seen many amazing HDR photos that exhibit those qualities. I think the reason for this is because the scene and subject mater of the photo called for that style which helped compliment it.

    So in my opinion, bad HDR would be when you take a photo and push it to far away from what the original image represented, like it's style or mood. In other words, if you shoot something rustic and dirty and you push the tonemapping to accentuate the gritty and grungy look, then your actually helping exaggerate the mood of the image. But if you take something like a beautiful sunset while doing some beach photography and push it to far into something over saturated, gritty and dirty, then you're ruining and skewing the true nature of the scene. That's at least my take on it. 

    What is Good HDR?

    To me, good HDR will exaggerate the scene in a complimentary way. With my HDR photography I try to accentuate how the scene made me feel when I was there. If I can do that then I feel I was successful in my post processing. So if the clouds where dramatic I'll use my three high dynamic range photos to push the detail in the clouds as much as possible to make them even more dramatic. But that is only if I'm going for an HDR tonemapped aesthetic. Which is only sometimes. 

    My personal favorite style of High Dynamic Range Photography is when you can't tell if was bracketed or not. Often when we go to the beach or walk around the city, everything will look exposed when looking around with our naked eye. This is because our eyes can always adjust on the fly to the dynamic range of what we are looking at. A camera cannot. So if we are able to capture the complete range of a scene with three or more shots so everything looks exposed as it should be, or as we saw it when we were there, then we can combine the photos so our final image can still look photo real without having that gritty nasty bad HDR look. This is what I think good HDR should look like and is usually what I aim for unless I'm going for a unique more surreal artistic look. Jay Patel and his wife Varina have a technique for this they call iHDR. You can read more about it on their post iHDR Workflow Overview.

    Todays image is as about as far away from the natural look you'll see me go. The clouds at the Redondo Pier were somewhat dramatic and the pier itself was had this gritty quality. I pushed the image not only in Photomatix, but also with a detail enhancer filter in Color Efex Pro. I wanted this photo to be detailed, dramatic and dirty. After all, the Redondo pier has a crazy history. It's been beat up a few times by storms, and was burned down to the shore in the late 1980s. 

    Today's Photo

    Is this bad HDR and did I push it to far? Or is this good HDR that helps the drama of the scene?

    Also, you can see more how I create my HDR Photography at my Photography Tips Page http://alikgriffin.com/photography-tips

    Redondo Pier HDR Photo

  2. Shooting Night HDR Photography

    The Redondo Pier at Night

    This photo is a great example of how to shoot HDR photography at night. Really it's not any different. The lights can be bright so just make sure you expose for them on your bracket exposed to the left. Then on a shot like this you'll want to pull out as much detail in the sky and under the pier so make sure to expose to the right enough to get that. I usually shoot my HDR bracketed shots two stops apart from each other. I would do more but my camera won't let me.

    Your longest exposure might be about 30 seconds. If you need longer you'll need a shutter release timer and you'll have to shoot on Bulb mode and count manually as your shutter is held down. I've done this before and it's not fun. Shots start taking forever to complete.

    You'll get a lot of hot spots on your sensor once you start exposing longer than 30 seconds. Cameras have built in ways to reduce this but it requires taking the same photo for the same duration twice. Which means now your minute or two exposure becomes two to four minutes. And in an HDR sequences you're doing it to three shots. 

    The main thing is focusing on your location. There is no reason to shoot HDR at night if your scene doesn't have a very high dynamic range. I like to shoot about 30 minutes before it's completely dark so I can still pull color out of the sky. 

    HDR Photography at Night

    This beach photo was shot on the Samyang 14mm f2.8 but I cropped in like a madman. Just pretend I shot it on a very cropped 8MP camera. 

  3. Shade on the Redondo Beach Pier

    On the Redondo Beach Pier there are these very strange shades above each of the seats. From a distance it makes the pier look as though it has some sort of wings. Up close it just looks cool. The green lighting adds a great contrast to the purple sky. An excellent subject for some night HDR beach photography.

    Today is also the Canon 5dmkii's fourth birthday. It's amazing how awesome this camera was when it came out. There still isn't much out there that is significantly better and that's after four years. 

    Redondo Beach Pier HDR Photography

    Learn how I create this style of HDR photography http://alikgriffin.com/tutorials/hdr-photography

  4. Redondo Beach Pier

    This Beach photo is of the Redondo Beach Pier during Sunset. There was a thick marine layer blocking most of the sun. A few minutes after this the light from the sun was pretty much gone even though the sun was still a good 15 minutes from setting. Luckily the Redondo Beach Pier has a lot of great and interesting areas with nice lighting so night photography there can be fun. I'll post several more photos from this general area as the week goes on.

    Redondo Beach PierThis pier is an interesting design, it's not like most that jet straight out. This one loops around and reconnects to the beach. It use to be larger but fires once burned it down and it has since been rebuilt.Read more about the Redondo Beach Pier at AlikGriffin.com

    Learn how I create HDR photos like this one at: http://alikgriffin.com/tutorials/hdr-photography