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Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 6:58 am)
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Based on what I can find on this HDR photo process this image ("Machinery") was done using Photomatrix Pro by photographer Heiwa4126...his photostream can be viewed on Flickr…here (this particular image can be found on page 22). Acccording to this web site the artist used three exposures: -2EV, 0EV,+2EV. Photomatrix Pro is a stand-alone software package but it distributes a free software trial and a Photoshop plugin trial for CS2, CS3, CS4 which can be gotten at the bottom here.
Above is what I got by taking the original and doing a 50% opacity overlay then a 15% unsharp mask and then Shadow/Highlights effect. Is that similar to yours?
Photoshop "HDR" tutorial
A tone mapped picture may be the RESULT of HDR manipulations but is not itself HDR, that is nothing that not Photoshop can handle. If something is missing from the original raw material just put it back again.. or add something entirely new, :)
For example Pawel Wewiorski aka bolandrotor professional photographer HDR expert par excellence got second place in a HDR competition with a picture that was done from only one image. Where after one of his fellow competitors remarked, "It's interesting how a non-HDR image places in the top 3 in an HDR challenge!"
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1005&message=32166859
Adobe Lab color space
Just as tone mapped images is made up by manipulating HDR photos we can do something similar by manipulating Lab images. Lab color space like HDR has a much larger dynamic range than computer displays, printers or even human vision. So the first thing we do is making a copy of your original and change the color mode to Lab. Then right-click on the new layer and choose "Convert to a smart object".
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Here is an example from the Wikipedia entry on Tone Mapping.