Viewing entries tagged
Highlights

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Blow Out, Part 5: RAW Processors

Please Note: This will be the last post on highlights for now. We'll be offering some advanced highlight-recovery tricks at a later date.

Every RAW processor will handle highlights differently. For example, being a Mac user, I have the opportunity to test image processing with both Apple's Aperture and Adobe's Photoshop Lightroom. I find that Aperture can recover blown highlights just a little bit more elegantly than can Lightroom. Yet Lightroom's interface is more straightforward and easier to master. RAW processors have nuances and characteristics to their resulting images that remind me of the personalities of various types of film. We can fine-tune these processors to achieve various effects but that's beyond the scope of this discussion.

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Blow Out, Part 4: In Post

So far, our discussion of highlights has been limited to our work in the field. This makes sense. It's best to control just about any process in its early stages—this is true for most things in life, be it health care, home maintenance, manufacturing, or photography. If we manage exposure we pretty much set the stage for a good photograph. But, the real world moves fast and we sometimes don't have the time or energy to get a perfect exposure. Sometimes lighting is just tricky. Sometimes we forget the basics.

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Blow Out, Part 3: Exposure Techniques

Exposure is at least as important in digital photography as it is in silver-based imaging, probably more so. As we've previously discussed, the dynamic range of today's digital, imaging sensors is limited. And when we lose highlight detail, the results are ugly. So, proper placement of highlight exposure is critical.

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Blow Out, Part 2: Specular vs. True Highlights

Don't blow out your highlights! These days you hear this admonition all the time. I suspect it's the result of the little blinky warnings all of our cameras now have. Personally, I can't stand the damned things. Blink! Blink! Blink! I'd rather destroy a photo due to overexposure than to ruin it from being distracted by flashing displays. I turn the blinkies off and generally use the histogram to keep track of highlights. However, I digress—that's not the point of this post.

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Blow Out, Part 1: Dealing with Fleeting Highlights

Blown-out highlights. Nothing is uglier in digital photography. Capturing wide, dynamic ranges in original scenes has always been a challenge. Working with Kodachrome, for example, was never a picnic when it came to proper exposure. But, at least Kodachrome (and its brethren) would fade to white in a somewhat elegant way. If you overexposed the film it might look washed-out, pale, and faded. At its best, it might even be labeled as a high-key shot and be praised for it. With analog overexposure, the overexposed areas might be lacking in detail but there would be no gaping, abrupt and white holes in your images. Sadly, with digital photography, ugly gaps are exactly what we find when we lose control of our highlights.

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