![]() I do have a lot of respect for Adobe Photoshop and it can help photographers achieve amazing results but I am afraid that unless you are using it everyday most mature photographers like myself would be relieved to know that Photomatrix Pro 4 is an option worth a try – you can download a demo version. I wont use any other HDR software now, this one really is the best. Photomatrix will save me a whole bunch of hours because most of my indoor/ outdoor high contrast scenes need to be composited to merge bracketed images. Photomatix Pro is pretty much a major part of my HDR photography workflow now. ![]() ![]() It also has a pretty effective Selective Deghosting Tool that is very helpful when you have images with movement in a series of bracketed images. Exposure Fusion and Tone Mapping settings are all adjustable from a single window panel so the personal control is not lost. I was pleasantly surprised to see that Photomatix can do a pretty good job of producing a merged HDR image of up to five bracketed exposures. In desperation I tried using HDR software but did not have much luck with the results that seem to turn merged images into rather sick looking results and so I abandoned the idea until a photographer demonstrated Photomatix Pro 4 during a workshop. Layers and masks still don’t make any sense to me even after I had to write out in detail literally every single step and follow it like a parrot – and you know, I still don’t get it! ![]() ![]() I concede Adobe Photoshop is an amazing piece of software for users … below sixty years of age! Okay, I confess to have struggled with compositing images with Photoshop layers and masks. ![]()
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