Merging photos in on1 photo raw for hdr
You can select or deselect images to be in the HDR merge You can check or uncheck them to see how they will make a visual difference to your HDR merge. To the bottom left of the screen, you can also see thumbnails of the images you have selected. If you have not shot from a tripod, you should also check the Remove Ghost box. The HDR editing controls disappear and we see an option to “Complete Toning in Adobe Raw” This is checked by default, and we leave it on.
#MERGING PHOTOS IN ON1 PHOTO RAW FOR HDR PRO#
However, if you click at the top right of the HDR Pro window and change 8/16 bit to 32 bit, something interesting happens. HDR Pro usually defaults to 8 or 16-bit files. In Photoshop the files are usually merged into a Photoshop PSD file. This gives you more dynamic range to play with than if the HDR was merged down to a different format. As most of you know, latest editions of Lightroom will merge RAW files into an HDR RAW. Here is the interesting thing that Scott Kelby found.
Select the images to merge and open them in HDR Pro Once open you will see something like this. This will automatically open Photoshop, load the images and open HDR Pro. Right click on any of the selected images and click Edit In – Merge to HDR Pro in Photoshop. The first thing we need to do is select the images that we wish to merge in Lightroom’s Library grid view.
I am using a 5 image auto exposure bracket shot taken from my Phantom 4 Pro drone in Cornwall earlier this year. Today I am going to talk you through the process of taking Lightroom images through Photoshop’s HDR Pro. The end result is much sharper as Scott Kelby had suggested but also I found that the removing ghosts also seems much more efficient and accurate. I was very happy to find that HDR Pro does indeed give a much better result. Recently, he posted an article about why it’s better to move from Lightroom to Photoshop’s HDR Pro when creating High Dynamic Range images.Īs someone that brackets virtually everything, I was keen to try this out. His tutorials, posts, and discoveries often inspire me to push my Adobe boundaries. I am a big fan of Lightroom and Photoshop guru, Scott Kelby.