VERY well done ! I currently use a Vietnamese editor but the turnaround time is longer than I like. I've been trying to find the photoshop recipe for how to do the exposure blending myself. This is it. Many, many thanks, Jim
for sure, I use flambient in certain situations when I'm needing a more color accurate image. especially when shooting dark furniture or wood features, flash helps maintain the true colors. the trade off is a steeper learning curve with flash equipment and more shooting time, so I alternate depending on my specific needs for each shoot.
@@fulltimerep please don't take this personal, but I find it bizarre that a photographer is calling using flash a "steeper learning curve"... Ability to use the light is a foundation of our craft. We should be capable of something more than bracketing in Aperture mode. As for "more shooting time", you get efficient if you learn it the proper way. Shooting this way and outsourcing editing is another terrible move. You will never learn proper editing (and proper shooting with editing in mind) if you rely on someone else. Learn it first (or learn it simultaneously by doing it yourself and having an editor), so you can be competent when outsourcing. I was just going through Photoshop for Real Estate Photographers group with editors post one after another. Most of the shots have no correction on vertical lines, windows look like LCDs on the wall, there are no shadows and the grass and the sky is ridicules...
Nice just started using photoshops HDR pro method, hopefully you can make a video on how to master that, JUST SUBBED!!
VERY well done ! I currently use a Vietnamese editor but the turnaround time is longer than I like. I've been trying to find the photoshop recipe for how to do the exposure blending myself. This is it. Many, many thanks, Jim
you're welcome Jim! its a great skill to know, sometime the clients just want their photos NOW. haha
not a fan of HDR for interiors, I like the "flambient" method for interiors. Just as quick and easy.
for sure, I use flambient in certain situations when I'm needing a more color accurate image. especially when shooting dark furniture or wood features, flash helps maintain the true colors. the trade off is a steeper learning curve with flash equipment and more shooting time, so I alternate depending on my specific needs for each shoot.
@@fulltimerep please don't take this personal, but I find it bizarre that a photographer is calling using flash a "steeper learning curve"... Ability to use the light is a foundation of our craft. We should be capable of something more than bracketing in Aperture mode. As for "more shooting time", you get efficient if you learn it the proper way.
Shooting this way and outsourcing editing is another terrible move. You will never learn proper editing (and proper shooting with editing in mind) if you rely on someone else. Learn it first (or learn it simultaneously by doing it yourself and having an editor), so you can be competent when outsourcing. I was just going through Photoshop for Real Estate Photographers group with editors post one after another. Most of the shots have no correction on vertical lines, windows look like LCDs on the wall, there are no shadows and the grass and the sky is ridicules...