


I see HDR as a way to get the same image with a dynamic range not achievable through hardware limitations. I've still got to sit down and have a go at this but the the theory anyway Then apply a laye mask to the enfused image and mask in cetain parts of the photomatix one with various transparency to add some of the detail punch you get in photomatix (however i feel its always too much in photomatix alone so i think possibly taking a more neutral well graded base from enfuse and then blending in the good parts from the photomatix process but leaving out the horrible stuff might work nicely Process the same set of brackets in both enfuse and photomatixĬomplete the bulk of the processing on the enfused image in lightroom My concept of using photomatix integrated with enfuse goes like this So all up its not as expensive as you might think! Now its a pretty big program and takes some leaning I highly recommend this book its well structured and easy to understand
#Hdrsoft photomatix pro 4.1.4 full version#
Lightroom is only like $180 for the full version if you are a student or know a student you can buy the student version which is probably only half that (dont get the lightroom cost confused with the hyper price of photoshop or the creative suiteĭamn just checked to give you a link and its under $110! for the student version. I use LR enfuse is donationware so i think if you donate 10 pounds you can get the full functioning version
