Ideally the tool should be
- easy to use
- able to work with images taken without a tripod (i.e. allow to align the images)
- free
by Garik
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First and foremost, the best "tool" for creating HDR images is having a proper understanding of what HDR is, and why you might need to use it. Most people are familiar with the classic "HDR Look", while at the same time not fully understanding why the classic HDR look is not necessarily how an HDR image should look. HDR, or high dynamic range, is a means of increasing the usable, functional range of contrast and color depth in a photo. Realistically, this provides greater flexibility when working with such an image, but there should not be any fundamental differences in how the resulting image looks. My preferred tool for working with HDR images is Photoshop. Adobe Photoshop, for several versions now, has offered a Another popular tool is Photomatix. This tool is explicitly designed to generate HDR images, and it has a fairly rich feature set. Photomatix is well known for creating images with that "classic HDR look", and if that is what your looking for, this is definitely the tool you want. There are some drawbacks to Photomatix, however. It sometimes has problems with generating noise, rather than eliminating it, when merging multiple shots. The end result is grainy images that have larger grains than your normal digital noise, but on par with film grain. Another quirk of Photomatix is that sometimes it caps off highlights lower than it should, limiting the available dynamic range you have to work with for bright highlights. |
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Photomatix and Photoshop are the big ones, Hugin is the free option but nobody mentioned oloneo - www.oloneo.com . I personally like Oloneo next to my Photoshop CS4 - the advantage I see in Oloneo over Photomatix are significantly simpler controls. |
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If you are not afraid of using the command line interface, then I can recommend align_image_stack and enfuse. I like the default settings. The output is not the cartoon like image. Details appear on the bright and dark areas. The simple commands I use
It generates prefix0001.tif prefix0002.tif prefix0003.tif. The next step is enfuse
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Try Luminance HDR. It's free (open source). This flickr group can also show you some examples of HDR being used. PROS
CONS
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TuFuse meets #3 and maybe #1. You don't need #2 if you shoot good RAW picture. See my step by step tutorial for details. |
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Hugin will meet needs 2 and 3. Not sure about #1, but try it out and see if it's close enough. |
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