From the course: HDR Photography: Shooting and Processing
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Panoramic HDR
You might already be familiar with panoramic stitching, the process of shooting a series of overlapping images and then using Photoshop or another piece of software to stitch those into a seamless, perspective-corrected panorama of your scene. You can do that with HDR also. It's a pretty simple process in its conception. It just takes a lot of work as you've got a lot of files to manage. What I've done here is I have shot three bracketed sets of HDR images. I'm going to go into Filmstrip mode here so we can get a bigger view. So here's one set. It's a normal three-shot bracket. Then I panned to the right and you can see the pan happened right there and I shot three more images. Again, another bracketed set, and then I panned to the right again and shot another three images. So I can get all of these merged and stitched into a single seamless panorama. All I have to do is just go through the normal steps that I would go through for HDR and then stitch the results. So stack those up…
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Contents
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Reducing noise and correcting chromatic aberrations13m 33s
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Finishing an image8m 42s
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Handling HDR images that are "flat"13m 37s
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Combining HDR and LDR23m 3s
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Selective editing with HDR Efex Pro9m 42s
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HDR that doesn't look like HDR12m 41s
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Tone mapping troubles to watch for6m 46s
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Why use HDR for black-and-white images?5m 26s
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Black-and-white HDR12m 39s
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Panoramic HDR12m 3s
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HDR time lapse4m 24s
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Processing the trestle image10m 1s
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