The dynamic range of the K-5 is amazing, but making use of it is not trivial. 
Both yesterday and today, I got some photos of the river gorge, with some cloud 
action going on in the background. When I shot them, I bracketed, but rather 
than using photoshops HDR feature I fussed, fumbled and frobbed the controls in 
lightroom to try to keep detail in both the sky and the valley.

I'm almost satisfied with the way that this one came out:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ellarsee/5559355279/in/set-72157626352846496/

The challenge seems to come from there basically being a bi-modal distribution, 
where I've got a lot of pixels all of the way to the right of the histogram, 
and another bunch all of the way to the left. I almost need a tone curve that 
is very steep on the right 10% of the values, and then more or less linear to 
that point, or possibly also fairly steep on the left, flattish in the middle 
and steep on the right.

I'm sure that the way to do this involves both exposing to get the shot, and 
then some specific tricks in lightroom to pull out the data.  Any suggestions 
folks?  Or am I much better off just using photoshops HDR tools, and getting a 
wide bracket?

I did try putting the camera in bracket (about two stops), setting the meter on 
the sky in Manual, composing, taking my bracketed shots, then hitting the green 
button to bracket on the foreground, so I've got two sets of bracketed shots, 
one for the sky and one for the foreground.



--
Larry Colen [email protected] sent from i4est





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