The Salutation of the Dawn
Kalidasa (Indian sanskrit poet in the 5th century A.D.)
Mists shrouding the plains below Blakemore Ridge, with the tower of St Mary's Church at Dartington bathed in the first light of a winter’s morning.
The sun had just risen over Blakemore ridge and for a few moments bathed some of the tree canopies with golden light and added a hint of gentle warmth to the mists.
Technical info:
Pentax K-X
Sigma 55-200mm DC lens
Manfrotto 190XProB tripod
Manfrotto 498RC2 panoramic ball-head
Cromatek circular polarizer
Aperture = f/22
Exposure durations = 1/30, 0.25, 0.5, 0.7 and 1.5 seconds
Focal length = 200mm
ISO = 200
(Manual mode & Spot-metering pattern)
HDR from 5 RAW files (manual bracketing) – using Photomatix Pro 3.27
Finished in Lightroom 3.6 and Photoshop 6.0
As for me, all I know is that I know nothing.
regards


https://www.philhemsley.co.uk/
Kind regards Maria

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Maria-Gray-photography/589310071158079?ref=hl
Best
Bill
BillWardPhotography
What made you choose those settings? I can't imagine stopping down to f/22 and the four shadow exposures are relatively closely spaced. It seems to work well and it's refreshing to see you haven't gone for an 'in your face' HDR process.
To answer WaypointCharlie's comments I think there is much hype about diffraction over f/16 and as there was so many layers of hidden and revealed countryside it seemed worth the risk to get decent front-to-back sharpness. Various 'zones' were spot metered and assessed to allow me to make the bracketed exposures I felt best represented the scene's dynamic range by later HDR processing... quick decisions in rapidly changing light, as the sun rose over the hills.

https://www.philhemsley.co.uk/
morpheus71
13 yearsMember
Totnes
https://www.philhemsley.co.uk/