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Robsweeney
Known Participant
December 10, 2019
Question

blown out highlights

  • December 10, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 920 views

Hello,

I shoot abstract natural landscapes, always underexpose by 3 stops, especially when I'm dealing with lots of highlights.  Even then, sometimes my highlights blow out.  In post, I try lowering "highlights" and "whites" but it still is a problem.  Any suggestions are appreciated.   

  

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3 replies

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 11, 2019

The sky is blown out, but not the rest.

Ricky336
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 10, 2019

Where are your blown out highlights exactly? Not in the grass. Also in this type of shot, why underexpose by 3 stops. It's rather a lot when in this photo you don't have strong highlight areas.

If you have strong highlights and dark shadow areas, it will be best to do an HDR type of shot, do one stop underexposed, exposed and one stop overexposed, i.e bracket your exposures,  then merge the shots together in Lightroom. It has an HDR function.

Robsweeney
Known Participant
December 10, 2019

Thank you Ricky336.  This makes sense.  I'm such a dinosaur when it comes to shooting digitally.  I'm having fun in LightRoom but clearly I need to produce better files.  Crazy question but is HDR considered a "technical manipulation", thereby making it less attractive for a purist collector of art photography?

Ricky336
Community Expert
Community Expert
December 11, 2019

HDR if done properly looks fine and does not have that typical 'HDR look'. If done well,the image will have a good range of tones.

Read this info from Adobe.

https://helpx.adobe.com/uk/lightroom-cc/using/hdr-panorama.html 

 

I would give this a go - it takes a bit of practice as you have to get your alignment right- so using a tripod can help with that.

 

JP Hess
Inspiring
December 10, 2019

Are you sure you're not remembering some colors that just weren't there? That just looks like underbrush that has lost its summer color. Nothing looks blown out to me.

Robsweeney
Known Participant
December 10, 2019

Thanks Jim.  I don't think colors "that weren't there" is the issue.  It's that underbrush that's clearly overexposed.  My question is how to deal with such a wide range of exposure points (I've never shot HDR - I'm not very proficient in how to digitally manage my exposures).