Dynamic range is a human concept. You might be able to fiddle around with
merging algorithms on board a camera or in post processing software, but
at the end of the day it comes down to the viewers perception of the scene
and how they want to represent it.
This invention would be ok for survelliance equipment or any application
that requires as much detail as possible to be captured, but for artistic
purposes i'd imagine it would create very 'unnatural' looking
images....whatever that means these days. ;)
Has anyone tried doing HDR bird photography?
Alistair McKeough <>
Sent by:
20/11/2009 04:41 PM
To
Bill Moorhead <>
cc
Birding-Aus <>
Subject
Re: [Birding-Aus] Live Lens
Interesting.
If you can solve dynamic range problems with modern cameras you'd make a
truck load of money and open up a vast array of applications - assuming
you
can maintain image quality.
Is Ansel Adams' zone system finally obsolete? I think he'd be smiling from
above if it is.
2009/11/20 Bill Moorhead <>
> A friend passed this segment from the TV programme New Inventors onto
me.
>
> http://www.abc.net.au/tv/newinventors/txt/s2746555.htm
>
> This, so called, Live Lens is the size of a postage stamp and apparently
> can be retrofitted to existing cameras and lenses. Issues of lightness
and
> darkness in the same image appear to be improved markedly. Anyway, it'd
be
> interesting to see how the invention goes.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Bill
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