A camera can't perceive the same range of brightness that your eye can, so it can't take one shot that captures the full range of dark to light tones that you see in a scene. To work around this problem, photographers take multiple shots of the same scene at different exposures and then combine them in an image editor such as Adobe Photoshop to create a high-dynamic-range (HDR) image with well-exposed details in both the shadows and highlights.
If you'd like to try out this type of photography without spending US$649 for Adobe Photoshop CS3, give Pangea Software's Bracketeer a shot. This $30 program takes advantage of the command-line utility Enfuse which, like Photoshop's Merge to HDR command, merges bracketed exposures into a single image that's much closer to what your eye sees.
Although the interface sliders can be a bit mystifying, I've found that the default settings usually produce good results--though you'll want to combine it with an image editor such as Adobe Photoshop Elements, to bring out the best in your resulting images.
For more Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2007 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.
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