• Black and White

    Posted on March 27th, 2010

    Written by admin

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    The Beauty of Black-and-White HDR

    by Jim Austin

    “Oscar Rejlander’s (1813 -1875) studio was unusual; shaped like a cone, the camera would be in the narrow part, the sitters at the opposite end. The camera was in shadow so that the sitters were less aware of it. He estimated his exposure by bringing his cat into the studio; if the cat’s eyes were like slits, he would use a fairly short exposure. If they were a little more open than usual, he would give extra exposure. If the pupils were totally dilated he would admit defeat, put the lens cap on the lens and go out for a walk!” Robert Leggat, 1999

    Cats, much to their delight, are no longer forced to endure conscription for use as light meters. Instead of cat’s eyes, we use other tools to expand the usable range of light. HDR photography is one of the important new tools, as it lets us preserve exquisite fine detail in a scene. Here, we explore the appeal of black-and-white HDR, paying special attention to a photographer’s personal and visual awareness.
    While the first two parts of this article looked at color HDR, this article investigates key qualities behind interesting black-and-white HDR work, with suggestions for a black-and-white workflow. First, we consider why HDR imaging techniques leave the feline method in the dark:

    Why Black-and-White HDR?

    Think of each black, grey, and white picture tone as a separate instrument in an orchestra. Filling out the tones is like adding extra players to the ensemble. Just as your musical experience listening to the Boston Pops is different from hearing a quartet, so does a wider range of black-and-white tones in a photograph allow for a greater reach of emotional expression.

    Black-and-white HDR also solves an old problem. When you’re photographing everyday scenes, brilliant whites and deep blacks can result in washed-out highlights, on the one hand, and blocked-up shadows on the other. HDR bracketing and multiple exposure (as we saw in Parts 1 and 2) help manage this lack of tone control. In Photos 1a and 1b (see below), compare the HDR multiple exposure at left with one single exposure at right. Shadow details are excellent in the HDR image, and the daylight outdoors is not washed out because of the greater highlight detail captured during the HDR process. (By the way, there was a cat in the bar, but the room was too dark for me to see its pupils.)

    1a. “The Bull, Key West” A six exposure HDR image with 1-stop bracketing, and Tone Mapping in Photomatix Pro 2.4. Highlights show much better detail. 1b. A Single Exposure taken in the middle of the bracketed series. There is loss of both highlight and shadow detail.

    image19

    What Makes Black-and-White HDR interesting?

    Tonal Range, Visual Elements, and the Photographer’s Personal Qualities

    The alchemy of black-and-white HDR is to make the unseen visible. One of the implied, unseen elements in photography is the movement of time. In the black-and-white HDR composition above, revered names of people who were killed in the Holocaust seem to recede without a fixed vanishing point, and so go on indefinitely, conveying a sense of the infinite.

    The use of Photomatix© helped expand the range of tones in this image. The enlarged tonal range made the image more graphic and austere. The deeply detailed blacks gave the photograph a solidity and sense of presence. Together, the tones and their presence created a graphic look to black-and-white HDR. The perception that abstract and graphic qualities are expressed by the tones of the picture is not new in photography. It was explored by master photographers like Edward Weston, whose prints had subtle and well-defined transitions from light to dark. Black-and-white HDR draws on this tradition. What makes it of interest now is the way a larger tonal range enlivens black-and-white’s abstract and graphic beauty.

    2. “Holocaust Memorial”: 3 exposures combined in Photomatix 2.4

    © by Jim Austin.

    image20

    Two more key ingredients for successful black-and-white HDR are the visual elements and the personal elements.

    Visual Elements: Composition and Symbolism

    Visual elements of interesting black-and-white HDR include composition, shape, and symbolism. To use these ingredients in ways that work for your imagery, it may help you to ask, “What attracts me to this scene? Is it the color, or is this a good picture regardless of whether it’s in color or black-and-white?” If you can identify the design elements in the scene before you photograph in black-and-white HDR, you’re on your way to creating a good composition.

    When visual elements of design support a photograph, they’ll expand the symbolic components of black-and-white HDR pictures, as well. For instance, a photograph can act as an analogy. The brilliant photography critic Susan Sontag pointed out, “What makes something interesting is that it can be seen to be like, or analogous to, something else.” For example, at first glimpse, the fins of the Chevy Bel Air (Image 3) reminded me of a large modern building. Later on, I titled the image because it reminded me of the hit song by Don McLean “American Pie” with its famous line “Drove my Chevy to the levy, but the levy was dry.” As the image evolved, I had other associations with more symbolism, which enhanced its interest.

    3. “Chevy Above the Levy”
    © by Jim Austin.

    image21

    Visual Elements: Tones in Time are Symbolic

    When they’re well-crafted, the tones in a black-and-white HDR are captivating. This is partly due to what the tones represent. Subtle changes from dark to light tones can act as metaphors for the passage of time. We mentioned time earlier referring to the Holocaust Memorial photograph which used space to suggest infinity. In a representative way, time’s passage can also be suggested by studying the black-and-white tones of a photograph. Think of a sun’s shadow and where it falls on a sundial, for instance. Remember how long shadows are as the sun sets. Think of moving white clouds as they race across the sky.

    In Martin Deak’s Eiffel Tower image, the lapse of time is suggested by blurred clouds. Since the multiple exposures that make up his picture were taken over an extended period, the clouds moved during the bracketing process. This movement shows the passage of time. HDR imaging, like time exposure, is an excellent medium for working with symbols that are central to photography, like the flow of time.

    4. “Eiffel Tower” by © Martin Deak.
    Used by Permission

    image22

    Personal Elements: Imagination to Innovation

    Two main personal elements within a photographer’s thought process make for interesting HDR imagery.

    First, learning to see in black-and-white is an essential exercise for the photographer’s imagination. Master black-and-white photographers practice forming mental pictures of color scenes to examine how the scene will look later when it’s printed in black-and-white. For example, Royce Howland created a windswept winter scene (Image 5) that was in the photographer’s vision as a black-and-white image from the beginning–long before he made three exposures and used Photomatix Pro and Photoshop CS2 for post-processing. Mr. Howland observed, “The scene’s dynamic range technically was within the capture ability of a single exposure. However there was a lot of subtle detail and texture across the range of highlights to shadows, and I wanted to preserve as much of that as possible. I used black and white to emphasize fine-grained detail in the snow and ice, as well as showcasing the graphic nature of the forms.” Seeing the beauty in “Effects of Light and Wind” is like listening to a symphony. The fine highlight detail, resultant shadow detail, graphic shapes carved by wind, and the radiant ambiance of the light all work together harmoniously.

    Second, photographers need to understand how innovative black-and-white HDR truly is. It’s fundamentally different from color, not simply what happens when color is removed. It’s a novel process to the extent that it alters the visual language. Black-and-white HDR adds to the emotionally expressive quality of a photograph. It has a graphic sense that color images do not possess. It’s a superb tool for exploring scenes we would usually pass by because of their high contrast.

    5. “Effects of Light and Wind”
    © Royce Howland 2007.

    image23

    Why Not Use Color HDR ?


    6. “Your Childhood Eyes Were So Intense”

    © Omar Freitas Junior and Luciana Maria Gerhard, Used by permission.

    image24

    Because color makes us respond emotionally to it, color in a photograph can distract us from the heart of an image, just like a special musical effect can overwhelm the melody of a song. Without color, however, all the dark tones support and direct our attention to the emotions in a picture, like those in the boy’s face. Black-and-white HDR allows tones to show character. For portrait photography, black-and-white HDR frees a photographer to create portraits that center on the individual, as in this image, “Your Childhood Eyes Were So Intense” by Gerhard and Junior (Image 6). The use of black-and-white HDR here allows the personality of the subject to stand out, without sacrificing detail in highlights or shadows when there is a lot of contrast in the scene. This is a satisfying aspect for photographers who wish to portray character authentically.

    The advantage of black-and-white was expressed by an anonymous photographer: “If you photograph people in color you show the color of their clothes-if you use black and white, you will show the color of their soul.” The inner soul of the subject is beautifully expressed by Pete Carr, a writer and photographer, with his photograph titled “In Loving Memory of Hillsborough” (Image 7).

    Nearly 20 years after the disaster at the Hillsborough Football club where 96 lives were lost, the memorial is still cherished. For his intimate portrait, Mr. Carr chose not to use flash. He used black-and-white HDR for realism, authenticity, and to recapture highlight details that were lost before HDR processing.

    7. “In Loving Memory of Hillsborough” © Pete Carr.

    Workflow for Black-and-White HDR

    image25

    We’ve seen several advantages to black-and-white HDR. Now let’s turn to the process itself. My workflow is the following:

    1. Take a RAW color image in a digital camera, bracketing by changing shutter speeds to achieve 3 to 9 exposures.
    2. Archive the original RAW files.
    3. Import the images into Photomatix Pro 2.4.
    4. Create a 32 bit color image file.
    5. Tone Map in Photomatix.
    6. Save the image as a 32 bit color .tif file to hard drive.
    7. Convert to 16 bits and Photoshop Enhance.
    8. Open in Photoshop (CS2 or newer).
    9. Convert to 16 bits; convert to black-and-white using Photoshop’s channel mixer adjustment layer.

    The Workflow Process:

    Using a digital camera, capture the image in color in RAW file format. The first decision depends on your having a tripod. One advantage of using a tripod in your workflow is that a tripod and camera release will make you slow down, and take more time to consider your composition, light and framing. This concentration will improve your images. If you don’t have a tripod, handhold the camera and take three bracketed exposures. To do this, use a manual camera setting. (Remember: you’ll keep the same aperture and bracket with shutter speeds.)

    You can also use auto bracketing. Most cameras allow only three shots in this mode, so take three exposures at -2 below the camera meter, at 0 or at the exposure as metered by the camera, and at +2 over the camera metered exposure. Keep your camera aperture constant to prevent the depth-of-focus changing between shots. If you have a tripod and cable release, you may want to take up to 9-11 frames.

    Once you have a series of frames, save the images and open your HDR software. You can convert to black-and-white in Photoshop, or use the HDR software tools in Photomatix, FDR tools, Artizen HDR or Adobe Photoshop CS3. If you choose, you can use the HDR program to convert to black-and-white by using the saturation control set to pure black-and-white, but by keeping the HDR as color, the flexibility of Photoshop’s channel mixer and camera raw yields better results.

    Whatever your personal choices in software and tone mapping, try not to let the technology overwhelm your picture-taking. Be true to the context and to your own vision for your photograph.

    Summary: Vision for Future Black-and-White HDR

    To create interesting black-and-white HDR, then, photographers must be alert to wondrous contrasts that are present everywhere and be excited to photograph these scenes. Making images with high dynamic range tools lets you see and appreciate detail that was always there, but you weren’t aware of it. With practice, the black-and-white HDR process helps you see shading and tonal detail in scenes that you wouldn’t have photographed before, thinking these scenes unremarkable.

    The culture of black-and-white HDR imaging offers new adventures for photographers. They can take portraits with character. They can expand their awareness of fine shadow and highlight detail when making photographs where the scene contrast is too great for methods employed before HDR emerged. Black-and-white HDR extends the graphic and symbolic traditions of black-and-white film photography. Finally, the real beauty of black-and-white HDR will grow with the vision of future imaginative photographers, as they work with this novel tool to expand their perception.

    About The Author: Jim Austin M.A., A.C.E., has written on digital photography for ten years. He was a commercial photographer in Denver, taught digital imaging for MSCD, and has shown work in galleries for three decades. He teaches Photoshop at the online campus of www.apogeephoto.com .

    His work can be seen at <http://www.flickr.com/jimagesdigital/sets>.

    8. “Black Power” by © Jörg Dickmann,
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/97752677@N00/

    image26

    Links and Resources for HDR :

    A large group of over 2,000 HDR B/W images by many different photographers:
    http://www.flickr.com/groups/bwhdr

    Color to B/W: For converting color to B/W, you can use Photoshop Elements. Check out
    Michael Fulks’ article: http://www.apogeephoto.com/nov2006/mfulks112006_1.shtml

    FDR Tools: Full Dynamic Range Tools,© Andreas Schoemann
    http://fdrtools.com/documentation/hello_world_e.php

    Forum on HDR photography with organized response threads: http://hdr.mirror.hu:80/

    Martin Deak Photograpy: http://www.flickr.com/photos/20931607@N00/

    Omar Junior Photography: http://www.flickr.com/photos/omarjunior/

    Oscar Rejlander, A History of Photography by Robert Leggat.
    http://www.rleggat.com/photohistory/history/rejlande.htm

    Photomatix 2.4 Download: You can download a free trial of Photomatix 2.4 for Mac OSX at
    http://www.hdrsoft.com/download/beta/mac2dot4.html

    and Win at http://hdrsoft.com/download/beta/win2dot4.html

    Photomatix Software Discount: Enter the word “beforethecoffee” in the box, for a 15% discount on Photomatix here, total of $84.15 US dollars, here: http://www.hdrsoft.com/order/discount.html

    Pete Carr Images at: www.petecarr.net

    and his TOP HDR set at http://flickr.com/photos/petecarr/sets/72157594220098364/

    Royce Howland HDR: http://www.vividaspect.com

    Set of 7 HDR Downloadable Presets for Lightroom:

    http://inside-lightroom.co.uk/hdr.html

    Tutorials and articles in an HDR forum: Photomatix tutorial by Ferrell McCullough: http://www.hdrphotos.net

    Video Learning Photoshop HDR: Go to YouTube and watch a tutorial on making a 3 exposure HDR Photoshop image, at
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVuDbcAfN_I

    The Beauty of Black-and-White HDR by Jim Austin

    “Oscar Rejlander’s (1813 -1875) studio was unusual; shaped like a cone, the camera would be in the narrow part, the sitters at the opposite end. The camera was in shadow so that the sitters were less aware of it. He estimated his exposure by bringing his cat into the studio; if the cat’s eyes were like slits, he would use a fairly short exposure. If they were a little more open than usual, he would give
    extra exposure. If the pupils were totally dilated he would admit defeat, put the
    lens cap on the lens and go out for a walk!”

    Robert Leggat, 1999

    Cats, much to their delight, are no longer forced to endure conscription for use as light meters. Instead of cat’s eyes, we use other tools to expand the usable range of light. HDR photography is one of the important new tools, as it lets us preserve exquisite fine detail in a scene. Here, we explore the appeal of black-and-white
    HDR, paying special attention to a photographer’s personal and visual awareness.
    While the first two parts of this article looked at color HDR, this article
    investigates key qualities behind interesting black-and-white HDR work, with
    suggestions for a black-and-white workflow. First, we consider why HDR imaging
    techniques leave the feline method in the dark:

    Why Black-and-White HDR?


    Think of each black, grey, and white picture tone as a separate instrument in an
    orchestra. Filling out the tones is like adding extra players to the ensemble. Just
    as your musical experience listening to the Boston Pops is different from hearing a
    quartet, so does a wider range of black-and-white tones in a photograph allow for a
    greater reach of emotional expression.

    Black-and-white HDR also solves an old problem. When you’re photographing everyday
    scenes, brilliant whites and deep blacks can result in washed-out highlights, on the
    one hand, and blocked-up shadows on the other. HDR bracketing and multiple exposure
    (as we saw in Parts 1 and 2) help manage this lack of tone control. In Photos 1a and
    1b (see below), compare the HDR multiple exposure at left with one single exposure
    at right. Shadow details are excellent in the HDR image, and the daylight outdoors
    is not washed out because of the greater highlight detail captured during the HDR
    process. (By the way, there was a cat in the bar, but the room was too dark for me
    to see its pupils.)


    1a. “The Bull, Key West” A six exposure HDR image with 1-stop bracketing, and
    Tone Mapping in Photomatix Pro 2.4. Highlights show much better detail.



    1b. A Single Exposure taken in the middle of the bracketed series. There is
    loss of both highlight and shadow detail.


    What Makes Black-and-White HDR interesting?


    Tonal Range, Visual Elements, and the Photographer’s Personal Qualities


    The alchemy of black-and-white HDR is to make the unseen visible. One of the
    implied, unseen elements in photography is the movement of time. In the
    black-and-white HDR composition above, revered names of people who were killed in
    the Holocaust seem to recede without a fixed vanishing point, and so go on
    indefinitely, conveying a sense of the infinite.

    The use of Photomatix© helped expand the range of tones in this image. The enlarged
    tonal range made the image more graphic and austere. The deeply detailed blacks gave
    the photograph a solidity and sense of presence. Together, the tones and their
    presence created a graphic look to black-and-white HDR. The perception that abstract
    and graphic qualities are expressed by the tones of the picture is not new in
    photography. It was explored by master photographers like Edward Weston, whose
    prints had subtle and well-defined transitions from light to dark. Black-and-white
    HDR draws on this tradition. What makes it of interest now is the way a larger
    tonal range enlivens black-and-white’s abstract and graphic beauty.


    2. “Holocaust Memorial”: 3 exposures combined in Photomatix 2.4 © by Jim Austin.


    Two more key ingredients for successful black-and-white HDR are the visual elements
    and the personal elements.

    Visual Elements: Composition and Symbolism

    Visual elements of interesting black-and-white HDR include composition, shape, and
    symbolism. To use these ingredients in ways that work for your imagery, it may help
    you to ask, “What attracts me to this scene? Is it the color, or is this a good
    picture regardless of whether it’s in color or black-and-white?” If you can identify
    the design elements in the scene before you photograph in black-and-white HDR,
    you’re on your way to creating a good composition.

    When visual elements of design support a photograph, they’ll expand the symbolic
    components of black-and-white HDR pictures, as well. For instance, a photograph can
    act as an analogy. The brilliant photography critic Susan Sontag pointed out, “What
    makes something interesting is that it can be seen to be like, or analogous to,
    something else.” For example, at first glimpse, the fins of the Chevy Bel Air (Image
    3) reminded me of a large modern building. Later on, I titled the image because it
    reminded me of the hit song by Don McLean “American Pie” with its famous line “Drove
    my Chevy to the levy, but the levy was dry.” As the image evolved, I had other
    associations with more symbolism, which enhanced its interest.


    3. “Chevy Above the Levy”

    © by Jim Austin.

    Visual Elements: Tones in Time are Symbolic


    When they’re well-crafted, the tones in a black-and-white HDR are captivating. This
    is partly due to what the tones represent. Subtle changes from dark to light tones
    can act as metaphors for the passage of time. We mentioned time earlier referring to
    the Holocaust Memorial photograph which used space to suggest infinity. In a
    representative way, time’s passage can also be suggested by studying the
    black-and-white tones of a photograph. Think of a sun’s shadow and where it falls on
    a sundial, for instance. Remember how long shadows are as the sun sets. Think of
    moving white clouds as they race across the sky.

    In Martin Deak’s Eiffel Tower image, the lapse of time is suggested by blurred
    clouds. Since the multiple exposures that make up his picture were taken over an
    extended period, the clouds moved during the bracketing process. This movement shows
    the passage of time. HDR imaging, like time exposure, is an excellent medium for
    working with symbols that are central to photography, like the flow of time.

    4. “Eiffel Tower” by © Martin Deak.

    Used by Permission

    Personal Elements: Imagination to Innovation

    Two main personal elements within a photographer’s thought process make for
    interesting HDR imagery.

    First, learning to see in black-and-white is an essential exercise for the
    photographer’s imagination. Master black-and-white photographers practice forming
    mental pictures of color scenes to examine how the scene will look later when it’s
    printed in black-and-white. For example, Royce Howland created a windswept winter
    scene (Image 5) that was in the photographer’s vision as a black-and-white image
    from the beginning–long before he made three exposures and used Photomatix Pro and
    Photoshop CS2 for post-processing. Mr. Howland observed, “The scene’s dynamic range
    technically was within the capture ability of a single exposure. However there was a
    lot of subtle detail and texture across the range of highlights to shadows, and I
    wanted to preserve as much of that as possible. I used black and white to emphasize
    fine-grained detail in the snow and ice, as well as showcasing the graphic nature of
    the forms.” Seeing the beauty in “Effects of Light and Wind” is like listening to a
    symphony. The fine highlight detail, resultant shadow detail, graphic shapes carved
    by wind, and the radiant ambiance of the light all work together harmoniously.Second, photographers need to understand how innovative black-and-white HDR truly
    is. It’s fundamentally different from color, not simply what happens when color is
    removed. It’s a novel process to the extent that it alters the visual language.
    Black-and-white HDR adds to the emotionally expressive quality of a photograph. It
    has a graphic sense that color images do not possess. It’s a superb tool for
    exploring scenes we would usually pass by because of their high contrast.

    5. “Effects of Light and Wind”

    © Royce Howland 2007.


    Why Not Use Color HDR ?


    6. “Your Childhood Eyes Were So Intense”

    © Omar Freitas Junior and Luciana Maria Gerhard, Used by permission.



    Because color makes us respond emotionally to it, color in a photograph can distract
    us from the heart of an image, just like a special musical effect can overwhelm the
    melody of a song. Without color, however, all the dark tones support and direct our
    attention to the emotions in a picture, like those in the boy’s face.
    Black-and-white HDR allows tones to show character. For portrait photography,
    black-and-white HDR frees a photographer to create portraits that center on the
    individual, as in this image, “Your Childhood Eyes Were So Intense” by Gerhard and
    Junior (Image 6). The use of black-and-white HDR here allows the personality of the
    subject to stand out, without sacrificing detail in highlights or shadows when there
    is a lot of contrast in the scene. This is a satisfying aspect for photographers who
    wish to portray character authentically.

    The advantage of black-and-white was expressed by an anonymous photographer: “If you
    photograph people in color you show the color of their clothes-if you use black and
    white, you will show the color of their soul.” The inner soul of the subject is
    beautifully expressed by Pete Carr, a writer and photographer, with his photograph
    titled “In Loving Memory of Hillsborough” (Image 7).

    Nearly 20 years after the disaster at the Hillsborough Football club where 96 lives
    were lost, the memorial is still cherished. For his intimate portrait, Mr. Carr
    chose not to use flash. He used black-and-white HDR for realism, authenticity, and
    to recapture highlight details that were lost before HDR processing.

    7. “In Loving Memory of Hillsborough” © Pete Carr.

    Workflow for Black-and-White HDR


    We’ve seen several advantages to black-and-white HDR. Now let’s turn to the process
    itself. My workflow is the following:


    1. Take a RAW color image in a digital camera, bracketing by
    changing shutter speeds to achieve 3 to 9 exposures.

    2. Archive the original RAW files.

    3. Import the images into Photomatix Pro 2.4.

    4. Create a 32 bit color image file.

    5. Tone Map in Photomatix.

    6. Save the image as a 32 bit color .tif file to hard drive.

    7. Convert to 16 bits and Photoshop Enhance.

    8. Open in Photoshop (CS2 or newer).

    9. Convert to 16 bits; convert to black-and-white using Photoshop’s
    channel mixer adjustment layer.




    The Workflow Process:

    Using a digital camera, capture the image in color in RAW file format. The first
    decision depends on your having a tripod. One advantage of using a tripod in your
    workflow is that a tripod and camera release will make you slow down, and take more
    time to consider your composition, light and framing. This concentration will
    improve your images. If you don’t have a tripod, handhold the camera and take
    three bracketed exposures. To do this, use a manual camera setting. (Remember:
    you’ll keep the same aperture and bracket with shutter speeds.)

    You can also use auto bracketing. Most cameras allow only three shots in this mode,
    so take three exposures at -2 below the camera meter, at 0 or at the exposure as
    metered by the camera, and at +2 over the camera metered exposure. Keep your camera
    aperture constant to prevent the depth-of-focus changing between shots. If you have
    a tripod and cable release, you may want to take up to 9-11 frames.

    Once you have a series of frames, save the images and open your HDR software. You
    can convert to black-and-white in Photoshop, or use the HDR software tools in
    Photomatix, FDR tools, Artizen HDR or Adobe Photoshop CS3. If you choose, you can
    use the HDR program to convert to black-and-white by using the saturation control
    set to pure black-and-white, but by keeping the HDR as color, the flexibility of
    Photoshop’s channel mixer and camera raw yields better results.

    Whatever your personal choices in software and tone mapping, try not to let the
    technology overwhelm your picture-taking. Be true to the context and to your own
    vision for your photograph.

    Summary: Vision for Future Black-and-White HDR

    To create interesting black-and-white HDR, then, photographers must be alert to
    wondrous contrasts that are present everywhere and be excited to photograph these
    scenes. Making images with high dynamic range tools lets you see and appreciate
    detail that was always there, but you weren’t aware of it. With practice, the
    black-and-white HDR process helps you see shading and tonal detail in scenes that
    you wouldn’t have photographed before, thinking these scenes unremarkable.

    The culture of black-and-white HDR imaging offers new adventures for photographers.
    They can take portraits with character. They can expand their awareness of fine
    shadow and highlight detail when making photographs where the scene contrast is too
    great for methods employed before HDR emerged. Black-and-white HDR extends the
    graphic and symbolic traditions of black-and-white film photography. Finally, the
    real beauty of black-and-white HDR will grow with the vision of future imaginative
    photographers, as they work with this novel tool to expand their perception.

    About The Author: Jim Austin M.A., A.C.E., has written on digital photography for
    ten years. He was a commercial photographer in Denver, taught digital imaging for
    MSCD, and has shown work in galleries for three decades. He teaches Photoshop at
    the online campus of www.apogeephoto.com . His work can be seen at
    <http://www.flickr.com/jimagesdigital/sets>.


    8. “Black Power” by © Jörg Dickmann,

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/97752677@N00/

    Links and Resources for HDR :

    A large group of over 2,000 HDR B/W images by many different photographers:
    http://www.flickr.com/groups/bwhdr

    Color to B/W: For converting color to B/W, you can use Photoshop Elements. Check out
    Michael Fulks’ article: http://www.apogeephoto.com/nov2006/mfulks112006_1.shtml

    FDR Tools: Full Dynamic Range Tools,© Andreas Schoemann
    http://fdrtools.com/documentation/hello_world_e.php

    Forum on HDR photography with organized response threads:
    http://hdr.mirror.hu:80/Martin Deak Photograpy:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/20931607@N00/Omar Junior Photography:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/omarjunior/Oscar Rejlander, A History of Photography by Robert Leggat.
    http://www.rleggat.com/photohistory/history/rejlande.htm

    Photomatix 2.4 Download: You can download a free trial of Photomatix 2.4 for Mac OSX at

    http://www.hdrsoft.com/download/beta/mac2dot4.html

    and Win at http://hdrsoft.com/download/beta/win2dot4.html

    Photomatix Software Discount: Enter the word “beforethecoffee”
    in the box, for a 15% discount on Photomatix here, total of $84.15 US dollars, here:
    http://www.hdrsoft.com/order/discount.html

    Pete Carr Images at:


    www.petecarr.net

    and his TOP HDR set at


    http://flickr.com/photos/petecarr/sets/72157594220098364/Royce Howland HDR:


    http://www.vividaspect.comSet of 7 HDR Downloadable Presets for Lightroom: |
    http://inside-lightroom.co.uk/hdr.html

    Tutorials and articles in an HDR forum: Photomatix tutorial by Ferrell McCullough:
    http://www.hdrphotos.net

    Video Learning Photoshop HDR: Go to YouTube and watch a tutorial on making a 3
    exposure HDR Photoshop image, at
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVuDbcAfN_I

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    This entry was posted on Saturday, March 27th, 2010 at 9:29 PM and is filed under Black and White. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
  • 7 Comments

    Take a look at some of the responses we've had to this article.

    1. Anonymous
      Posted on June 10th

      found your site on del.icio.us today and really liked it.. i bookmarked it and will be back to check it out some more later

    2. Posted on February 15th

      These photos are awesome, Jim. I especially liked that shot of the Eiffel Tower. This technique makes photos seem a lot more interesting and it adds a touch of mystery to them. Thanks for sharing these! I’d be dipping my toes into black-and-white HDR photography soon, for sure!

    3. Anonymous
      Posted on April 5th

      While I can see the definite appeal of black and white HDR I have to admit that the effect isn’t as striking to the eye as the same process in full color. Has anyone tried doing the photo in full color HDR and then manually desaturating it?

    4. Hi there, Jim! These are amazing shots! I think black and white photography can really challenge a photographer’s skills. It strips subjects of elements that can augment their beauty — color, especially — thus forcing the photographer to infuse his/her own skills and interpretation into the photo.

    5. Anonymous
      Posted on June 7th

      To Photos are very fabulous .HRD Black and white for is very nice. I always see the art of the picture. Very amazing .

    6. Posted on July 22nd

      I like this post, so interesting, im amazed with the shots, thanks for sharing this post, keep it up!
      Stu @Mor Manufacturing´s last blog ..There’s more than one way to devour a Mac Life My ComLuv Profile

    7. Hi Jim! Doesn’t black and white photography always seem so timeless? They always seem perfect for framing and putting up at walls. :)
      Jenna – midland wedding photographer´s last blog .. My ComLuv Profile

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