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153 of 162 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't throw it all away yet!
I have been learning about HDRI primarily from Uwe Steinmueller's generously helpful articles on his site outbackphoto.com, and from the Photomatix email list. Seeing that Steinmueller is a contributor to The HDRI Handbook, I expected it to be more of the same.

In the event, it has been an epiphany. I had not appreciated that HDRI is a doorway into truly...
Published on December 30, 2007 by Dan Dill

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50 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not a Manual
This book gives a good general perspective on the world of High Dynamic Range imaging: the motivation for making HDR images, some theory, file formats, HDR viewing software, photographic capture, software workflow, HDR editing and CGI. Many of the example images are beautiful and inspiring. I found it a useful introduction.

However, despite the title of the...
Published on April 17, 2008 by Under Exposed


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153 of 162 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't throw it all away yet!, December 30, 2007
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This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
I have been learning about HDRI primarily from Uwe Steinmueller's generously helpful articles on his site outbackphoto.com, and from the Photomatix email list. Seeing that Steinmueller is a contributor to The HDRI Handbook, I expected it to be more of the same.

In the event, it has been an epiphany. I had not appreciated that HDRI is a doorway into truly archival imaging, for today's imaging technology *and* for imaging tools and output devices not yet invented. I had completely missed the point made on page 132 of The HDRI Handbook:

"Most photographers will tell you that the next step [after having merged bracketed exposures into an HDR image] is tone mapping because an HDR image doesn't fit the limited range of our ..." output devices. "This is missing the whole point."

"*Don't throw it all away yet!* There is nothing special about an HDR image. It's all just pixels waiting to be messed with, but better pixels that are much more forgiving when we apply extreme edits. Imagine the HDR image as raw clay that we can form into whatever we want. Why would you burn that raw clay into a hard block now just so you can destructively chisel the final form out of it? Wouldn't it make much more sense to massage the clay into a good model first? [Apply non-destructive edits to the HDR image itself!] And then put it in the oven the fix that form [tone map into an LDR image], and sand and polish [fine-tune with LDR editing tools] afterwards?

"To speak in more photographic terms: Here we have an image that exceeds the tonal range and qualities of a RAW image. Wouldn't it be great to keep it like that for as long as possible? Well, you can! That's what true HDR workflow is all about.

Christian Bloch then describes a 32-bit workflow to do just this. An HDR LDR workflow can be broken down into three parts. Bloch describes and compares the tools available for each part, and examples of these are provided on the DVD that comes with the book.

First, combine bracketed exposures to create an HDR image. Block focuses on using Photoshop or Photomatix for this step.

Second, use Photoshop to make basic adjustments to the HDR image. These are: cleanup with the Clone Stamp, white balancing (done in two steps, differently than in LDR images), frame/perspective correction (using Free Transform), sharpening (using the HDR exposure changes to visually quantify proper sharpening), and color correction. None of these need to be done to the HDR image, but Block discusses the advantages of doing so, *before* converting to LDR.

Third, tone map the HDR image into an LDR image. For me, this is the core, creative part of HDR imaging in photography. Bloch distinguishes two perspectives.

One perspective is to have "the final image appear as natural as possible, ... an image that looks like it was shot with an ordinary camera but incorporates more dynamic range than a camera could actually handle." (page 168).

The other perspective is to create an "painterly" interpretation, as illustrated by the many example images seen on the web.

Bloch illustrates tone mapping of four different HDR images, using the four methods in Photoshop (Exposure & Gamma, Highlight Compression, Equalize Histogram, and Local Adaptation), Photomatix Details Enhance, FDR Tools Compressor, and Artizen HDR Fattal.

The tone mapping that seems to offer the most precise control is Photoshop's "flagship tone mapper" (page 155): Local Adaptation. The mapping is crafted by adjusting a toning curve to set black and white points, and to control local and global contrast. Bloch's detailed examples show precisely how to work with this approach. I show an example of this in the Digital Dgrin Photography Forum post

<http://dgrin.com/showpost.php?p=718903&postcount=8>

Uwe and Bettina Steinmueller describe (pages 172--182) how they have used Photomatix to produce their stunning images of interiors of abandoned buildings.

Also, there is a very helpful, detailed (page 183--211) tutorial by Dieter Bethke, of how he used Photomatix to create three "natural" and two "painterly" images. It is a great resource for getting to know how to use Photomatix and an encouraging illustration of the capability of HDR imaging as a photographic tool.

There is much more in The HDRI Handbook but this is what I have gleaned so far. The HDRI Handbook has turned out to be a wonderful, measured, detailed, and accessible guide to what an HDR > LDR photographic workflow has to offer.
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39 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Informative, even for seasoned practitioners, May 21, 2008
By 
ThomasH (Santa Clara, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
The principle was so obvious to me, and yet as soon I finished the study of this book, I realized just how limited my prior knowledge was. Apparently I did not knew about existing image standards, tools and about a fundamental importance of HDR (high dynamic range) imaging for digital photography as a superior way of preserving images.

Foreword is by one of the top gurus in the discipline and author of several graphical file formats, Greg Ward.

Author starts with explaining the basic concepts of dynamic range, EV (exposure value) and specifics of human perception of light and shape. This sounds like a platitude, but in fact the chapter is very educational and to the point. Reader can quickly understand the limitation of the contemporary digital imaging based on integer numbers. I had no idea that HDR tools and files use in fact floating point numbers, utilize exponents to cover the vast dynamic range, while occupying still the same number of bits per pixel.

In chapter 2 author goes through the numerous file formats invented to hold graphical information, beginning with Kodak's Cineon, Portable Float Map, Float Tiff, Radiance, LogLuv, Open EXR (devised by Florian Kainz at Industrial Light and Magic,) High Dynamic Range Jpeg, Fjpeg, and several more. I was not aware of the most of them. Tabular summary at the end provide a perfect and compact summary.

He summarizes than properties of the diverse HDRI tools, of which I knew of Photomatix, but the rest was widely unknown to me. One group of programs contain generic image viewers with HDR capability, like HDRView, exrdisplay, JahPlayer. Even Irfanview can apparently interpret two HDR formats: radiance and TIFF LogLuv. Later Bloch compares features of HDR file generators and tone mappers: HDRshop, Picturenaut, PhotoSphere, Photomatix and FDRTools. This is the most comprehensive enumeration of HDR software which I saw so far. Of course, he also talks about full image editors and compares their features to Photoshop CS.

Chapter 3 is devoted to capturing HDR images. Bloch explains limitation of contemporary CCD and CMOS sensors, talks about future prospects. He explains how to use bracketing in ordinary digital cameras to gain series of images covering the wide dynamic range. Foremost he reminds to use the same aperture to preserve identical depth of field in each shot. Sounds so obvious, and yet before I red this book, I made series of images violating this principle. Expectedly I gained poor results, which I than attributed to an "immature HDR software." If fact, I was not ready. Bloch follows with a description of a series of workflows using dedicated tools, like HDRshop, Photomatix, Picturenaut, and compares them to a fully manual process in Photoshop. Very educational.

Next chapter describes tone mapping: Once the HDR image is in place, its vast dynamic range must be mapped into the Low Dynamic Range (LDR) of the display, screen or paper alike. The process has many variables and an element of artistic freedom. Here again Bloch compares several automatic tools with a manual process in Photoshop. Some of the example images are simply stunning. The chapter has several sections written by other photographers presenting their selected HDR images.

As a bonus follows a chapter about shooting of HDR panoramas, a combination of two dimensional series of images for each part of the scene, and for each part of the dynamic range. Fascinating are all the gadgets and contraptions being used to generate the surreal projections and circular panoramas.

To sum up Bloch speaks about trick photography combined with CGI (Computer Graphics Images.) This is of course just a short introduction in context of HDR, and yet very informative.

For me this is one of most educational books in photography which I ever read, and do I press the shutter button for over 30 years. Do yourself a favor: grab it and read it and foremost: Experiment with HDR!

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35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally there is the definitive source for HDRI, November 27, 2007
This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
I had seen the book announced months ago and was probably one of the first customers to order a copy. It took me about two weeks to read it from cover to cover and check out some of the resources on the disc. This is an amazing source of information! I am a photographer and I was intrigued by some of the HDR-Photography I had seen posted on the web (by Dan Burkholder and others). I started experimenting with some of the tools like Photomatix and Photoshop but these were fairly random experiments and I did not get consistent results. After reading Christian Bloch's HDRI Handbook, I think I understand this technique and the underlying concepts and I feel I can embark on a new and better planned trip into the field of High Dynamic Range Photography.
Luckily, I can use many of the bracketed shots that I still have -- and I already started to reprocess some of them with software that was included on the disc. I was blown away by the first results. HDRI is fun and I expect to spend many more nights over the next few weeks to create HDRIs. I am just starting, but this book is, in my opinion, a must have for any serious and forward-thinking photographer.
I highly recommend this book.
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50 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not a Manual, April 17, 2008
By 
Under Exposed (Perth, Western Australia) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
This book gives a good general perspective on the world of High Dynamic Range imaging: the motivation for making HDR images, some theory, file formats, HDR viewing software, photographic capture, software workflow, HDR editing and CGI. Many of the example images are beautiful and inspiring. I found it a useful introduction.

However, despite the title of the book, this is NOT a manual. It is more like a word-for-word transcript of a training workshop. It falls short of the expectations created by calling it a manual.

The technical information is often presented in a vague, loose or imprecise way. The coverage is uneven and sometimes appears downright lazy. Stereographic projection is not explained but is simply described as a 'fun' thing. The author's report on one of the available software packages is basically that he couldn't get the package to work. There were numerous, minor technical errors.

The text is often vague, loose or imprecise. The style is more like a flashy sales pitch than a technical document. At times I found it almost condescending (Quote: "Click the little checkbox, it's cool"). I grew tired and sceptical of the constant use of the word `modern' - especially when the book refers to the fifty-year-old science of Machine Vision as a "new field".

Most of all what irked me about this book was the poor editing. It is really time that the Rocky Nook publishers hired a sub-editor. This particular book is strewn with linguistic mistakes, some of which are distracting or confusing (like writing `predecessor' when he means `successor', or using `eventual' to mean `possible', or `experiences' instead of `experiments', `straight angle' for `right angle', and `backside' for `reverse side').

If we treat this book as the notes-plus-CD from a one-day workshop on HDRI, it is entirely satisfying.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Aptly named, May 31, 2008
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This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
This is an excellent book provided you know what you are getting. It is a genuine handbook, by which I mean it has loads of information about the theory of HDRI, capturing pictures and software used to create the final version. If all you want is a how-to-do-it there are cheaper and frankly less complex books out there. I recommend the Complete Guide to High Dynamic Range Digital Photography by Ferrell McCollough as a quite well-done book that is all most people will need. That having been said, the Bloch is essential for the underlying ideas and is particularly strong on HDRI panoramic photography. Also somewhat more complete and useful than other books on comparing various software programs for combining pictures. Well written and clear. One major advantage of the Bloch book is that it has a CD with versions of the major software packages (all available as free trial downloads as well)and more importantly it also contains the pictures used throughout the book as illustrations so that one can practice HDRI creation and compare one's own results with those by Bloch. HDRI is not especially difficult, but it takes a certain amount of practice and patience -- the CD helps to solve the practice part of the process. For patience you're on your own.
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BEST Book in HDRI - hands down!!!, November 30, 2007
By 
HDR Man (Savannah, GA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
This is the book we've all been waiting for. It's easy to read and understand. There's something for photographers, 3D artists, and compositors in there. I am a professional photographer, a panoramic photographer, a 3D Visual Effects Professor, and have been using HDRI for more than 5 years now. This book is well written and not biased towards any one piece of software or technique. You will glad you bought this book!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant review of the HDRI process!, April 28, 2008
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This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
I was worried that this book would be too technical for me, but it was wonderful. I reviewed each cahpter and then went back and followed the process from the beginning, until I understood it thoroughly, could work my equipment without effort and received the results I was expecting. And it is working for me! There is more information than you will ever need to get satisfying results. But the book is well-researched and the chapters brilliantly assembled. Anyone can learn from it.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars comprehensive, but not for beginners, January 3, 2008
By 
D. Graham (Wakefield, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
The book kicks off with a couple of very technical chapters looking at the background to HDRI, a comparison of the various image formats together with a very comprehensive look at a wide range of HDRI software currently available, from freeware up to the top of the line packages, comparing features of each. This takes up the first third of the book, and I did feel a bit like I was being overloaded with technical info.

However, then the book does get onto the interesting bit - how to take HDRI images, and what to do with them when you've got them. Suddenly all the dry tech stuff up front makes sense, and you can see where all the bits go, and why. Chapters 3, 4 and 5 look at taking HDRI images, tone mapping and HDR image processing, and cover the subject extremely well, with huge amounts of useful information and clear step-by-step instructions.

The last two chapters cover panoramic HDR images and an interesting (but again quite technical) chapter on HDR in computer-generated imaging.

So, the first couple of chapters could put off a novice photographer, but dig a little further and there is a wealth of information here. If you're interested in HDR images and what you can do with them, then this is a fantastic resource. And it comes with an accompanying DVD packed with software, sample HDR images and tutorial files.
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62 of 86 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not what I expected, November 26, 2007
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This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
When I received this product, the DVD that was supposed to be included with the book was not there, and there was no evidence that it had ever been there, so that was a disappointment from the outset. (Please note that I don't blame Amazon for the missing DVD--Amazon has done a great job for me every time I have ordered from them.)

I decided immediately to return the book, but I took a quick look through it and realized it was not meant for me--an amateur photographer with little training in color or video theory. The author admits that this was a masters' thesis project, and it reads like one. The content is extremely technical, and a mainstream reader is going to get bogged down with lots of theory and mathematical equations.

This is a "how-to" book for schooled computer graphics people---NOT the general public. I'll be looking for more basic books and articles on HDRI. If anyone has recommendations, I'd love to hear them.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD, February 4, 2009
This review is from: The HDRI Handbook: High Dynamic Range Imaging for Photographers and CG Artists +DVD (Paperback)
Great if you like technical information, but for hands on "get me started",the book falls short. Also important is the book is now "old" and as far as keeping current, I will be looking for something that addresses the modern era.
The author tends to go off on tangents just when you are anticipating new information, and seems to use different terms for the same applications (confusing)
I personally found a very small part of this book to be useful.
My copy is for sale!
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