In this regular column, John Paul Caponigro delivers digital
photography techniques, showing you the tricks that will make your
digital images stand out from crowd.
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Extend the dynamic range through this processing technique
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By John Paul Caponigro
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Reproducing the full range of tones or brightness values seen by the
human eye is one of the most fundamental challenges in photography.
Capture, display and print technologies are all limited when compared
to the ability of the human eye to see a wide dynamic range. Recent
advances in technology enable you to exceed these limitations.
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Extending the dynamic range in your images is possible with sound technique and a little software magic
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By John Paul Caponigro
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Reproducing the full range of tones or brightness values seen by the
human eye is one of the most fundamental challenges in photography.
Capture, display and print technologies are all limited when compared
to the ability of the human eye to see a wide dynamic range. Theyre
all advancing. As they advance, our methods for addressing this
fundamental challenge advance with them.
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In this first in a series of columns about digital black-and-white, we explore some of the fundamentals.
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By John Paul Caponigro
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Prior to the 21st century, black-and-white photographers developed a heightened sensitivity to the direction and intensity of light, a given relationship between highlights and shadows, largely discounting the appearance of hue and saturation unless able and willing to use color filtration during exposure. These perceptual skills are all very important for 21st century digital black-and-white photographers. But, today, because you can make any hue light or dark, globally or locally, and you can make more dramatic changes to more saturated hues, hue and saturation need to be factored in rather than factored out.
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Whether your goal is perfect neutrality or creating an effect, you can use this technique to refine the colors in your images
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By John Paul Caponigro
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Not all white lights are the same. Differences in white light are
commonly described by their color temperatures (rated in Kelvin). The
lower the number, the warmer the light; the higher the number, the
cooler the light. Light temperature has a significant effect on
exposure, calibration, printing and display.
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Using multiple exposures and sound camera and software technique, you can defy the laws of physics
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By John Paul Caponigro
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The ability to reproduce detail is one of the essential characteristics
that defines the photographic medium. While there are many similarities
between the camera eye and the human eye, there are also significant
differences between the two. One of the most significant differences is
that the camera eye can achieve a much greater area of focus than the
human eye can at one time. This has never been more true than today.
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