Panasonic TZ5 HDRs

Posted on June 15, 2009

For being such a small camera, the Panasonic TZ5 does a pretty decent of job shooting bracketed images. Bracketing is where you shoot three differently exposed shots and then use software like Photoshop CS4 or Photomatix Pro to blend them together to produce a high-dynamic range (HDR) photograph. Over the past year, I’ve been experimenting with bracketing, HDR, and various software to produce some fairly stunning results. Out of all those, these are my greatest hits.

Austin Creek Fire Road

This shot was taken near Guerneville, CA at the Austin Creek State Recreational Area which is adjacent to Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve. Taking pictures under a forest canopy is tricky. And, to be honest, most of the shots I’ve attempted in these conditions normally don’t amount to anything. Doing HDR and applying some “highlight” adjustments create a stunning result about 10% of the time. I was lucky here because this turned out the best out of anything I’ve shot in the ubiquitous redwood parks surrounding the Bay Area.

San Francisco Park Presidio

The Presidio is another area where it’s difficult to take decent photographs due to the sun shining down through gaps in the canopy. It’s similar to the redwood parks in that images tend to be overexposed in parts and underexposed in others due to beams of sunshine sparsely illuminating the groves of trees. This image turned out quite well, but there’s some rippling at the bottom you can see at high-resolutions due to the fact I was sans tripod on this walk.

Foggy Golden Gate Bridge

The following HDR I took from the Marin Headlands. It was a bit of a chore finding a place to sit the camera on the mini-tripod. My normal procedure is to set a two second timer and leave the camera resting on a fence post before shooting an HDR up there. Small movements in the exposure can wreak havoc with Photomatix Pro. On this one, I feel like I turned the saturation up a bit too high, but people seem to like it.

Here is a link to all of my other HDR images.

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  1. Wilmer Fri, 19 Jun 2009 03:14:22 UTC

    Now you stole my idea! :-P

    But you have better HDR software than I have. :-)

    The Golden Gate Bridge picture looks a but surreal now, but plenty people seem to like that, yeah. HDR pictures often end up like that.

    Somehow HDR doesn’t work for me anymore, lately whenever I tried it the originals seem to have more dynamic range than their HDR version.

  2. Ali Fri, 19 Jun 2009 15:36:13 UTC

    nice! i usually don’t like hdr that much, but these are really decent.. not too hdr-obvious, and really pretty shots!

  3. Tony Perrie Fri, 19 Jun 2009 15:38:40 UTC

    The last one is totally HDR obvious. Thanks for the encouragement though. One day I’ll buy a real camera like you. :-)

  4. Tony Perrie Fri, 19 Jun 2009 15:39:50 UTC

    @wilmer my next feat is going to be a combined Orton HDR of the Golden Gate Bridge. That could be something.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orton_(photography)

  5. Wilmer Sun, 21 Jun 2009 05:56:49 UTC

    Ooh, neat. Making the out of focus picture seems hard to do with a compact (AF-only, I assume) camera, though… (Without accidentally moving it.)

  6. Tony Perrie Sun, 21 Jun 2009 20:34:56 UTC

    I just apply the blur filter in Photoshop. What!?

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