Taken with Canon 5d Mark II, ISO 100, f14, 7 e.v.'s apart - Afternoon WITH CLOUDS!
HDR stands for High Dynamic Range. It is pretty cool to see an image generated by this method. What is so appealing about it? Well, it gives us an image that mimics our eyeballs dynamic range of light. But when is the time to use it and when should you not use it? Well that is up to the artist. There are some HDR people who push their images to the edge and this looses realistic qualities to the image and that is fine if that is the look they want. But if everybody does it, it is just like air in the tennies, eventually the novelty wares off. I think 'HDR sustainabilty' should be part of a photographer’s work flow, a tool of sorts, not the end result. The most pleasing results I get from HDR outside is when the sun is low and there are clouds diffusing the light. I know, I know HDR is meant to capture the whole darn range so why not shoot it at midday with crazy hard sun? Because light is light, and it is harsh no matter what you do to it in the middle of the day. But how bout shooting at the golden hour (especially with a little cloud) and having the capability to capture even more shadow detail than you thought possible? That is where HDR soars! In fact, the golden hour can get extended to about two hours now! Here is an example of one of my top selling images it was taken just at sunrise: http://pa.photoshelter.com/c/chipallenphotography/gallery-img-show/Color...