To decrease motion blur the fastest high speed shooting possible is desired. Then we use the highest possible frame rate to capture all three exposures. For these shots we enable AEB for three exposures (usually about 1.33 EV apart). Software can work very well to align your bracketed images (more later) so in many cases shooting HDR hand-held can work quite well. Using live view or mirror lockup can reduce camera shake when taking longer exposures.Use a remote if available or the camera's built-in timer.Sturdy tripod, heads, clamps and plates are needed.The photo below stressed the 30 second limit quite a bit.įor HDR a tripod is even more essential than with single shots, to avoid any movement between photos. Yes, I know long exposures can create noise, but many cameras work quite well beyond 30 second exposures. I don't believe there's a solid technical reason for this any more. All cameras we know of limit the maximum exposure time to 30 seconds. ![]()
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