![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEmKPc72-XV0yJN5pOtWnAvmkh-6eBNhNENmK_qrA-WdLoTG6izwwhkhM-ybXYq4rq0P2Ydu9K59DonCtIGonjz0ZIgWsCuHCj8_4CkxXGJ5TW58BnLCihTq8czUzXQXbWKMJ6tu-kGQw/s320/953669278_03f62a0711_b.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifRsgK5CCAytkMz63u4ElrmKCbn0lPxwQqkT6m78HrLhlHOm3I3xMAEB6TuAXANWsYuzQZJHOERqirQDJlc73GEwiKrqqM7D2fI_gsnTbQOs-5CggLcSFNL4xHnn2IYBvLMxrYYekFwo4/s400/2945608377_1dc89ee3b5_b.jpg)
I can talk a little bit more about the philosophy behind the photography style here for a quick moment.
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Cameras, by their basic-machine-nature, are very good at capturing “images”, lines, shadows, shapes — but they are not good at capturing a scene the way the mind remembers and maps it. When you are actually there on the scene, your eye travels back and forth, letting in more light in some areas, less light in
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdNujGF7xjtesyMJL6kwc0zPIh9XASZLOljJ0QNPuVzYAJjANhyk5tOpDQK_xf-5NGQrJpQcUypHAB3mAj6NtJ17i15n_xCJS3R_O703FE4EXrKXKiyssPRPwPehB-_e1tDZwcRY1-63E/s320/3410783929_051d93bc86_b.jpg)
others, and you create a “patchwork-quilt” of the scene. Furthermore, you will tie in many emotions and feelings into the imagery as well, and those get associated right there beside the scene. Now, you will find that as you explore the HDR process, that photos can start to evoke those deep memories and emotions in a more tangible way. It’s really a wonderful way of “tricking” your brain into experiencing much more than a normal photograph.
I will post a few interesting HDR photographs that I have taken that people seem to like. This first image below is the first HDR photograph ever to hang in the Smithsonian Institution in D.C. and many of the others are represented by Getty. I think this goes to show how mainstream and accepted HDR can be, if the technique is properly applied.
credit to Trey Ratcliff from Stuck in Custom
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