Most of the options in the main window are self-explanatory, especially for those of you that are familiar with other Nik Software applications and plugins. Once you’ve set the options required for your image, click the “Create HDR” button to open the main HDR Efex Pro 2 window. You can then drag the loupe around the image, and it will automatically zoom in to the areas you want to inspect for chromatic aberration or ghost reduction.įor this image I left the “Alignment” option enabled, and the “Chromatic Aberration” setting enabled and set to the default settings. Just click on the small magnifying glass in the lower right of the preview image to enable it. If you need to adjust the “Chromatic Aberration” or “Ghost Reduction” adjustments, there’s a very handy loupe function you can use. More often than not you would enable this option. ![]() I also noticed that when the Ghost Reduction was enabled, I got some unwanted artifacts in the preview image. I did this because I knew it was a very still evening when the photos were taken, so the trees and bushes weren’t moving around. HDR Efex Pro 2 EV Spacing Selectionįor this image I deselected the “Ghost Reduction” option. For example if the original exposures were -1.3EV, -0.7EV, 0EV, +0.7EV, +1.3EV, you would select 2/3 spacing as shown below. If you’re working with JPG images that have had the metadata stripped, they won’t contain the original exposure information, so you you’ll also have to tell HDR Efex Pro 2 what the original EV spacing was. HDR Efex Pro 2 Auto Crop and Resize, and EV Selection HDR Efex Pro 2 will handle cropping the images for you-this is one of the new features in this version. If your images aren’t the same size you’ll see the following message in the upper left corner of the Merge Dialog box. HDR Efex Pro 2 will launch and the following Merge Dialog box will appear. Selecting Panoramas in Lightroom for HDR Processing Select your 5 panorama images in Lightroom, right-click on one of them, and select Export > HDR Efex Pro 2. Don’t worry about making the new canvas size too large-you can always crop it later. Document the size of each of your panoramas, and pick a new canvas size that is larger in width and height than any of your images. You can do this in Photoshop by opening each image and increasing the Canvas size (not the image size). If you’re using one of these applications and your panoramas aren’t exactly the same size, you’ll need re-size the images before you do the HDR processing. If you’re following along using a different application, you should be aware that HDR Efex Pro (version 1), Photoshop, and Adobe Bridge will require all of the panoramas be the same size (dimensions). I’ll be using Adobe Photoshop Lightroom and Nik Software’s HDR Efex Pro 2 in this example. Photoshop’s Photomerge Dialog Box Creating the final HDR image
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