![]() For all of these tools i advice to optimize the source images to gain better qualitiy in the resulting images. The images generate with the plugin are of high qualtity, and the differences to other tools are negligible. This results in copying the GPS meta data manually to the image, which is not necessary. A little defect in my opinion is the fact that GPS meta data are not copied to the resulting image, even though the plugin comes with its own own version of exiftool, which is capable to transfer this meta data, too. While f-stop and shutterspeed is sort of reasonable, excluding the focallength is not, or do you take a bracketing series for HDR with different focal length settings?Īt least you can enable copying those meta data. The default settings for the plugin will disable the meta data f-stop,shutterspeed and focallength from being copied to the HDR-image. Ok but since a video explains a lot better than thousends of words, take a look at the screencast Installation and usageĪfter downloading the zip-file extract its contents to the plugin folder of your Lightroom installation and activate the plugin in the modulmanager. You are able to test the plugin without registration, but output is limited to images sized 500px on the longest edge. Besides of Photomatix, i compared their version 5.0 against the free of charge tool SNS-HDR, there are to mention Photoshop and Luminance.Īs an additional alternative i took a look at the LR/Enfuse Plugin for Lightroom, which is donationware, which means the developer expects a donation. Meanwhile there are quite a few tools available, to generate a HDR from a bracketing series of images. Compared to the software products to generate HDR like Photomatix oder Photoshop, for which you have to pay for, there is an (almost) free alternative, the LR Enfuse Plugin for Lightroom. ![]()
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December 2022
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