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About a year ago I read a how-to piece where you take 20+ photographs of a single subject over 10 or so hours of varying daylight, then overlay those images (in Photoshop?) to even-out the lighting. In the resulting image, the sky, the subject, everything is similarly lit, with few or no shadows.

I think I saw it on Wikipedia, which had a link to the how-to piece.

Can someone give me any link to point me in the right direction?

Does the latest PhotoShop version now simplify this process, to minimize manual fussing?

2007-12-05 03:23:25 · 1 answers · asked by Level 7 is Best 7 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

1 answers

Zanthus: No one likes a fool, especially one who attempts to advise other people. Please take your ignorance elsewhere. I think at some point in the future - many decades from now - large-scale work will be displayed on digital photo frames. But, this would mean that the cost of producing a 13x19" digital frame and larger would be cheaper and easier to produce than the same size piece of photographic paper. For this to take place, it would also mean that there is no more film and no more photographic paper; a scenario that I cannot imagine happening for the foreseeable future.

2016-03-15 07:00:30 · answer #1 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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