© 2009 Jess Smith

As Above, So Below

Ahh, what a delightful weekend in Kingston it was. Chris and I bottled our first batch of beer – a porter – that is roughly 1-2 weeks away to being delicious (the anxiety is unbearable). As if that wasn’t enough, down the road from his apartment is a giant, decommissioned hospital boat appropriately dubbed “The Floating Hospital.” Images of that excursion to come throughout the week.

This image was shot from the stern of the floating hospital. The rail bridge is located just after the mouth of the Delaware and Hudson Canal. It was ideated by a couple of industry workers, the Wurtz brothers, during the mid-nineteenth century as a means of transporting goods from Pennsylvania, to New York and Canada. I’ve been unable to figure out what the name of the actual bridge, or what interest those smoke stacks might have once served; however, what I can tell you that the horn on that freight train in the morning is chilling.

This is my first attempt at creating a High Dynamic Range image. I’ve never tried it out before, but would like to expound upon it in the coming weeks, especially after seeing some amazing results sifting through all of your blogs. I’m running into some difficulty with other images I took of the boat; I’m just not obtaining the balance I’m envisioning. I’m currently using Photoshop CS4 to create my HDR’s, which feels a bit limited. I’ve read a couple of online tutorials, but would be open to hearing anything you think might help a newb. I’ma keep at it!

Any recommendations on a superb Mac program?

3 Comments

  1. Posted November 9, 2009 at 5:55 PM | #

    This is beautiful Jess, the colors are amazing. If this is your first attempt at this I definitely can’t wait to see more.

  2. Posted November 9, 2009 at 7:53 PM | #

    We were not even aware it is an HDR before reading the text (..and that is good). We like the capture with all the detail and calmness.

    For another HDR program, try Photomatix. It runs on mac (even using more than one core) and you can download a demo to try before you buy. Photomatix will give you more control and can also create the “all out HDR look” that we all are guilty of using from time to time. All our HDRs are processed using Photomatix (hit the HDR category).

    Best of luck

  3. Posted November 10, 2009 at 8:38 AM | #

    http://fdrtools.com/ is a good one and its free. The site has good tutorials and tips. Try not to be too heavy handed with hdr, you can get some ugly results.

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