Dynamic Before-and-After
Use the sliders in any of the images below to see the before and the after of the respective image blended into each other. If you are using a tablet PC, simply tap on the image to move the slider to that position. The before image (single exposure straight out of the camera) is always shown on the left and the after image (fully processed final image) is on the right.
If you currently only see a single image, click on this link to open the whole list!
The Parliament (HDR)This is the before-and-after comparison of "The Parliament (HDR)". On the left side, you see the original 0 EV source photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image that is based on a 6-shot exposures with shutter speeds between 0.6s and 15s. The image was processed in Photomatix Pro 4.2 and Photoshop CS6. ![]() ![]() |
Light my Way (HDR Vertorama)This is the HDR before and after comparison of "Light my Way (HDR Vertorama)". The final image was created from 4x3 TIFF files (4 series of 3 autobracketed RAW images, +2, 0, -2EV that were converted to TIFFs using Abobe Camera RAW). The result of the HDR merging, tone-mapping, stitching, perspective correction, cropping, and retouching can be seen on the left. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop CS6. ![]() ![]() |
Santorini Cathedral (HDR)This is the before-and-after comparison of “Santorini Cathedral (HDR)“. On the left side, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a 6-shot autobracketing series with +2EV to -3EV in 1EV steps. ![]() ![]() |
The Alley (HDR)This is the before-and-after comparison of “The Alley (HDR)“. On the left, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a 3-shot autobracketing series with -2, 0 and +2 EV. ![]() ![]() |
Sunset Gate (HDR)This is the before-and-after comparison of “Sunset Gate (HDR)“. On the left, you see the original 0EV photo straight out of the camera. The right side shows the final image after a number of post-processing steps executed in Photoshop. This image is based on a standard 3-shot autobracketing series with +2, 0 and -2 ev. ![]() ![]() |
Izmir Harbor (HDR)This is the before-and-after comparison of “Izmir Harbor (HDR)“. On the left side, you see the original 0 EV source photo straight out of the camera. On the right, you see the final image. This image is based on a 6-shot semi-autobracketing series with -3, -2, -1, 0, +1 and +2 EV. ![]() ![]() |















Super! Aber eine Beschreibung- welche Schritte im Post-Prozessing vorgenommen wurden, wäre noch interessant! MFG, Robert
Hallo Robert,
danke für dein Feedback. Eine ausführliche Beschreibung findest du auf der jeweiligen Photo Page (Link jeweils unten links). Das alles hier rein zu packen wäre zu viel des Guten.
Gruß
Klaus
Brilliant!
Achja- und sogar mit VideoTutorials!! Perfekt! Wunderbare Bilder! MFG, Robert
Fantastic feature in your web, Klaus!
Great idea with the slider. Love it!
Klaus, those pictures are magnificent. what a beautiful way to show the before and after. The slider is a fun interactive tool.
Great new feature. The slider really shows off the bang HDR can add to an image.
Fantastic. I especially liked the way the Castle cleared-up in the HDR.
That is great… I can only hope to get
even half that good. I keep working at it.
Heinz
PS, When I told you in my last post that
I came to the US in 1948 I didn’t say I’m
from Fürstenfeldbruck.
This is an amazing photo and post production is stunning!
I love the slider feature it really gives a visual impact on the processing. Nice processing btw.
Outstanding presentation, love the slider feature. The HDR brings a clarity to the photo
that was definately missing on the single shot.
Great presentation Klaus and again an inspiration to all interested in HDR work….
Fantastic processing as always. The slider works really well! It even makes people walk!
para los novatos como yo,gran aportacion la suya lo agradezco tenemos mucho por recorrer para llegar a esa meta´.
Thanks so much for the page, very informative!
I wonder why you never post about photomatix Exposure Fusion? Always refer to Tone Mapping.
I rarely use tone mapping…rather I find E.Fusion Mach more effective. Can you explain why they offer E.F. If no one but me seems to be using it….
Out of thousands of HDR pix I’ve processed….only a couple have worked for me in Tone Mapping…
Just curious if you have a perspective on EF?
Thanks.
Robert
Bobbyp28@hotmail.com