I have been interested in HDR for a little while and wanted to give it a go. I use a Nikon D40x and took some contrasty raw shots of a boat on the beach. I then adjusted the exposure in Lightroom to give me six shots of ranging exposure from very light to very dark.
I then used Photoshop CS2 Merge to HDR but keep getting an error message that there is not enough dynamic range in these photo's to construct a useful HDR image. Could anyone venture a guess as to what I may be doing wrong. I have tried using both PSD and JPG images but it makes no difference.
Thanks

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) processed image where the tone mapping step remaps shades "incorrectly". The joke about wrong processing is kind of true, but not from the user input side (unless they were after realism ofcourse). If there is too high a range to display in one image then you have to remap the colours into a smaller range than can be displayed in a single pic. If you map them correctly the resulting tonally compressed image will look similar to the natural scene (although looking washed out and poor) and after some contrast and perhaps vibrance adjustments it looks like you've taken it in one capture. If you map the out of range tones "wrongly" and apply adjustments to accentuate this then the resulting scene looks very unusual and surreal. This has become popular and is sometimes refered to as the HDR look, when in actuality it's not really HDR but more to do with processing choices of such HDR images.
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