For those who have not got into HDR photography, I thought I would post a simple example of how effective using a single RAW file to generate what is in effect a pseudo-HDR image can be. The first image is the original photograph converted via Ufraw and The GIMP to a basic image, stored as a jpg file. The second image is the same RAW file processed with Photomatix Pro. The software automatically uses the RAW data to create "images" at +/- 2 stops and combines them with the original. Tone-mapping was carried out in the usual way.
Thus, the more time-consuming aspects of HDR such as bracketing and using a tripod to collect several images can be by-passed in some circumstances, with reasonable results.
David

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). As for shadow recovery on a single image it's useful and for averaging and evening out the lighting in an image if that's what you're after. Perhaps it's most appealing to the artistic/stylistic users is the un-natural tone mapping look which isn't HDR as such since the dynamic range is within the limits of the image but it doesn't matter as it's chosen technique for stylistic purposes rather than technical application.


