Digital UK Design Blog

HDR before and after image 1

HDR can not be fully appreciated or understood without comparing the before and after photographs. This post shows 20 examples, some perfectly illustrating how HDR should be used, and others illustrating how badly a photo can look. All photographs, images and materials are copyright to their respective owners.

HDR before and after image 2

HDR before and after image 3

HDR before and after image 4

HDR before and after image 5

HDR before and after image 6

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HDR before and after image 8

HDR before and after image 9

HDR before and after image 10

HDR before and after image 11

HDR before and after image 12

HDR before and after image 13

HDR before and after image 14

HDR before and after image 15

HDR before and after image 16

HDR before and after image 17

HDR before and after image 18

HDR before and after image 19

HDR before and after image 20

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16 Responses so far

  1. Piggynap Says:


    This shows that HDR is completely awesome for clouds. I also love the ‘outside the window’ effects in the shots with the girls - it’s like they’re in a room with fairyland just outside :)


  2. Shun Says:


    Piggynap is absolutely right. The clouds are really impressive after HDR processing. The interiour shots are awesome, too. Thanks for this nice collection.


  3. Cool Photos Says:


    the motorcycle one is so perfect and not extreme
    and clouds are awesome


  4. Kris Says:


    I honestly do not see why everyone is in love with HDR. It is just as annoying as the gamers who go on and on about lens flair. There are a few that looked really really good in your list, but many of them are just so fake and their originals are more beautiful and natural. It is like any technique, overuse just makes it bland.


  5. JuanS Says:


    Nice, very nice!


  6. SusanG Says:


    What Kris said: It just looks cartoony after a time. Alright on occasion but repetition gets annoying.


  7. Tiemen Says:


    Quite a few of them aren’t HDR images, just images with contrast & other filters cranked way to far open.

    I don’t understand people who hype those shots. HDR is about getting all the detail in one photo, So every bit on the photograph is properly exposed. Shadows ARE part of properly exposed images, otherwise the ideal HDR image would simply be a grey matte.

    Other than those, you have terribly looking shots which have been HDR-ed on auto, creating a light halo around the shapes in the air.

    The motorcycle, church and tower on a square are properly done. Rest of them is rubbish


  8. frog Says:


    Hi Tiemen.

    I can’t agree more. These are a collection of examples that I found that illustrates the vast degree that people use HDR on their photographs.

    HDR is overly used, as are filters in photoshop, but you’ll find the main culprits are those will little experience, knowledge and sometimes respect for the tools they re handed. Taking a perfectly exposed image and attempting HDR is a clear sign of experimentation of a novice, which sometimes should be excused.

    I agree with you about those HDR photos you picked out being the best, the rest certainly aren’t the work of a seasoned pro.

    Thanks for the comment, HDR certainly has a mixed reaction.


  9. UtahLuxury.com Says:


    I think that HDR has a great way of carrying color. I must say that when it used to blow a picture out of believability it really sucks. Sometimes it is cool for the effect like was said earlier about the “Fairytale Effect”. The rest of the time it is just too much.

    Love the cat photo, the graveyard and the Utopia photos for exactly what I was talking about.


  10. Ron Anderson Says:


    HDR could be used to create truly awesome beauty of expanded versions of what digital cameras are able to capture, but as you have seen here the photos were distorted into childish overdone illustrations with garish coloring. This is unfortionatly the rule. Its like giving a child in first grade a new set of 36 crayons. Every damn crayon will be used to excess whether appropriate or not.


  11. Professional HDR at it’s best » The Frog Blog Says:


    [...] for all to follow. You would be hard pressed to find a more accomplished portfolio on professional HDR, B&W and wide angled photography. Enjoy this small collection from Jeff’s meteoric [...]


  12. John Dawson Photography Says:


    Overall I think those are all very good examples of HDR. The one with the very green water is a bit much IMO but that could have been toned down easily. The indoor scenes really look great - the HDR conversion brings out a lot of detail.


  13. Steve Says:


    So if an artist using oils or water colours paints something that looks ‘unnatural’ or ‘unreal’ its wrong is it?

    Van Gogh is turning in his grave.


  14. bryony1 Says:


    While getting in as many details as possible, it’s easy to forget that in real life shadows, etc., as in the trees by the downward roadway, do darken and sometimes obscure details. Not everything can nor should receive the same amount of light. If it does, it does not look authentic.


  15. Photographer Corey Nielsen Says:


    I think that hdr if used corectly can make amazing work as a few of these are but as it has been said before shadows highlights and midtones are all equaly important but saying that I am a big fan of hdr I use it for architechture A LOT and I find it fantastic when saturation is decreased.
    Good collection none the less..

    Thanks mate.


  16. Ron Anderson Says:


    HDR when used by the bottom feeders is disgusting, and when used with discretion and thought can be beatiful.




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