HDR Photography

To anyone who is into photography and shoots HDR photos. What are your favorite subjects to shoot? How do you find your master setting? Post your personal best HDR photo and possibly give some advice to how you got your shot!
 
Anything with lots of texture is nice. I prefer landscapes, personally. As long as the HDR effect isn't overdone. 90% of HDR photos I see look like absolute shit because people overdo it.
 
I took this with my cellphone.

01918_midastouch_1680x1050.jpg

 
Well, I'l be honest I really don't like HDR but I'll try and help ya out a bit.

First, of the ones that I have seen, I really like nature HDR, seascapes to be exact.

Next there isn't a master setting for HDR you take pictures, on a tripod, at different Exposure Values. Basically what you're doing is creating a "perfect" picture, you get the best of the shadows combined with the best of the highlights.

I could type out everything for you but, it would be much easier to post this link haha:

http://range.wordpress.com/2006/07/15/modern-hdr-photography-a-how-to-or-saturday-morning-relaxation/

Goes through everything from dynamic ranging to actually doing it in Photo shop.

Hope that helps some what

 
Thanks to those who replied to my post especially Jordan.

Jordan, I actually read about that site and he says you have a master setting under the title Do you really need HDR? and I took a few sample shots around my house and put them together with photomatrix but the only satisfaction I got out of the photo was the reflection on the car I photographed. I also could not get the clouds to flow. Any advice to what I am doing wrong?
 
the only time i find HDR necessary and super helpful is when you're shooting some land and some sky. generally the brightness of the sky will make the land almost pitch black so if you do hdr you can get the land bright as well as the sky and you have a good picture
an HDR shot of a basic subject won't look awesome, i've seen very few HDR shots of flowers that actually look good, but landscapes they look awesome and can be really helpful to getting all parts of the picture exposed
what you can also do is take a raw image and develop it in photoshop under 3 exposures and then combine those, it makes it so that you only need to take 1 picture
 
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