- Better to do on days where there's a busy/cloudy sky.
- Edgy and lots of detail.
You make three different edits of the same image- bringing out the detail in each one the same then underexposing one of the three edits and overexposing another on the edits- keeping one of them as the "normal"/correctly exposed image. You then Take the brighter image and the darker image and copy one onto the other then "overlay" the top layer so they blend.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3JpadaDh_49FCxShlPoVkWUJV1MxBl6_4FQGFUPqjyLWC-1Tk80EiFwEqB7ohwSdBEC3Ajzz-tEn6Q-hRdk4SGm1HhJ3WIs_dvDwGwT_SOanZz0os7ukduqtOVEMuNQts9ugDhGtqB0s/s400/IMG_8079-2darkeraname.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNdv3KuNU1nfjUguxuxH0o48uxGECHDujoTjpsY7U35nE7IJ8nF8h0fqWrJgZPxZSaSrnPtw1yz8kPQyz4CgnE6IVgRpxdYGxQNvbyTZJAtBtr4Bu6hD5cWHDKtXUzF43DMhMCLRvdsFI/s400/IMG_8079-3brighteraname.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhwc2QlMxgquKKR2Og2evOr9Mjv2AR51woZauYDajhRV_davQHDIvby9WY8HTh6ItveNHHzY8reMgEhMjsLbKJqDJIKaEoscvXuepjw5tq1ebgFEG0Wsh0tuFzY0jsBlqKvgp1QF1HxlgA/s400/IMG_8079-3layedwith2a.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgGUy2BtOhbkHu3HT8490iTe8usbm8AIGsWWPO2DCwDEM-38wR0ay7tf1JhqFMrm47tTiiZlceob6wpWorAgO91b0I6bTSCVfHLwbl84JNa-upWWCfF4_BRQEfIWDO3Gk3-BWTS_X_CiGw/s400/IMG_8079dmiddlenme.jpg)
This is the final Image;
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh5zTebepMUIDZi8-zgJDOA2X8c43NV0jcqYteLiZK6A9dUiTjeOJ7UVi8-LyFTpgHESqGnhmcC-rdLqzmso7_AliiGgeD8EhkX5T52qZzLzuc1bKwRWUylCewH2HWSV_9T8BK3Y_MvKbI/s400/IMG_8079-3layedwith2aallnae.jpg)
this result image is not exactly HDR photography, but "it's getting there" I think with more practice I'll be able to create a HDR image successfully with this method.
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