Very easy in Capture NX. In Photoshop you'd need to add a layer mask that masks out everything else and play with the sky. Haven't used Lightroom.
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Very easy in Capture NX. In Photoshop you'd need to add a layer mask that masks out everything else and play with the sky. Haven't used Lightroom.
Taken from a look out in Nati National Park
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/images/im...009/12/264.jpg
Another good one Lou.
Believe it or not I can actually see two areas where blown highlights have transposed to artifacts across the top of the image. I think this is similar to what you were saying about the wag tail in the other thread. In this case though I can say it is down to the fact the image is saved at low resolution for the web and there's nothing you can really do about it.
That will do it.
It pays to take a couple of sample shots and chimp the histogram and check for highlights (I'm pretty sure the D80 allows that). Also sample meter over the entire range of the pano and choose the highest reading. You can always lighten a lot easier than you can darken an image.
Derek would it have made a difference if I had a graduation filter on while holding the exposure lock?
would that have helped stop the sky from blowing out?
Yes, Grad ND would have made a lot of difference.
i get great easy results with arcsoft panorama maker