
Then open the resulting photos in Photomatix. The easiest way to do this is to set up the camera on a tripod and set up automatic exposure bracketing (AEB), this mode is available on almost all modern cameras, with a difference of 1/3 - 2 steps and to make a picture. When photographing a complex scene, for example, with a bright sky, three shots are taken with different exposures, so that one photo has black shadows, the other neutral and the third bright. In practice, it's a lot easier than in theory.
PHOTOMATIX ESSENTIALS 64 BIT PRO
Photomatix Pro uses tone compression algorithms to create a regular JPEG (or TIFF, if further processing is planned) with evenly distributed brightness from the resulting HDR image.

HDR (High Dynamic Range) is essentially a format of images with a very large dynamic range, much larger than the monitor can be played back. It can also create a pseudo-HDR from a single RAW file and mix exposures - Exposure Fusion. This is a program for creating HDR images from multiple photos with different exposures. In this situation Photomatix Pro software will help. Bright skies and dark plans or shadows are just beyond this distance. Simply put, the dynamic range is the distance from the lightest point to the darkest point that the camera can save.

Have you ever photographed a beautiful landscape on a bright sunny day to get a completely white, illuminated sky? Or vice versa, by changing the exposure to get a blue sky and completely black everything else? The fact that the dynamic range of any digital camera is limited, and is much narrower than the range of the human eye, which can also adapt to the light.
