#Sony playmemories for windows 10 keygen#
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The Sky HDR app is, no doubt, a pretty powerful tool. That’s cheaper than shipping on some of the ND filters I own. Oh yeah, it can also do this on the RAW file. When you accept the changes, you can then save the image. It presents it to you then asks if you would like to tweak your boundary settings (position of boundary, as well as the defocus area-the strength of the effect near the horizon). When you get your settings dialed in, you push the shutter button and your camera takes an image with the land settings first, then it takes the second exposure with your sky settings. You set the boundary between the sky area and the land area and rotate it appropriately to match your horizon. You can independently control the white balance, shutter and aperture of each element. This app is remarkable to me for the reason that it does a composite of the land and the sky-each with it’s own exposure settings. The sunset preset provides a warm tone that “expresses the redness of dusk scenes impressively.” The Graduated ND filter “shoots images with only different exposures.” Usage
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I got really comfortable with the Sunset and the Graduated ND filters. Here is the comparison-with the only corrections being the removal of dirt on the lens and sensor. It includes three types of presets (Blue Sky, Sunset, and Graduated ND), with two additional custom “save points.” I only had time to really play with two of them and I’ll share my experience here. Now I would like to think that Sony actually made this Sky HDR application for me. In short, you have to really be dedicated to put up with all the filter juggling. You have to make sure your lens is clean-sure, but now you also have a filter with two sides that can pick up dirt. Adding to the challenges, the filter is really another element to keep clean. You could always purchase the cheaper, non-multicoated ones, but then you run the risk of glare and internal reflections. Some of the ND filters are extremely expensive. Typically the environments I photograph in are not the easiest to move in, and among the most hazardous when I drop things (dropping glass on rocks usually ends in tragedy). Then when I bring the pieces, I need to make sure I don’t drop the delicate filter. One is making sure I brought the correct one and every piece required to mount it (not only do I need the actual graduated ND filters-there’s a few of them-but I also need the slide mount and the appropriate threaded rings that the slide mounts clip onto). Graduated NDs have worked so far with my photography, but they come with their own set of problems. Otherwise, with less dynamic range, you stand to lose details in the highlights or shadows.
The dynamic range of the Sony sensor is pretty amazing, but sometimes you need to stretch it even further to bring out details in both the land-based items and the clouds in the sky. When I photograph something with skies, I grab a graduated ND filter to properly expose the skies with the land or water. They help me make the smoothest curtains of water, as well as stretched out cloud effects.īut they also serve a different purpose. They help me drag my shutter speeds to get a pretty neat effect with water and clouds. Spencer Pablo takes us into the new Sony app that will have your graduated ND filters gathering dust