This is why I most times would just review one piece of software at a time, do the FTC announcement to let you know that I may or may not have a financial connection to the company and then give you my honest opinion of that piece of software. So if I don’t promote things, I also don’t eat. So if I say something is good, how do you know it’s not just me pushing something I possibly could make money on? Secondly, It’s a conflict of interest to myself since photography and this website are my only means of making a living. In the first way, I represent.as an affiliate, some of the companies reviewed here. Mostly because it is a conflict of interest, in two ways. I have long avoided doing a head to head comparison like this. *Note: You can skip reading this next part if you just want to get on with the review. In this article we will compare 8 of the most popular HDR Processing Software currently available including: Instead I just want to concentrate on the Close up, shooting at or near your lens Minimum Focus distance. I’m not going to get into pure Macro work here because it is an article all to itself and I’m not trying to reach those people. Macro enthusiast know it far too well, how trying DoF becomes and how much beyond a basic understanding of DoF it takes to produce good work. But when the camera get’s close, when the magnification increases, that’s when that rudimentary knowledge falls all apart. In most instances, we can get away with having a rudimentary understanding and it won’t hurt our images. I see it all the time, especially in portrait work where many proudly exclaim ” I always shoot wide open” and then I know…they don’t really get it. Sounds simple enough, but unfortunately it isn’t. ” It’s when your subject is In-Focus and the background isn’t”. People say they understand it and in the most basic way most photographers do. You may say, no the Exposure Triangle is, but Depth of Field is so entrenched in that, that we can’t separate the two. One of the first principals of photography that must be learned is, Depth of Field (DoF).
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