![]() A brush tool to selectively apply color corrections to selected areas.New Saturation, Hue and Brightness controls (equivalent to other programs’ Hue, Saturation and Luminance, or HSL controls), very similar to the controls in both Aurora and Adobe Camera Raw.When Photomatix came out with Version 6 early last fall, there were a number of new and very useful features, including: Photomatix also allows you to view and save the full HDR image after your photos are merged (but only then).Īnd all this is before you’ve even started editing the image. If you handheld your camera for your bracketed exposures, neither of these two programs offer manual manipulation of one or more brackets as do a few other HDR programs.Īnd, if you are merging Raw camera images, there are a couple of options that pop up for white balance and color space in Photomatix. ![]() ![]() This is especially useful when using higher ISO settings on your camera. Noise control (not in Aurora) allows you to choose to remove noise: only on the underexposed image or images, the regular and underexposed images, or all or none of the images. Photomatix also gives you a bit more control in aligning the images. You can also manually select areas to deghost, which is not an option in Aurora. Photomatix has, for example, more de-ghosting options, including the ability to preview ghosts to see how bad the ghosting is, allowing you to determine the intensity of the process. And those differences start as soon as you load your photos. Trying both Photomatix Pro and Aurora HDR, you are first struck by differences in the user experience. How Photomatix Stays Relevant Against Aurora HDR
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |