Hi,
Nice idea to try to detect bracket shot !
3 kind of bracket exist :
bracket with aperture
bracket with time
bracket with iso ( i don't think it's a good idea to use it)
Why not try to detect bracket shot with datetime of picture and
(aperture or exposition time)
Something like :
it's a b
On Thu, Jul 11, 2013, Rob Z. Smith wrote:
>
> Which of the bracketed shots do you want to retain in the collection?
> The one that has the best exposure or the one that is the most
> overexposed short of blown out highlights? If it is just the best
> exposed shot of the series can't you simply sel
> On Thu, 11 Jul 2013 17:36:32 +0200, jeremy rosen
> said:
jeremy> I have the same problem and I'm looking into automated bracket
jeremy> detection and grouping using lua...
jeremy> my investigation shows that, at this point, the bracket
jeremy> information is not presen
Which of the bracketed shots do you want to retain in the collection? The one
that has the best exposure or the one that is the most overexposed short of
blown out highlights? If it is just the best exposed shot of the series can’t
you simply select this by eye in LT?
Rgds,
Rob.
From: Tecst
Hello,
the most relevant information - as stated by Aahz - would
be the histogram. But, this is availalbe in darkroom mode only. At the
same time browsing through your collection using the filmroll is very
slow as each picture gets processed.
Also for me it would be a very
good feature to ha
I have the same problem and I'm looking into automated bracket detection
and grouping using lua...
my investigation shows that, at this point, the bracket information is not
present at all in DT and the time precision doesn't allow us to easily
detect burst images.
I'm looking into being able to
Howdy,
I went on a cruise to Alaska and got 14K shots, of which a large number
(8K?) are bracket shots (0/+1/-1 EV) because of the difficult lighting
conditions. I'm probably not going to bother with HDR for the vast
majority, but I do want to pick the best shot from each group of three
based on