About

Hello! I’m Scott Webb, London Ontario based Photographer.  I intend to become one of the most desired Wedding Photographers in London Ontario!

The Urban HDR Photoblog

This is Urban HDR, a photoblog that is dedicated to HDR photography.

What is HDR Photography?

HDR photography is capturing the dynamic range of light in a scene that is to the likeness of what you see with your eyes.  A camera cannot cature this in one single shot.  Instead of using external light sources or equipment, bracketed photographs at differing exposure values will capture the entire range of light levels.   This is only the first of the process.   The second half of the process takes place within a computer and processing the multiple files into your HDR file.   Since we cannot properly view a 32 bit HDR File, it is then processed via “Tone Mapping” to convert the image into something manageable for our monitors or HDTV’s to view.   We can then view the entire scene as if we were standing in front of subject again.

HDR Tutorial & Workflow

If you’re looking for a tutorial, check out Nuwomb and go through the HDR Workflow!

Author: Scott Webb

I made the decision to make photography a part of my everyday life. While I still battle depression every single day, I know photography helps keep me moving forward. There are days still spent in bed, but they’ve become less and less.

  1. 1-25 Reasons to Start a A Blog – Why I Blog and You Should Too | Nuwomb | Incubator for Ideas on Photography, Business, Blogs, and Social Media

    [...] features.  It’s allowed me to adopt my own style today.  Recently, I had an issue with my HDR Photoblog – Urban HDR but I’ve actually been doing this for over a year [...]

  2. micheal

    Hi, nice site. Most of your images suffer from not using a pc lens. With architecture like what you seem to like to photograph without using the ‘right’ lens most images suffer from barrel distortion, and need perspective correction, otherwise buildings appear to be falling backwards or sideways.
    You can fix this by using lens correction in photoshop.

    Nice stuff.

  3. Jason Evans

    Hi,

    I’ve been meaning to drop you a line for sometime. Your work is inspiring. I have recently started experimenting with HDR photography myself. I’d love to know what process you use for keeping your skies so crisp.

    Regards, Jason.

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