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sandofsky | 9 months ago
No, it isn't. It's saying they captured HDR scenes.
> The result of the juxtaposition is that the article did in fact claim Adams used HDR
You can't "use" HDR. It's an adjective, not a noun.
> Film’s 12 stops is not really “high” range by HDR standards, and a little exposure latitude isn’t where “HDR” came from.
The Reinhard tone mapper, a benchmark that regularly appears in research papers, specifically cites Ansel Adams as inspiration.
"A classic photographic task is the mapping of the potentially high dynamic range of real world luminances to the low dynamic range of the photographic print."
https://www-old.cs.utah.edu/docs/techreports/2002/pdf/UUCS-0...
> Perhaps it’s useful to reflect on the fact that HDR has a counterpart called LDR that’s referring to 8 bits/channel RGB.
8-bits per channel does not describe dynamic range. If I attach an HLG transfer function on an 8-bit signal, I have HDR. Furthermore, assuming you actually meant 8-bit sRGB, nobody calls that "LDR." It's SDR.
> Analog cameras have exposure control and thus can capture any range you want.
This sentence makes no sense.
dahart|9 months ago
Hey it’s great Reinhard was inspired by Adams. I have been too, like a lot of photographers. And I’ve used the Reinhard tone mapper in research papers, I’m quite familiar with it and personally know all three authors of that paper. I’ve even written a paper or maybe two on color spaces with one of them. Anyway, the inspiration doesn’t change the fact that 12 stops isn’t particularly high dynamic range. It’s barely more than SDR. Even the earliest HDR formats had like 20 or 30 stops, in part because the point was to use physical luminance instead of a relative [0..1] range.
8 bit RGB does sort-of in practice describe a dynamic range, as long as the 1 bit difference is approximately the ‘just noticeable difference’ or JND as some researchers call it. This happens to line up with 8 bits being about 8 stops, which is what RGB images have been doing for like 50 years, give or take. While it’s perfectly valid arithmetic to use 8 bits values to represent an arbitrary amount like 200 stops or 0.003 stops, it’d be pretty weird.
Plenty of people have called and continue to call 8 bit images “LDR”, here’s just three of the thousands of uses of “LDR” [1][2][3], and LDR predates usage of SDR by like 15 years maybe? LDR predates sRGB too, I did not actually mean 8 bit sRGB. LDR and SDR are close but not quite the same thing, so feel free to read up on LDR. It’s disappointing you ducked the actual point I was making, which is still there even if you replace LDR with SDR.
What is confusing about the sentence about analog cameras and exposure control? I’m happy to explain it since you didn’t get it. I was referring to how the aperture can be adjusted on an analog camera to make a scene with any dynamic range fit into the ~12 stops of range the film has, or the ~8 stops of range of paper or an old TV. I was just trying to clarify why HDR is an attribute of digital images, and not of scenes.
[1] https://www.easypano.com/showkb_228.html#:~:text=The%20Dynam...
[2] https://www.researchgate.net/figure/shows-digital-photograph...
[3] https://irisldr.github.io/
sandofsky|9 months ago
> I’m happy to rescind my critique about Ansel Adams
Great, I'm done.
> and switch instead to pointing out that “HDR” doesn’t refer to the range of the scene
Oh god. Here's the first research paper that popped into my head: https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/hdrplusdata.org/e...
"Surprisingly, daytime shots with high dynamic range may also suffer from lack of light."
"In low light, or in very high dynamic range scenes"
"For high dynamic range scenes we use local tone mapping"
You keep trying to define "HDR" differently than current literature. Not even current— that paper was published in 2016! Hey, maybe HDR meant something different in the 1990s, or maybe it was just ok to use "HDR" as shorthand for when things were less ambiguous. I honestly don't care, and you're only serving to confuse people.
> the aperture can be adjusted on an analog camera to make a scene with any dynamic range fit into the ~12 stops of range the film has, or the ~8 stops of range of paper or an old TV.
You sound nonsensical because you keep using the wrong terms. Going back to your first sentence that made no sense:
> Analog cameras have exposure control and thus can capture any range you want
You keep saying "range" when, from what I can tell, you mean "luminance." Changing a camera's aperture scales the luminance hitting your film or sensor. It does not alter the dynamic range of the scene.
Analog cameras cannot capture any range. By adjusting camera settings or attaching ND filters, you can change the window of luminance values that will fit within the dynamic range of your camera. To say a camera can "capture any range" is like saying, "I can fit that couch through the door, I just have to saw it in half."
> And I’ve used the Reinhard tone mapper in research papers, I’m quite familiar with it and personally know all three authors of that paper. I’ve even written a paper or maybe two on color spaces with one of them.
I'm sorry if correcting you triggers insecurities, but if you're going to make an appeal to authority, please link to your papers instead of hand waving about the people you know.