![]() ![]() I must admit though, to get the images looking their best, a little ‘fill light’ in Lightroom helps, and adding contrast and saturation layers also helps bring out the best in the Fused images I created. With no tweaking at all, a pretty reasonable final image is spat out of Enfuse. These programs utilise Exposure Fusion by stitching and fusing bracketed sequences together, with some pretty nice results.ĭie-hard HDR fans may not be too impressed by this new revelation, but I certainly am. If you’re into photo stitching then PTgui and Hugin may be of interest to you. There is currently no plugin for Photoshop. However, the plugin is donation-ware so its limited to 500px final images until you donate to get the full version. It still uses the command line utility in the background (you have to tell it where your enfuse.exe is), but the process looks more refined. ![]() If you’ve got Lightroom then one of the more convenient ways is to use the plugin. Ingemar Bergmark has produced a GUI for it, not surprisingly called EnfuseGui, which can be a little easier if you aren’t too keen on command lines. At this stage Exposure Fusion is still in its infancy, so there’s only a handful of programs to choose from.Įnfuse is the primary tool for Exposure Fusion at the moment, and although it is a command line utility, there are ‘ ‘droplets’‘ (batch files) available that you can drag and drop a series of images onto to create a fused image. ![]()
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