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📷 Elevate Your Photography Game!
Photomatix Pro 6 is a powerful software designed for creating and editing HDR photos. With features like one-click presets, automatic photo alignment, and batch processing, it streamlines the editing process while delivering stunning results. The included plugin for Adobe Lightroom enhances your workflow, making it a must-have for professional photographers.
M**S
Photomatix Pro 4.1
This is a brilliant piece of kit. So easy to install alongside Photoshop and Lightroom and so easy to use. I have read so much on the internet about different hdr products and this one seemed to be the best. I can't imagine being without it now. Just load your three exposure shots and let the software do its thing, the results are stunning and, if you dont like what you see, it's so easy to tweak the colours and saturation etc. Plus, there are lots and lots of presets you can play around with.If you want to try hdr, get this, you won't regret it.I'd recommend this to anyone.
P**)
It’s in German language only
Although on the web site it appears English, it is in fact a German CD with no option to change the language.
A**J
Great software. The more you give it, the more you get back
This CD comes from Amazon EU and is the German version of 6.0 Pro. No problem. Load it onto your machine, register the code from the User Manual, go to the Photomatix website and load version 6.3 update. If you are doing this from the UK it will update to the English version.I have used version 5.1 for years and carefully choose which photos I want to enhance using this software. As with all decent post process software, it is better to take the time to turn a few already good photos into something stunning rather than trying to enhance lots of so-so images.I often use 5 tripod mounted 48mp RAW images using exposures from -2 to +2 stops for landscape and industrial work. On a decent computer, this software is quick to process the image and always produces a great starting point for further work.If you have never used the software before, watch the simple Photomatix Tutorials online
T**S
and it came with a handbook
Most things these days don't come with a printed handbook and you are left to either print out a costly PDF or try to work out how to use it on screen. Hopeless if its software and you have to keep switching between screens.I have used this program for a while now and finally decided to buy the latest version - and the small but well writen handbook was a very useful bonus as my previous copy was downloaded with on-line guidance. Having now read the booklet from cover to cover I know significantly more about it than from muddling through on-line.If you are in to HDR images and their processing - then this program handles the job well - from vey realistic to surreal with an almost infinite number of settings in between including a very good de-ghosting tool that is very effective at removing those inevitable movements.Overall an excellent program.
F**E
Sweet!
Having experimented with a free download HDR software and having read several reviews I plumped for Photomatrix Pro. You can purchase it cheaper as a download from the HDR Soft website but I always prefer the comfort of a disk in a box! Version 4.2 supplied (not 4.1 as advertised) complete with a instructional brochure. Can be used straight away as is simple and fairly intuitive and comes set up with several pre-set option effects. (You can also save any of your own preferences). So you can have some great tone-mapped images with-in minutes of installing. If you have some suitably bracketed images, you might even have some good starter HDR images.Not cheap but versatile and easy to use.
D**K
Create Some Magical Photos.
I have recently become impressed by the creative photographs that I have seen around the Internet and owning a Canon camera that has the ability to take bracketed photographs, I wanted to find out how to do it. (Bracketed photos are a number of photos taken of the same scene but using different exposures - for instance, a 3-shot bracketed shot would underexpose the first, correctly expose the second and over-expose the third). A search brought me to Photomatix, a software capable of creating such wonderful magical effects that I had observed on the Internet and I am more than pleased with the results.The software will line up and layer together 3 or more bracketed shots that I load into it and then I can use adjustment to create my own high dynamic range (HDR) photograph with it...The first one I tried for instance, was a bracketed shot of the sunset over the back of my garden. The camera was on a tripod to ensure that it didn't move between shots. I then loaded all three shots into the software - which was very easy through a small pop-up window where I selected all three that were loaded layered one on top of the other. I could then use all the various adjustments to bring out everything that I noticed with my eyes and have them show up in the picture. I wanted the Pampas Grass to show that golden reflection that the sun cast on it. Without the software, the only way to do it would be to overexpose the sun and sky to bring into view the darker objects in the shot.. Well one of the bracketed shots had done this overexposure, whilst the other two had focused more on getting the colours of the sun and sky correct whilst throwing the foreground into shadow at various degrees. The three shots were layered one on top of the other, and by making adjustment I got all the foreground and background fully visible.There are also pre-set creative adjustments in the software where you can make your photo for instance, black and white, like a water colour, like an oil painting and many more.A real fun application for those love creative photography. Easy for a beginner like me too!
M**N
Very poor software
Very poor software. Probably get better off a free one. Doesn't do anything like what it's meant to. I wish I paid that little bit extra for a better software. This one wasn't cheap
E**N
still learning
still experimenting with this program not able to give a higher star at this time, but so far seems ok
P**O
Gutes HDR-Programm
Das Programm arbeitet zuverlässig, so wie ich es von der Vorgängerversion gewohnt bin. Die Gesichtserkennung benutze ich nicht. Anfänger müssen sich einarbeiten. Für meine Belange ist es perfekt!
G**Y
I Love this program
I Love this program, easy to use after the first couple of tries, it gives you lots of options, the sliders work great.Thank you.
J**T
So easy, so tricky, so pretty, such a mess
Photomatix Pro is a wonderfully easy software package to use. Select the images you want to use to create your HDR image, click on a button, and it's done. Click another button to tone-map the HDR image back into an image that will look good on paper or your computer screen, and it's done again. It's so easy your spouse's mouth-breathing brother could do it.Unless that mouth-breathing in-law is also a man of sensitive artistic taste and deft skill, the results will look awful. That's where the program becomes more demanding. It gives you two options for tone-mapping, one that enhances details, another that takes a more global approach. To explain just a little, your HDR image is like a negative, full of information that has to be interpreted into a positive before the picture looks good. The detail enhancing tone-mapper brings out every little detail on that negative, high-lighting the transitions from brick to brick, leaf to leaf, and stripping away shaddows to reveal what might be hiding in the dark. The more global technique de-emphasizes those details in favor of creating a smoother image, one where the over-all balance of shaddow and light in the negative is the focus. The result is more photographic.You might think then that the artistic decision is in deciding which tone-mapper to use. Wrong. Each tone-mapping option comes with a variety of sliders to adjust things like contrast, luminosity, the intensity of whites and blacks, color temperature and so on. Choose wisely and you can get beautiful results with either tone-mapping option. Those gorgeous images you see in the how-to books are well on their way to being realized on your computer screen. Choose badly and you get garish, eye-watering results. Look at HDR images on-line and the great majority fall into that second category. The problem is that very few of us are both tasteful and technically proficient artists.There are ways to make up for artistic deficiencies. Photomatix comes with pre-sets that allow you to choose your look - painterly, grungy, standard photographic. Think of those as frozen dinner equivalents. They can actually look pretty good, just not as staggeringly good as the examples in the books. They can't make you a good photographer, and they can't capture the subtleties you might have seen when you saw the scene you decided to photograph. But they can get you on your way to seeing what the software can do. Ultimately, you'll have to play with the sliders and figure out what works for you. Buy some how-to books and try their "recipes" and then get creative. Just understand that it will take time and effort to become a chef and get a feel for which ingredients will go well in which images.Photomatix can only do so much. I think that at some point you'll want to do more fixing in Photoshop or another program if your aim is gallery-quality prints. I have no doubt that Photomatix is the way to go to create the initial HDR negative, and its tone-mapping functions are the way to go to create your initial positive. But then you'll move the job to Photoshop for some smoothing here, some cloning there to touch up what Photomatix's ghost-correcting function started, a bit of work to get rid of halos around buildings, then the application of some tools to enhance your artistic vision. You'll do more than 90% of the work in Photomatix though, and for most photos that will probably be enough.I'm still very much in the learning phase with this program, but I'm having a great time learning to use it. My results are nowhere near the pictures in the how-to books, but it took only a couple of hours of playing with it to get results I really liked. HDR isn't for every situation or for every subject, but in the right situation, it adds a whole new dimension to your images. Photomatix Pro is an excellent product to get you started.
P**5
Logiciel de retouche photo
Logiciel en langue anglaise...Dommage !
B**D
Photomatix Pro 5
Photomatix Pro 5 is pretty much the standard software for HDR photography. It gives the user the ability to get a realistic HDR image or a surreal image. It's interface is pretty much straight forward. The GUI has none of those cute little things that distract from the task. For bracketed images, tone mapping and exposure fusion are available. I play with both to see which comes closer to what I want. Single images (raw, tiff, or even jpeg) can be tone mapped giving good results, but not as good as bracketed images.This is not a do all end all program. It's really good at tone mapping and exposure fusion. Everything else such as white point, black point, saturation and other adjustments, is only very basic and can be done better in a photo editor. For instance, saturation in Photomatix is global, affecting the whole image. In a good photo editor hue, saturation, and luminance can be performed on individual colors.It has several presets. Some of these may work on some images. The monochrome presets seem to be a global desaturation. Better b&w can be done in a photo editor. My take on presets is to try them. But I usually end up doing my HDR adjustments manually. After all, I want to control how my photo looks, not have a program telling me how it should look.Think of the file that Photomatix creates as a raw image. Create the HDR only in Photomatix. Then do your final adjustments in your favorite photo editor.There are plenty of tutorials on the web for Photomatix. Check them out. Some of them are really good. Also read the manual that comes in the box, especially the section on how to get your bracketed shots. Pay attention to where the shadows and highlights for the different shots should be on the histogram for the best results.Photography will change how you see things. HDR and Photomatix will change how you will visualize your images.
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