"Captain Kimo" has a web page comparing HDR software. I also don't see where at their website you can download the current version for a trial. Gotta say though, I'm not thrilled with the price. I'm thrilled that the next version of Aurora will be available for Windows users. HDR is definitely a task for which I like to keep a variety of tools at hand to achieve the best outcome. It's not like cropping, adjusting levels, or even masking where every program works about the same. One may work well for a certain set of bracketed shots, but for another set a different program works better. The thing about the various HDR software that I've tested, every program is very different from each other. Most programs have free trials and many are quite inexpensive (or even free). Do you love the way Photoshop merges bracketed shots? If Yes, then maybe you don't need a specialized HDR program?īut if you specifically take exposure bracketed shots for the purpose of HDR merging, I think you should give specialized HDR software a chance.
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