The old church of Marten
This is one of my very first High Dynamic Range (HDR) images. I am really proud of this photo. However, I feel that the pole at the center is a big deterrent. I think I will have to work a lot on my Photoshop skills to get it wiped off. Well, I tried the smart select and delete option. Any other ideas are welcome.
Nondestructive Photography Workflow That I Follow
Following flowchart illustrate the nondestructive workflow that I keep up to manage and edit my photographs. I hope that the illustration is self explanatory. The software Adobe DNG (Digital Negative) mentioned in the illustration can be downloaded for free from http://www.adobe.com/products/dng/.
The color profile of the camera is set to AdobeRGB. All RAW editing is done with software that are set to work in this color profile. My camera (Canon EOS450D) produces 14-bit RAW images (Only a few very high-end cameras actually record more than 12 bits of data in the 16 bits that are available to RAW files). The 14-bit RAW can, if needed, be converted to 16-bit using the software that comes with the camera. RAW files are nondestructive – the only way one can destruct it by deleting it from the system. Which means that any change done on the RAW files can be undone if and when necessary. I tend to save all the processed images as TIFF files (8bit). All photograph winnowing is done using Adobe Bridge.
Using Coral Draw Images In Ubuntu
Use uniconverter to convert .cdr file to any other format required.
Or use SK1 (http://sk1project.org/)











