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Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Early high-dynamic-range imaging

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Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 2 Sep 2015 at 23:38:16 (UTC)

Original – From the article: "The idea of using several exposures to fix a too-extreme range of luminance was pioneered as early as the 1850s by Gustave Le Gray to render seascapes showing both the sky and the sea. Such rendering was impossible at the time using standard methods, the luminosity range being too extreme. Le Gray used one negative for the sky, and another one with a longer exposure for the sea, and combined the two into one picture in positive"
Reason
High quality scan of a 160-year-old example of a popular technique
Articles in which this image appears
High-dynamic-range imaging, Gustave Le Gray
FP category for this image
Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Photographic techniques, terms, and equipment
Creator
Gustave Le Gray
Now you mention it, I remember the ol' fotogs doing that in the newspaper dark room. Sca (talk) 21:36, 25 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That's where the Photoshop terms 'dodging' and 'burning' come from - the physical interventions in the enlarger during the photographic development. This video is a good demonstration. Ðiliff «» (Talk) 22:36, 25 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Yup, I remember them sorta waving their hands in the light of the enlarger. If results weren't up to snuff, they could always do it over. (Those were the days of Tri-X, the all-purpose B&W film – used by newspapers for decades.) Sca (talk) 14:19, 26 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Promoted File:Gustave Le Gray - Brig upon the Water - Google Art Project.jpg --Armbrust The Homunculus 03:50, 3 September 2015 (UTC)[reply]