Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
SCOTT KELBY
SCOTT KELBY
How to Get Rid of “Ghosting” Problems
If anything was moving slightly in the scene you were photographing (like water in a lake,
or tree branches in the wind, or people walking by, etc.), you'll have a ghosting problem,
where that object is either blurry (at best), or you'll actually see a transparent ghost of that
part of the image (hence the name), or half a person, and so on. In this hand-held photo,
there are people moving in the scene and that usually means we'll have some ghosting, but
in most cases, fixing that is just one-click away. Or maybe two. Either one or two clicks.
Max.
Step One:
Select your images in Bridge, then go under the Tools menu, under Photoshop, and choose
Merge to HDR Pro to open the HDR bracketed images. You can just use the Default set-
ting (which by the way, almost never looks good), but just so it doesn't look too terrible,
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