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Browser-compatible HDR backgrounds

Robin Monks 🏳️‍🌈·Robin Monks·about 1 month ago
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How I've made high DPI and device-aware HDR backgrounds a part of my workflow New Westminster, British Columbia. Photo ©Robin Monks. I take a lot of photos. In fact, I have taken almost all the photos that accompany articles in this blog-letter. I also love HDR photos, and have been taking them ever since my Google Nexus 4 phone. HDR captures a wider range of light, which gives you more ability to capture scenes that have bright and dark sections together without the dark sections turning to black or the light sections being blown out. Early in the life of HDR photos, the only device I had that could even show the full gamut was the phone I shot the photos on. On laptops and desktops, I'd have to tweak the color settings to look good on traditional screens. Thankfully, technology has changed a lot in 13 years, and now most of the screens we use have some amount of HDR support. Almost any modern laptop, TV, phone, tablet, and monitor has support for displaying HDR content.…

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