- How do I shoot HDR photos for real estate listings?
- On a tripod, shoot 3–5 brackets per room about one to two stops apart, with one locked white balance. That holds interior and window detail. Then upload to QuickHDR to merge and edit so you are not hand-blending each scene.
- What is exposure bracketing?
- Bracketing is the same frame captured at different exposure levels. You merge those frames into one HDR image with balanced room and window brightness, which is what most listing photos need when a single shot cannot cover the full range.
- What is automatic HDR editing?
- The app merges your brackets, aligns scenes, and runs tone and cleanup work without you blending layers. In QuickHDR you upload your shots and download listing-ready JPEGs from the browser—no per-room manual merge in another editor.
- What does QuickHDR do?
- It is a browser-based auto HDR tool for real estate. It merges bracket sets, balances rooms and windows, corrects common lens and color issues, and exports high-quality JPEGs. You upload supported RAWs or JPEGs; the main deliverable does not need manual HDR in Photoshop for every frame.
- Do I need to edit anything manually in QuickHDR?
- No. Upload your bracketed files and QuickHDR runs the merge and base correction. After that, use the Adjustments panel only if you want to tweak brightness, contrast, or saturation for a room.
- Can I upload a full real estate photoshoot at once?
- Yes. Add a full folder or many files at once. QuickHDR groups by scene and batch-processes so you are not merging room by room in another app.
- What file formats does QuickHDR support?
- It accepts common camera RAW types (including ARW, CR2, CR3, NEF, RAF, ORF, RW2, PEF, SRW) and JPEG, and returns high-quality JPEG. DNG is not supported. The uploader in the app lists allowed extensions.
- How long does HDR processing take in QuickHDR?
- Most jobs take minutes. Small sets are often 5–10; large drops may go to about 20, depending on file size and load. Merging runs in the cloud, not on your machine.
- Does QuickHDR replace Lightroom or Photoshop?
- It replaces the HDR merge and base listing look for your delivery. You can still use Adobe tools for further style work, but many users send QuickHDR output straight to clients or MLS without that extra pass.
- Can I adjust brightness, contrast, or saturation after processing?
- Yes. On a finished image, use the Adjustments panel. Many listings need no change beyond the automatic pass; the sliders are for small tweaks if you want them.
- Is there a free trial for QuickHDR?
- Yes. New signups get free credits to run real work. When you outgrow the free tier, pick a plan on the pricing page that fits your volume.
- Is my data secure with QuickHDR?
- Yes. Transfers use secure connections, and your work is not published publicly. For retention and your rights, read the Privacy Policy link in the site footer.