Selasa, 09 Mei 2006

Photoshop For Digital Photographers

Digital Photographers that use Photoshop take note- here is an online course just for you. As far as I'm concerned, Scott Kelby is a master of this craft. I have his books and refer to them constantly for my Photoshop tweaking of photos.



PRESS RELEASE: Kelby to Offer 21-Day Online Course 'Photoshop For Digital Photographers'


New 21-Day Online Training Class Offered Only at Photoshoptraining.com

TAMPA, Fla. -- May 9, 2006 -- The National Association of Photoshop Professionals (NAPP), the world's leading educational and training resource for Adobe® Photoshop®, has just released Photoshop for Digital Photographers with Scott Kelby, a 21-day online training course on its newly launched training site - http://www.photoshoptraining.com. Featuring the #1 best-selling Photoshop book author and president of NAPP, Scott Kelby, Photoshop for Digital Photographers is an innovative online course for digital photographers to learn how to color correct, sharpen, fix and finish their digital photos at their own pace in the comfort of their home or work place. Learning Photoshop has never been this easy.

In just five minutes a day, Kelby takes online students through a special lesson showing them exactly how use a specific Photoshop feature from start to finish. Each lesson is designed to be quick, easy, and straight to the point, without a bunch of boring theory or confusing jargon. More online classes will be available from Scott Kelby in the coming months. Additionally, classes will be available from Dave Cross and Matt Kloskowski, Kelby's co-hosts of the popular Adobe Photoshop TV podcast (http://www.photoshoptv.com), Adobe Certified Experts, and NAPP instructors.

Pricing for the 21-day class is just $69.99. NAPP members receive a $30 discount paying just $39.99. To become a member of NAPP visit www.photoshopuser.com.

About Photoshoptraining.com

Launched by the National Association of Photoshop Professionals (NAPP), photoshoptraining.com showcases the most comprehensive Photoshop and digital imaging educational resources available today. It joins the creative line-up of educational resources and products produced by Scott Kelby and the creative team at NAPP, which publishes Photoshop User and Layers magazines, the Photoshop Elements Techniques newsletter; and produces the weekly Adobe Photoshop TV video podcast, the bi-annual Photoshop World Conference & Expo, the one-day Adobe Photoshop Seminar Tour, and a complete line-up of Photoshop books and DVDs. For more information about NAPP go to www.photoshopuser.com or its parent company website www.kwmediagroup.com.

Jumat, 05 Mei 2006

Backup, backup and backup

Just a friendly reminder - backup your photos often.

I had been very lazy about sorting and filing my pictures since last November. I had about 1000 images in a series of folders that were on my list to "sort" into my different picture folders (my two kids birthdays, christmas, and ski vacation were all in these folders - so some photos that meant a lot to me). I finally decided to spend a few hours sorting them out. Had an odd hiccup with the computer - every folder that did not have a unique name yet (still had the same folder name as when I took them out of the CF) disappeared on me. Not in the trash, nowhere. I was devestated - 1000 lost images. I started to go through all sorts of work to try and recover the lost images, but it was looking like it would be a nightmare (I have 50-60,000 photographs on the hard drive I use, so the recovery programs found tens of thousand of JPEG files and I had no way to know which ones to recover).

Took a deep breath and went to my office where I keep a second hard drive with my backups on it. Turns out I had backed up about two weeks before this potential tragidy (and those two weeks I had been away on business, so all those photos were on my laptop). I ended up losing nothing, but came so close to losing some precious memories.

Why did I share this? Because I remembered doing my backup right after reading a story like this where a person really did lose their photos.

So, backup, backup and backup again!

Weekend assignment: Introducing the weekend assignment

Looking to improve your photographic technique?

Perhaps you'd be interested in a Weekend assignment. That's what they are up to over at Photodoto, a new site on the scene.

"The idea is simple: reading about technique is pointless without practice. My hope is that the weekend assignment will not only help you improve your photography but also give you some creative ideas to focus on each weekend to help you make fresh images."

Kamis, 04 Mei 2006

Apple Releases Aperture 1.1.1

According the The Imaging Resource, Apple Computer has released an update to Aperture, its professional image editing application. There has been much news circulating recently about the fate of the software project.


The 1.1.1 update "addresses several issues related to performance, stability, color correction, and display compatibility. Apple recommends the update for all Aperture users.

The update is also available from the Aperture download page on Apple's Web site. To install the update, you must first update to version 1.1 under Mac OS 10.4.6. The update addresses "performance, stability, color correction, and display compatibility."

Correcting Color Balance in Digital Photos

Color can be a tricky thing. While we rarely think about it, color is not absolute. Your eyes perceive color differently in the daytime and at night, for example. In low light, your eyes can't distinguish color and you tend to see mainly in shades of gray, usually without even realizing it. Likewise, the color of light affects the color of objects we see. Something that looks white in the midday sun might look yellowish indoors, under an incandescent light bulb.

And digital cameras are no different. Often we are surprised by the results of our digital photos when they seem to have a color cast to them. Often indoor photos have an orange cast for example. To determine whether or not you need to adjust the overall color, look primarily at two areas: people's faces and objects that should be white or gray. If the faces look good, you will probably be happy with the picture. If they don't, look at the white or gray areas to see if they have a color cast. Then use the software to remove that color from the overall picture.

Your picture-editing software program will have a menu option called Color, Color Balance, or Variations. You can correct the color cast of your picture by adjusting it according to the chart below:

Color CastHow to Correct
Too yellowReduce yellow or increase blue
Too blueReduce blue or increase yellow
Too greenReduce green or increase magenta
Too magentaReduce magenta or increase green
Too redReduce red or increase cyan
Too cyanReduce cyan or increase red

Rabu, 03 Mei 2006

Shooting Digital | Book Review

Good digital photography books are hard to find.

There are plenty of good, even great, books about the art and science of photography in general. The newer ones often contain some specific digital information, and a fair bit of the info in even decades-old books is still perfectly applicable to digital. F-stops, focal lengths, lighting, composition; all of that stuff works much the same for digital as it does for film.

When a photo book starts banging on about emulsions and fixatives and cross processing and slide versus print film and enlarging lenses and colour compensation and how to keep light out of a Holga, though... well, those pages are good places for a digital photographer to rest a coffee cup.

And if you're looking for information about the relative merits of JPG, RAW and TIFF image formats in an old photo book, you're going to be looking for rather a while.


Buy one now!

Mikkel Aaland's Shooting Digital (subtitle: "Pro Tips for Taking Great Pictures with Your Digital Camera") doesn't pretend that film doesn't exist. It mentions silver halide technology when it's relevant, which'll help film photogs making the leap to digital to get up to speed. But like the title says, this is a book about digital photography, and it aims to give the most inexperienced digital happy-snapper information on how to get good results in all sorts of photographic situations.

It's got 269 content pages plus an index, and they're good-sized pages, too; the book's about 205 by 255mm. Every page contains either digital-relevant info, or example photos; Shooting Digital is lavishly illustrated. Nowhere is there information that's dead weight to a non-film photographer.

What you get

Shooting Digital opens with a primer on the differences between film and digital, resolution, lenses and focal length differences and what's up with that "35mm equivalent" stuff, the kind of digicam you'll need for different tasks, and the importance of knowing your particular camera's capabilities.

Throughout the book, the ordinary point-and-shoot consumer cameras that most people use get a lot of air time. Shooting Digital is not a publication for camera snobs or penis-free young professionals. The book even makes clear those times when a light, simple, flexible consumer camera will be a better photographic tool than a hefty pro-cam.

Chapter two is about shooting portraits, both candid and studio. How to stop your subject from looking like a serial killer, the Elephant Man or a Rembrandt shadow study, when and how you can use flash without ironing your subject's face flat, and why non-professional photographers might still want to bother setting up a mini-studio.

The most difficult portraits - kids, animals and people at parties - get their own whole chapter, which addresses picking the moment to shoot, dealing with shutter lag, and how to minimise the chance of disaster if it falls to you to photograph an Important Event ("Sorry, I missed that - could you take it again from 'I do'...?").

Next, it's action photography; more on how to pick the moment, how to minimise blur, and how to make worthwhile pictures even if you can't get rid of a lot of the blur.

Movie mode gets a whole chapter to itself. The slow seepage of camcorder capabilities into still cameras is one of the biggest new things about digital, but most "mini-movies" might as well not have been taken. Shooting Digital talks about how to make even very short movie clips say something, and how to use them to work around the artistic limitations of still photography in general. This chapter goes on to talk about mini-movie editing and distribution, with software suggestions for Windows and Mac.

Where Aaland talks about software, he tends to talk about the Mac more than Windows. Here it's particularly obvious, with more than two pages devoted to telling you how to add a fat black border to a low-res movie so it won't turn into LegoVision when played back on a Mac OS system which, apparently, plays everything full-screen.

Shooting Digital isn't a really Mac-centric book, though. Windows users don't have to plough through much more irrelevant info than this.

Next, there's a chapter on shooting on the road - kit bags, camera care and maintenance, storage and archiving, shooting strangers, dealing with adverse weather, and so on.

Next up, interiors and exteriors. The insides and outsides of buildings may have the decency to sit still, but that doesn't make them easy subjects. This chapter has lots to say about light, composition, exposure, and maximising image quality.

This flows naturally into the next chapter, on shooting landscapes. This chapter touches on the ineffable-word-of-God or idiotic-creativity-strangling (depending on your point of view) Rule of Thirds, but that's about as artsy-fartsy as Shooting Digital ever gets. I like the fact that Aaland talks about the technical aspects of beautiful pictures - How You Could Do This - and leaves the pictures to do the rest of the talking for themselves.

Next, there's a whole chapter about panoramas, including the fully or partially spherical "virtual reality" variety, and "object movies", where you can turn a virtual object around on screen rather than looking around a virtual landscape.

The next chapter's about "Shooting Your Stuff" - photographing objects for fun and profit. EBay sellers and hardware reviewers, ahoy; this is the bit where you learn how to make good looking product shots.

Next comes the out-there chapter - infrared, underwater and aerial photography, night shots, and the benefits of "digital grid" mosaics of low-res images. Then there's information on organising and sharing your digital photos - printing, storing, sorting, sending, showing - followed by some technical appendices about sensors and RAW data and image processing. And then there's the index.

Everything, and I do mean everything, has at least one photo to illustrate the principle being discussed, and Shooting Digital is also riddled with boxes talking about how software can help (in an old school photo book, these parts would be darkroom tips), what accessories may come in handy, and what's going on inside your digicam. The accessory and Know Your Camera boxes aren't necessarily specifically relevant to the chapter they appear in, but it's all good stuff.

Web support

Shooting Digital has a companion Web site, the inventively named Shooting-Digital.com. The site's not what you'd call a heavyweight at the moment, but it's got a bit of content and some perfectly good links, and promises to be better in the future.

Even if Mikkel Aaland gets eaten by a hippo tomorrow and the site freezes in its current state, though, there'll still be plenty of excellent photography sites on the Web.

Shooting Digital is worth the money without any extras. And, pleasingly, its price is not pumped up by a CD of questionable value inside the back cover.

Overall

Shooting Digital is both commendably up to date and likely to age well. It doesn't mention the very latest cameras and software, but it's not talking about particular cameras anyway, except to show the moments when some feature of a particular camera made it able to take some particular picture. In five years' time some of the technical info in Shooting Digital won't be relevant any more, but its basic points will stand - and there'll no doubt have been another edition or two by then, anyway.

Shooting Digital really is packed with useful advice, the value of much of which I can personally confirm. For instance, "Bracketing The Heck Out Of The Exposure" is indeed a valid technique, and yes, "prying flesh from frozen metal is painful".

Modern digital photography is, genuinely, a step up from film for most purposes, and it's only getting better. Sure, digital doesn't have the grass roots hackability of film, or the near-zero-dollar entry point, but just removing the image capacity and processing time limitations of film gives the photographer a much more direct involvement with the activity of image-making. Digital definitely does make learning easier.

And, importantly, consumer digicams now have good enough price/performance ratios that regular people really can do better with digital than they can with film - much better. Books about high quality digital photography are no longer like books about Lamborghini maintenance - this is mainstream now.

If all you ever do is take badly lit pictures of stunned-looking relatives with their noses in the dead centre of the frame, you're missing out on almost all of the value of any kind of photography. That's where this book comes in. Shooting Digital genuinely is full of "Pro Tips for Taking Great Pictures with Your Digital Camera"; it is the digital photography book that the vast bulk of digicam users have been waiting for.

Shooting Digital isn't likely to be very useful to someone who's already an accomplished photographer, even if they're moving into digital for the first time.

But if you don't look at your digital photos and think "Wow!" very often, it's high time you bought this book. Highly recommended.

Casio Announces the EXILIM ZOOM EX-Z5

The new EXILIM ZOOM EX-Z5 comes with 5 mega-pixel resolution, 3x optical zoom, and a 2.5-inch TFT color display to view the photos in comfort. The EX-Z5 includes a lithium-ion storage battery, USB docking station and a camera bag.

PRESS SUMMARY
The new EXILIM EX-Z5 is the perfect companion for the summer. With its matt-brushed, black surface it is a well-designed eye-catcher in every situation. At the same time the easy-to-handle digital camera convinces due to its simple operability and innovative EXILIM technologies. Users appreciate the 5 mega-pixel resolution with 3x optical zoom for fantastic photo quality, as well as the 2.5-inch TFT color display to view the photo motifs in comfort.

A large number of BEST SHOT motif programs, which can be easily activated via the BEST SHOT button, makes it easy to take photographs at selected moments. Beginners therefore also have the possibility of setting their digital camera specifically to outside motif conditions. The freely selectable Easy Mode prevents inadvertent adjustment of the technical settings and makes it easier than ever to take pictures. The DIRECT ON function rounds off the user-friendly operability of the EX-Z5.

The integrated Anti Shake DSP (Digital Signal Processor) electronically reduces the risk of camera shaking. The Auto Macro function, Quick Shutter function and multi auto focus also safeguard correct focusing. The innovative Revive Shot function complements the pallet of functions of the EX-Z5. Old and faded photos can be photographed directly out of the photo album and replenished by means of Color Restoration technology. Thanks to CASIO's own digital restoration including trapezium correction, photos shine resplendent in their new color gloss. The Rapid Flash function takes three pictures with flash in succession in only one second. Additional flash functions for beautiful photo results with little ambient light are the Flash Assist function and the 4-function flash with Red Eye Reduction and Soft Flash. The internal memory of the new EXILIM digital camera can be increased with commercially available SD-/MMC cards.

The EX-Z5 delivery package includes a lithium-ion storage battery (NP-20), USB cable, AV cable, extensive software on CD-ROM and a hand carrying-strap. USB docking station, camera bags, neck straps and other comprehensive accessories are available optionally in the latest EXILIM look.

The EXILIM ZOOM EX-Z5 is available from the end of May 2006.