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Posts Tagged ‘500px’

500px now supporting Lytro ‘Living Pictures’, offering users $250 rebate on Illum

25 Jul

Photo sharing site 500px has announced that it is now supporting images uploaded in Lytro’s unique ‘Living Pictures’ format, and is offering its customers a $ 250 discount on the purchase of Lytro’s Illum camera (MSRP $ 1599). The Illum is available now for pre-order and is expected to start shipping within the next couple of weeks. Click through for more information.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Lytro Launches Open-Source Web Viewer; 500px to Host First Living Pictures Gallery

12 Jun

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As Lytro prepares for the launch of its second generation light field camera, the Lytro Illum, the company faces a challenge: how does one easily display and share the ‘living pictures’ their cameras produce? Today the company announced plans to open-source its Living Picture Player – a viewer for its light field images. The WebGL-based player can be integrated into any website or social media platform, thereby allowing for easy sharing of Lytro’s living pictures. 500px will be the first to host an image gallery based on this player.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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500px Prime goes live, photographers now get 70% not 30%

08 Mar

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A few weeks ago we reported on the announcement of 500px ‘Prime’ a licensing service built into the popular photography website that was designed to allow users to make some cash from their images. Originally, the service was set to offer photographers a 30% cut of image sales at a minimum price per image of $ 250. A lot of photographers weren’t happy with the 70/30 split but now Prime is live, the terms have changed and photographers are being offered 70%, with new ‘flat rate $ 250 pricing. Click through for more details. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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500px ‘Prime’ is a licensing marketplace with 30% cut for photographers

08 Feb

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Photo-sharing site 500px has launched ‘Prime’ a licensing service that it is describing as ‘the world’s most intelligent marketplace’ with fees that start at $ 250. Interestingly, the company is also claiming that the photographer will get 30% of every fee for a licensed image, no matter ‘how it is bought, who buys it, or under what license’. Click through for more details. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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How to Upload Photos to Flickr and 500px using Lightroom 5

14 Dec

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

The main benefit of Lightroom’s Library module is that it saves you time. It is much quicker, and ultimately simpler, to organize your photos using Lightroom Collections, than it is to search through the folders on your hard drive containing those photos when you need something.

The skills you’ve learned so far in this series (yes, there is a series – I’ll provide links to the relevant articles at the appropriate points) all come together with Lightroom’s Publish Services. You can use these to publish photos to photo sharing websites like Facebook, Behance, Flickr, 500px and more. Today I’ll concentrate on the two you are most likely to use for your best images: Flickr and 500px.

How to Upload Photos to Flickr and 500px using Lightroom 5

Publishing Collections

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

Lightroom’s Publish Services use a special type of Collection called Published Collections (there are also Published Collection Sets and Published Smart Collections). These are the same as regular Collections (which you can learn more about in my article Use Lightroom Collections to Improve Your Workflow) except for these key differences:

  • Published Collections have one purpose only:  to publish your images to either a hard drive location or a photo sharing website such as those listed above.
  • Published Collections are dynamic. They tell you if a photo has changed after you have published it, so you can re-publish it.

Here’s how it works. You create a Published Collection containing the photos that you would like to upload to a website (for example, Flickr). Lightroom tells you which photos have already been uploaded, and which ones haven’t. But wait, there’s more: if you publish a photo to Flickr, then make changes to that photo in Lightroom’s Develop module, Lightroom’s Publish Service marks it and gives you the option of uploading it again.

That’s clever, and very, very useful, as it enables you to see at a glance whether you have uploaded the most recent version.

Setting up a new Flickr Publish Collection

That’s the theory, let’s see how to put it into action:

Step 1. Go to the Publish Services panel. It’s at the bottom of the left-hand panels in the Library module (see below)

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

Step 2. Click the New Published Collection icon and select the Go to Publishing Manager option.

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

Step 3. Click the Add button in the bottom left of the Publishing Manager window.

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

Step 4. In the next window, select Flickr from the Via Service drop-down menu. Type a name for your service underneath.

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Alternatively, if this is the first time you’ve done it, you’ll see something like the screenshot below. Click the words Set Up next to the Flickr icon to get started.

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Step 5. Start by clicking the Authorize button and entering your Flickr log-in details. This authorizes Lightroom to access your Flickr account.

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Step 6. Now it’s just a simple matter of adjusting the settings to what you want. The most important ones are near the bottom of the Publishing Manager window. You can set things like image quality, image size and sharpening, add a watermark, set which metadata (if any) to include and select the appropriate privacy setting. Press the Save button at the bottom-right of the window when you’re done. The Flickr Publish Service is now set up.

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Using the Flickr Publish Service

You’ll see that there is a Published Collection called Photostream in the Flickr Publish Service. Any photos you add to this Published Collection will be uploaded to your Flickr account using the size and quality settings you selected earlier.

Lightroom 5 Publish Services

Click on the Photostream Publish Collection and you’ll see something like the image below if you’re in Grid View – press ‘G’ on your keyboard if you aren’t. If you’re not familiar with how Grid View works, then see my article Making Sense of Lightroom’s Grid View.

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There are three sections:

New Photos to Publish: photos added to the Published Collection but not yet uploaded to Flickr. Click the Publish button at the top right to publish them.

Modified Photos to Re-Publish: these are photos already uploaded to Flickr that have changed since being published. Note that any change, however minor, will result in a photo appearing in this section. That includes things like adding keywords, or any tweaks you make in the Develop module. Modified photos are uploaded again when you press the Publish button. If you don’t want to upload the modified photo, right-click on the thumbnail and select the Mark as Up-to-Date option.

Published Photos: Photos already published to Flickr.

You can also manage Flickr Photosets from within Lightroom. Right-click the Flickr Published Collection heading and select Create Photoset from the menu. This lets you add photos to Sets as well as your photostream.

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Finally, another benefit of using Lightroom’s Publish Services is that you can add keywords and a description to your images in Lightroom and these are populated automatically when you upload your photos to a photo sharing website. That means you only have to type in those details once, instead of multiple times. You can learn more about keywords in my article Creative Ways to Use Keywords in Lightroom 5.

Publishing to 500px

The 500px Publish Service works in a similar way to the Flickr Publish Service except that it is not built-in to Lightroom. You need to download the plug-in from the 500px website, which you can do here.

Unzip the file and move it to your Programs folder (PC) or Applications folder (Mac). Go to the Lightroom Plug-in Manager (File > Plug-in Manager) and click the Add button to install the plug-in. Once installed, it works virtually the same way as the Flickr Publish Service. The main difference is that the 500px plug-in downloads any photos you have already uploaded to 500px and adds them to your Lightroom Catalog.

Mastering Lightroom Book One: The Library Module

Mastering Lightroom ebook

My latest ebook Mastering Lightroom Book One: The Library Module is a complete guide to using Lightroom’s Library module to import, organize and search your photo files. You’ll learn how to tame your growing photo collection using Collections and Collection Sets, and how to save time so you can spend more time in the Develop module processing your photos.

The post How to Upload Photos to Flickr and 500px using Lightroom 5 by Andrew Gibson appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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500px redesigns online photo portfolios

12 Apr

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500px has redesigned its online photo portfolio feature, offering photographers more customization tools and advanced options for interacting with followers and customers. The new portfolio UX is expected to roll out by May and will allow for store integration so visitors can purchase photos directly from a portfolio, and blog integration and even full CSS customization. Learn more about the upcoming changes at connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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500px and the challenges of upscaling

20 Dec

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Photo sharing site 500px has become a popular venue amongst photographers – resembling in many ways the photography-friendly environment that made Flickr popular a few years ago. It faces a range of challenges as it grows – including the how to keep exposing great photography in the face of booming membership and attempts to ‘game’ its systems. Connect discusses these challenges and some clever cloud-based features about to be launched with 500px CEO Oleg Gutsol.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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500px extends mobile platform to iPhone

29 Nov

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Connect: Photographers who use the photo sharing platform 500px can now access their images via an iPhone app released today. Previously, only iPad and Android versions of the app were available. The iOS version is compatible with iPhone, iPod touch and iPad, and requires iOS 5.0 or later. ‘With our new iPhone app, we are continuing to push the boundaries to create a seamless, premium photo sharing experience for photographers, on any device they use,’ said Oleg Gutsol, 500px CEO.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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