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Archive for March, 2013

Aptina signs patent cross-license agreement with Sony

01 Mar

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Sensor maker Aptina has announced it has signed a patent cross-license agreement with Sony, that provides each company with access to the other’s patent portfolio. This agreement gives two prominent sensor makers access to some of each other’s technologies for future development of cameras and other imaging products.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Aptina signs patent cross-license agreement with Sony

01 Mar

aptina_1.jpg

Sensor maker Aptina has announced it has signed a patent cross-license agreement with Sony, that provides each company with access to the other’s patent portfolio. This agreement gives two prominent sensor makers access to some of each other’s technologies for future development of cameras and other imaging products.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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The Silent Valley: Landscapes Overtaken by Urbanization

01 Mar

[ By Steph in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

Silent Cities Yongliang 1

The rapid industrialization of China and its effects on the nation’s beautiful natural scenery are depicted taking over traditional landscape scenes in a stunningly detailed series of digital works by artist Yang Yongliang. The imagery of Song dynasty artists, who painted pastoral scenes filled with peaceful mountains and pristine waterways, is juxtaposed to disconcerting effect with futuristic megacities, leaving little land untouched by urban growth.

Silent Cities Yongliang 2

Silent Cities Yongliang 4

The viewer must get very close to each work to see all of the complexities contained within them. Yongliang has envisioned a future in which there is virtually no escape from the hand of man, with skyscrapers clinging to the sides of mountains and rivers clogged with boats. What might be a dark nighttime scene is hazy with light pollution, made even brighter by presumably smog-filled skies.

Silent Cities Yongliang 5

‘Sleepless Wonderland’, pictured above, even mimics the artistic style of 12th century Song dynasty painters with ‘cun’, traditional texture strokes that were used to outline trees and texture land surfaces. These Song landscapes have long been considered an ideal representation of the beauty of Chinese nature.

Silent Cities Yongliang 9

Silent Cities Yongliang 8

Silent Cities Yongliang 7

In other works, such as ‘Crocodile and Shotgun’, figures in traditional Chinese dress look out upon wasted landscapes filled with industrial remnants and land mines. ‘Bowl of Tapei’ offers two variations of the city: one idyllic, with hovering clouds, the other dystopian and steaming with factory smoke. See more at Galerie Paris Beijing.

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[ By Steph in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

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Samsung Galaxy S4 expected to be announced on March 14th

01 Mar

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Samsung is expected to unveil the Galaxy S4, its next flagship Android smartphone on March 14 at a press event in New York. The company took to its Twitter account this morning to tell followers to be ready ‘4’ the next Galaxy. Read more at connect.dpreview.com

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just posted: Fujifilm X-E1 Review

01 Mar

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Just posted: Fujifilm X-E1 review. With a sensor and imaging pipeline that is identical to the X-Pro1’s the X-E1 promises much of the X-Pro1’s fun in a more compact and affordable package. We’ve spent the past few weeks using the X-E1 intensely with the full range of lenses now available for the X-system, and have prepared a full in-depth review. Following the release of raw support from Capture 1 and much improved raw support from Adobe, the X-E1 (and X-Pro 1) just got a whole lot more appealing, too. Click through for a link to our full review. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Hands-on with weatherproof Sony Xperia Z and multi-screen YotaPhone

01 Mar

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Day four at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona and the team at connect.dpreview.com is still at the show, visiting manufacturer stands to find the newest in smartphone and tablet camera technology. We’ve added brief hands-on articles of the weatherproof Sony Xperia Z tablet and multi-screen YotaPhone. Click through for links to the latest content at connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Learning to See, Part VII

01 Mar

Whereas photography is about vision, composition is about aesthetics.

In our previous readings in this series we learned how colour,  contrast and tonal range have a dramatic effect on the overall result.  Some teachers may say the first important rule in making successful pictures is composition, and indeed that may be so.  However,  I also like my intrepid readers to be unique and true to themselves.  Therefore, let’s argue that colour impact is more important than composition  ( remember folks, this series is for the novice and beginner  so please let’s not start a raging debate and muddle the waters. I want our beginners to have fun and explore for themselves – they will figure it out.) 

              I had the good fortune of being raised in the country, on a twisting gravel road that followed a meandering river. Not far from the family farm was one of those old-styled triangular framed bridges that crossed the river, and just beyond that was a drumlin where one could sit and breathe in the unfolding landscape below.  It was idyllic, and a magnet for artists’ easels.

When my daily chores were finished I would often climb aboard the 28-inch hand-me-down bicycle, with worms in pocket and alder fishing pole, and peddle to my secret fishing hole. Sometimes I would arrive at my destination, other times I would be sidetracked by an artist standing atop the Lloyd Hill (as we called the drumlin), adorned in beret with brushes in hand.

Invariably each artist would add the S-curve of the river leading in from the bottom right corner of the blank canvas following a diagonal until it exited in the upper left corner. The triangular bridge was always in the bottom right-hand corner of the canvas, our farm in the upper right hand corner.  The distant pine forests would create the far-off horizon line. One artist who often visited the same location would place an elm tree in the left foreground of the scene to add balance and colour, reflecting the season. Ironically, the elm was not in the vista lying before her eyes, but was a creation of her imagination.

 

Many of the elements of good composition can be found in this image. Can you locate the diagonal lines, the various "C" and "S" curves, and triangle forms in this image?
Many of the elements of good composition can be found in this image. Can you locate the diagonal lines, the various “C” and “S” curves, and triangle forms in this image?

I liked this artists work best; she was not only painting the scene as it lay before her, but she was also adding her own elements —the elm tree— and expressing her mood and thoughts at that particular time. By breaking the realist rules of the day, she was making a statement with her art.

Some twenty-five years later I would often reflect on those early lessons that had registered by way of an artist tolerating the relentless gawking of a kid with worms escaping his shirt pocket.

What I found particularly intriguing, however, was how the artist would start with a blank canvas and then add elements as their imagination desired. By comparison the photographer starts with a full canvas and eliminates those elements that are undesirable.  Consequently we can say that a painter’s art form is an additive one, whereas a photographer’s is subtractive.

Over the next few issues let us explore some of the basic rules of composition by identifying the elements of pleasing aesthetics: the S-curve, the C-curve, how to create motion by using diagonals, forcing the viewer into the scene by way of using contrast and selective focus, how the use of triangles keep the eye moving within, and of course the time-honoured favourite of teachers everywhere … the Rule of Thirds.

Once we have explored the possibilities these guidelines can bring to our photography, we will then become rebels and toss them aside. Only by understanding the “rules” can we then effectively break them.

A newly hatched Blanding's Turtle, identified as a species-at-risk, is only about the size of the largest coin you have in your pocket. When taking portraits of just about all living creatures, a good rule-of-thumb is to position the camera at eye level of the subject.

A newly hatched Blanding’s Turtle, identified as a species-at-risk, is only about the size of the largest coin you have in your pocket. When taking portraits of just about all living creatures, a good rule-of-thumb is to position the camera at eye level of the subject.

 

In the interim, what I want you to do is start making pictures with an awareness of where you are placing your subject, and objectively pondering why you made that decision. There is no substitute for actually being out there enjoying the craft that made us acquire a camera in the first place. As you study your results ask if the image translates the message you were trying to make in the first place. This is not philosophical rhetoric – there really was a reason you made that picture in the first place.

What was it?

Study and analyse your picture, and learn from your exercises. First and foremost, keep your picture making fun.

And remember, if you are having fun  you are doing it right.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Learning to See, Part VII


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Vimeo adds ‘Looks’ filter effects for videos

01 Mar

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Video-sharing service Vimeo has partnered with video-editing company Vivoom, to add a filter effects tool called ‘Looks’. More than 500 effects ranging from vintage to futuristic and can be applied during video upload. Each effect can be adjusted from 0-100% intensity. Looks will be free to Vimeo’s registered users for the next 90 days. Read more at connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Snap Up this 50% Off Deal: 3 Captivating eBooks by Mitchell Kanashkevich

01 Mar

NewImageOver at our sister site – SnapnDeals – this month there’s a great deal running on 3 of our most popular eBooks from travel photographer Mitchell Kanashkevich.

Normally $ 59.99 this week you can grab the following 3 eBooks for just $ 29.95:

  • Natural Light: Mastering a Photographer’s Most Powerful Tool
  • Transcending Travel: A Guide to Captivating Travel Photography
  • Captivating Color: A Guide to Dramatic Color Photography

All 3 eBooks are packed with practical information, inspirational images and lots of diagrams – and as usual they’re backed by our 60 day money back guarantee in case you find they don’t meet your needs.

Learn more and snap up this bundle over at SnapnDeals here before it ends.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Snap Up this 50% Off Deal: 3 Captivating eBooks by Mitchell Kanashkevich


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Satechi introduces BT Smart Trigger wireless shutter release for Canon

01 Mar

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Accessory maker Satechi has announced the BT Smart Trigger, an iOS-controlled Bluetooth 4.0 shutter release for Canon DSLRs. It features multiple shooting modes including timelapse and long exposures, via the free Smart Trigger app. The trigger has a claimed battery life of up to 10 years and range of 50 feet. It is currently available for an introductory price of $ 44.99. An Android-compatible version will be available from March 2013.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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