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Archive for May, 2013

Selbstportraits: Ein guter Start in die Portraitfotografie

21 May

Wie wahrscheinlich die meisten habe ich nach meinem ersten Kamerakontakt Blumen und Katzen fotografiert. Das sind eben auch relativ dankbare Anfängermotive. Und wahrscheinlich würde ich heute noch auf dem Bauch liegend Gänseblümchen im Garten ablichten, wenn ich mich nicht auf Flickr angemeldet hätte.

Dort gab es viele schöne Bilder von Blumen und Katzen, die zeigten, dass auch diese Motive weit mehr als Anfängermaterial sein können – aber das war es nicht, was meine Welt veränderte.

Es waren vor allem Fotografinnen wie Kalie Garrett und Rosie Hardy, die mich in die wunderbare Welt der Selbstportraits entführten. Ich war begeistert und bin versucht zu sagen, es war Liebe auf den ersten Blick. Ich wusste, ich wollte Menschen fotografieren.

Die Frage war nur: Woher die Menschen nehmen? Wer hat Zeit und Lust, miese Anfängerfotos von sich machen zu lassen? Denn nicht jeder hat eine hübsche kleine Schwester, gutmütige Freunde mit viel Zeit oder Lust, Geld für Modelle auszugeben. Und vor allem: Woher das Selbstbewusstsein nehmen, sich selbst als Portraitfotograf anzupreisen? Daher schienen Selbstportraits erst einmal die einfachste Möglichkeit zu sein.

© Laura Zalenga

Klar, der Anfang war auch hier nicht leicht. Ich habe ein Weile gebraucht, bis ich herausfand, wie ich das Bild wirklich scharf bekomme, wenn ich im Moment der Auslösung nicht hinter der Kamera stehe. Aber durch diese technischen Fragen habe ich meine Kamera kennen und verstehen gelernt.

Die ersten Ergebnisse waren trotzdem enttäuschend. Ich konnte zwar nicht genau definieren, woran es lag, aber verglichen mit meinen Vorbildern sahen sie einfach nicht gut aus. Nach und nach entwickelte ich dann einen Blick für das, was mir nicht gefiel und versuchte, es zu verändern. Bis ich dann schließlich Fotografien machte, mit denen ich zufrieden war, dauerte es allerdings trotzdem noch eine ganze Weile.

© Laura Zalenga

Erst seit kurzem arbeite ich regelmäßig mit anderen Menschen vor meiner Kamera und erst jetzt wird mir bewusst, wie sehr ich dabei von meinem Selbstportraitstudium profitiere. Nicht nur, weil ich alles in Ruhe lernen konnte, ohne meine Unsicherheit vor einem Modell verstecken zu müssen. Nicht nur, weil ich jederzeit üben konnte, weil ich ja nur mich und die Kamera brauchte.

Nicht nur, weil mir nichts peinlich sein musste, weil nur ich die Ergebnisse zu Gesicht bekam. Nicht nur, weil ich völlig frei experimentieren konnte, weil ich allein der Auftraggeber war. Sondern auch, weil ich heute weiß, wie sich die Person hinter der Kamera fühlt, denn ich kenne ihren Blickwinkel.

© Laura Zalenga

Alles, was ich heute über Komposition, Motiv, Posen, Licht und Kameratechnik weiß, habe ich an mir selbst getestet und gelernt. Und zwar allein durch erkannte Fehler. Besser sich selbst den Kopf angeschnitten als einem Kunden und lieber an sich selbst erkennen, dass die Schärfe auf den Augen liegen sollte und nicht auf der Nase.

© Laura Zalenga

Worauf ich hinaus möchte? Jeder, der bei sich die Liebe zur Portraitfotografie entflammen spürt, aber nicht weiß, wie und mit wem anzufangen, sollte die Selbstportraitschule in Betracht ziehen. Die zeitliche Unabhängigkeit, völlige Sicherheit vor peinlichen Momenten und die Freiheit, jedes noch so unmögliche Experiment wagen zu können, sind doch ein gutes Angebot oder?

Eine eventuelle Nebenwirkung sollte aber nicht unerwähnt bleiben: Selbstportraits sind nicht nur Schule, sondern auch sehr viel Spaß, daher besteht in manchen Fällen Suchtgefahr. Diese ist nicht behandelbar, aber nach bisherigen Erkenntnissen ungefährlich.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Auto Draft

21 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Drawing & Digital. ]

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Infinite Garden Multiplies Miniature Forest with Mirrors

21 May

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Garden Optical Illusion 1

Peering through a hole in the hovering white skin of an unusual installation at the 22nd International International Garden Festival of Chaumont Sur Loire, France, seems to transport the viewer into a different place altogether. What could not be more than a few square meters, judging by the outside dimensions, becomes a vast forest that seemingly continues without end. Outside-In is a ‘visual paradox’ that intends to show us how relying on our senses can limit our imagination.

Garden Optical Illusion 2

Designed by Meir Lobaton Corona and Ulli Heckmann architects, the installation is a white canvas box punctured with circular windows, rendering a small planted area inaccessible. But mirrors mounted inside that box reflect the few trees that are actually contained within it. The effect is enhanced in warm seasons, when the leaves are at their lushest.

Garden Optical Illusion 3

“We think that all perception is locked within our body: The sense of seeing from the eyes, the sense of hearing from the ears, the sense of smelling from the nose, the sense of tasting from the mouth, and the sense of touch primarily from the hands,” say the creators.  “Our garden, entitled ‘outside-in’, is conceived as a visual paradox, as device that enhances such conditions in order to make the audience realize how by relying only on sight we rely on imagination, that is to say, on interpretation.”

Garden Optical Illusion 4

“‘Outside-in’ is a garden within a garden, a contemplative space, a small universe where landscape and architecture are fused to create an experience capable of raising questions rather than answering them, a live mechanism whose aim is to make us reflect on the contrast between what we know and what we see, demanding us to constantly negotiate the gap between physical reality and visual perception. It is a meditation on space, light, and the possibility of infinity as seen through the limitless reflections of a trapped narrative meticulously fitted inside a world of two-way mirrors.”

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[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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All-new Flickr comes with free terabyte – and ads

21 May

flickr-logo.jpeg

Flickr fans may find the lure of a free terabyte attractive, but they might be put off by the accompanying advertisements that support Flickr’s new free account model. A major update to the photo sharing service has completely revamped the look of accounts and restructured the way users may pay for Flickr in the future. We take a look at the changes on connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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New York Times details photo editing policy for fashion magazine

21 May

nytcover.jpg

A cover image in the latest issue of the New York Times’ monthly style magazine, T, has led to an interesting discussion about the newspaper’s policy on photo retouching. While editors forbid any image manipulation beyond, ‘minor color-toning and brightness’ in news stories, retouches and removal of blemishes are allowed in the style magazine’s fashion photography. Does a newspaper risk credibility by allowing retouching on editorially-branded content? Click to read more and share your thoughts.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Holy Mash Potatoes Batman! Flickr to Offer All Users 1 Terabyte of Free Photo Storage!

21 May

Wow! Well just when you thought the Tumblr acquisition was the big Yahoo news of the day, Yahoo drops yet another bombshell. All free accounts on Flickr just got upgraded to 1 terabyte of FREE storage!

Yep, you heard that correctly; the Flickr 200 photo limit for free accounts is being done away with. If you’re one of those Flickr users who, in the past, complained about Flickr holding your photos beyond 200 in a free account “hostage,” well, the Navy Seals at Flickr HQ have just set them all free.

Starting today, everyone will be able to upload full high res photos up to 50MB to Flickr for FREE up to 1 terabyte. For the .01% of the population who might store more than a terabyte on Flickr, Flickr will sell you an additional terabyte beyond your free one for $ 499 per year. By comparison, Google would charge you about $ 1,199 for 2 terabytes of storage per year and only gives you 15GB of high res storage for free. Facebook doesn’t allow high res photos at all and won’t allow photos larger than 2048px on the site.

While this might sound really great for today’s free account users, it should be noted that the new free 1 TB account will contain advertising. If you want to opt out of advertising on your free account, you will need to pay $ 49 per year….

…unless…

you are already an existing Pro account member. While Flickr will no longer offer new Pro accounts, existing Pros will be allowed to keep their Pro account and continue paying $ 24.95/year for full unlimited high res ad free storage (still the best deal in my opinion).

If a user wants to downgrade from their current paid Pro account today, Flickr will allow them to do this and claim their 1TB free/ad supported account and rebate back the residual remaining value on their Pro account early.

In my opinion, this is a game changer. Just last week at Google I/O, Google upgraded everyone from 5GB of free, high res storage to 15GB of free, high res storage, but upgrading from 15GB to 1TB is quite a leap from there.

Of course, on Google+ there are no ads, and on a 1TB free Flickr account a user would see ads.

You have to love competition in the online photo space and today Flickr is raising the stakes. This will likely put more pressure on Google and Facebook both to consider increasing high res storage for users as well.

While giving all users 1TB of free storage was the biggest news from Flickr today, it is only the beginning.

In addition to offering all users 1TB of free storage, today Flickr also ships their highly anticipated Android app. Many users were super excited late last year when Flickr rolled out their new iPhone app. I reviewed the iPhone app here. Now Flickr is bringing a similar, amazing mobile experience to Android users. I was able to see the new app prior to release and it is truly awesome — I’d say even BETTER than the highly regarded 4.5/5 rated iPhone version — one more reason to switch to Android right?

But there’s more…

In addition to an increase in storage limits and a new Android app, Flickr is also shipping today a complete redesign of the entire site. The new version is amazing and beautiful and full of mosaic walls of photos with infinite scroll everywhere. Gone are the days of tiny little thumbnail results using Flickr image search (my favorite feature in today’s new site redesign). Instead, now you see big, bold images of whatever your looking for.

Sets on Flickr were also given this same facelift. With the old Flickr, the sets page looked the same as it had since as long as I can remember (I joined Flickr in 2004). Sets contained super tiny little teensy weensy thumbnails of square icons for photos. Today’s release showcases photos in sets in much larger format.

The Flickr photo page now shows a giant, oversized version of your photo with just enough basic photo info above the fold on the page to tempt the user into scrolling down for more. The Flickr recent activity stream now shows giant, oversized photos by your contacts and lots of new information.

It really is a whole new Flickr in the best way possible.

Undoubtedly there will be some critics of the new Flickr site, just like there were critics when the automobile came out and some crotchety old folks still wanted to use their horse and buggy. This is, however, in my opinion the single most positive day for innovation being released by Flickr ever.

Last night when digesting all of the Yahoo Tumblr news, I posted on Twitter, Flickr + Tumblr = chocolate + peanut butter. I’m a huge fan of Reeces Peanut Butter Cups and I think that, in addition to this Flickr news today, future innovation coming from Tumblr and the Tumblr team will only be positive for Flickr. Already, I get the most viral views on my Flickr photos from Tumblr more than any other site. By deepening the Flickr/Tumblr integration, this will create even more synergy for Yahoo.

Maybe instead of titling this post “Holy Mash Potatoes Batman,” I should have titled it “How Yahoo got its Groove Back” — because with what’s gone on there over the past 24 hours, I’d say Yahoo, once again, is a power player in social media.

There is still work at Flickr that needs to be done — groups still need a refresh, for example — but after failing to innovate for years, Yahoo is showing the world that Flickr is indeed super important to their company and that photos are very important to a biggr, boldr, more beautiful Yahoo going forward. Yahoo is investing heavily in Flickr (they are hiring), the first Yahoo CEO ever has an actual active Flickr account, and staff morale feels super high. Flickr VP Brett Wayn and Flickr Head of Product Markus Spiering, are leading the charge, backed by strong commitment from senior management and an enthusiastic all-star team who is pushing out the most significant innovation we’ve seen at Flickr yet.

Congrats to the Flickr team on a wonderful release today.

You can find me on Flickr here and posting again on Tumblr now here.


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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Google releases more photocentric Google+ app for Android

21 May

googleplus2.png

At last week’s I/O developer conference Google announced a number of upgrades to the photo section of its Google+ social network, including features such as ‘Auto-Highlight’, ‘Auto-Enhance’ and ‘Auto’-Awesome’. To make the same experience available on its mobile platform the search giant has released an upgraded Google+ app for Android. Click through to Connect to find out more.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Book Review: Shooting in Sh*tty Light

21 May

cover.jpg

Lindsay Adler and Erik Valind, both working professionals and educators, have written a beginner’s guide to photographic lighting with an unusual conceit at its core. By structuring a book around a list of common challenges – what they call the ‘top ten worst situations’ – they’ve created a digestible, useful ‘lighting 101’ guide. In this short review, Adam Koplan takes a look at their book ‘Shooting in Sh**ty Light: The Top Ten Worst Photography Lighting Situations and How to Conquer Them’.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Props Are Evil: How To Use Them For Good

21 May

A Guest Post by Lynsey Peterson.

Nothing freaks me out like props.  Every time I see a picture of flower girls holding an empty frame that is outlining a bride and groom kissing in the distance, I die a little inside.  

Whenever I am subjected to a photo that attempts to bring in a letter jacket and a football and a casual I’m-just-hanging-out-here-in-my-letter-jacket-holding-my-football expression, I try to remember that I am terrible at making coffee and therefore cannot give-up photography immediately and go get an application at Starbucks.  We have come to a place where portrait photography trends are natural and candid and while you would think that means we are leaving all props behind to die a formal, posed, and staged death, we just can’t help ourselves from wanting to put a little extra something in there.  

Something personal.  Or themed.  Or fun.  As a photographer, the logistics of getting something personal or themed or fun in an image and having it look natural are overwhelmingly complicated.  Often leading to overwhelmingly complicated images.  But if done right, a little extra something adds…….a little extra something.  Photographing people with props comes down to one basic thing: how can you make this interact with that?

Props1 1

Make it Natural

This shot doesn’t scream A PROP WAS USED HERE, though it was.  This bride did not provide me with a “must have” shot list, which of course makes her my favorite bride ever, but she had one simple request: one picture of her drinking a can of PBR in her wedding gown.  

Now admittedly when she told me that, I wanted to pass out from the biggest eye roll that has ever happened because……….how on earth was I going to pull that off?  The goal was a tongue-in-cheek stylish effort that didn’t come across as a classless snapshot.  

Had there been any posing or obvious mention of the can, it could have easily gone from sweet and funny to tasteless and tacky.  Instead it’s a near romantic take on a candid moment at a reception.  It’s rare that making a joke out of the prop or drawing obvious attention to it generates a beautiful and interesting portrait.  Since it’s already on the losing side of “one of these things is not like the other”, there is no need to point it out.

Props2 1 

Make it Different

When it comes to props in portrait photography, chances are good that it’s been done before.  So do it different.  Photography is just storytelling and a prop is just another subject in your cast of characters; how many lines it gets is totally up to you.  High school seniors tend to be the group most interested in including a prop.  Which is often sports equipment and getting creative and unposed with things like sporting equipment is not an easy task.  Step out of the intended purpose and treat it like an object.  

A soccer ball doesn’t have to go at the feet, a letter jacket doesn’t have to be worn, a lacrosse stick doesn’t have to……do whatever it is that lacrosse sticks do.  The image is about a person—the viewer knows what the intended purpose is of a practical use prop.

Props3

Make it Simple

Including a prop adds another level for the eye to process, so clean up everything else as much as you can.  A tight frame, a clean background, and minimal distractions are all your friends.  Stick with them and they won’t do you wrong.

Props4

Make it Meaningful

As props go, the easiest of the bunch are the ones people want included because they are highly personal and mean a great deal.  Wedding rings, special stuffed animals, maybe their cat (tip: avoid this one if you can).  The interaction here will be easier, so the key is highlighting the connection between the person and their special prop.  

The book in this photo was written by their great-grandmother and has obvious family importance.  Before this shot I took dozens of them just holding the book, wanting badly to document the entire cover.  Finally it dawned on me that the the story here was about kids having something so significantly personal and historic still able to generate their interest.  Great images are never about the prop, but the people it connects to and why.  

Props5 1

Make it Timeless

Props have a way of dating a photograph.  Take a moment to consider what the image you are about to take will feel like in 10 years.  Or 20.  Or 50.  If there is anything that can be changed, deleted, or moved so that in a decade this image will have every bit as much relevance as it has today, do it.  

These kids had on screen print t-shirts featuring cartoon characters that most of us likely won’t know in a few years.  T-shirts, messy faces, lollipops, and two boys makes for a complicated snapshot.  Colorful props, interaction, and sweet expressions makes for a timeless portrait.  

Props6 1

Make it make Sense

In my opinion, there is no tougher prop than a costume.  And when these sweet girls showed up in tutus at a suburban park, I had no idea how PINK TUTUS and grass and dirt were going to mix together.  Seemed a little like onion flavored ice cream.  If you take it apart piece by piece, it’s easier to vision it as a whole.  

I knew I wanted to show off the tutus full glory so the girls had to be standing.  I wanted the relationship of the sisters to play a huge role.  And I wanted it to have a feeling of magic.  Much like how I feel when I go to the park in my own pink tutu.

Props7 1

With enough creativity, almost any prop can make an image fun, personal, and interesting.  Unless someone shows up with their cat and lacrosse stick.  Then you’re on your own.

Check out more of Lynsey Peterson’s work on her website.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Props Are Evil: How To Use Them For Good


Digital Photography School

 
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DxOMark investigates lenses for the Nikon D600

20 May

DxOMark-logo-520.jpg

Our friends and collaborators over at DxOMark have recently been looking into how lenses score on specific cameras, and the latest model they’ve examined is the Nikon D600. In a three-part article published at the end of last week, they investigate how 70 lenses from Carl Zeiss, Nikon, Samyang, Sigma, Tamron and Tokina measure up on the D600’s 24MP sensor.  The article also compares how given lenses score on the D600 compared to the 36MP D800 and 24MP D3X. Click through for links to the three parts of the article.    

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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