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Archive for May, 2013

9 May, 2013 – What’s The Gold Standard of Inkjet Papers

09 May

Ilford has recently introduced five new inkjet papers. How do they compare to the previous "gold standard"? Find out in our latest paper review article, writtten by Mark Segal and Michael.

         

"Yes I downloaded the videos. THEY ARE AWESOME!!! I learned so much I think my brain is going to explode.


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Poll: What concerns you most about Adobe’s move to subscription software?

09 May

AdobeCClogo.png

Adobe’s decision to move to a subscription-based model for its professional creative software has prompted probably  the most impassioned response we’ve ever seen to a news story on dpreview.com. There’s a risk that the sheer volume of comments might prevent a clear message being heard, so we’ve prepared a poll of the most common complaints, to help establish what your biggest concerns are.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Come Photowalk in the Biggest Photowalk In History with My Pals Trey Ratcliff and Robert Scoble — We’re Giving Away Google Glass!

09 May

New Videocast Photo Talk Plus Premiers Live Tonight at 8PM PST

Next Tuesday evening, May 14th at 5:30pm, my good pals Trey Ratcliff, Robert Scoble and the awesome team at Google+ Photos will be joining me for an historic and truly epic photowalk in San Francisco. We think it will probably be the largest photowalk ever held in the history of photowalking — already almost 600 people have signed up! We will start the walk in Yerba Buena Gardens in downtown San Francisco.

Most exciting, one of our lucky photowalkers will win Google Glass. That’s right, a winner will be selected randomly — you must pre-register for the walk here and must be present at the end of the photowalk in person to win. We will go over the rules and details on how to win the Glass at the photowalk.

This is a free event open to everyone regardless of skill, experience, camera type, etc. Bring your Holga/Diana or your Canon 5D Mark III or your Rebel or your Android phone — or even that other phone that I can’t ever remember the name of ;)

We will be announcing more details between now and the event, but you won’t want to miss this fantastic San Francisco event. We will have a great afterparty too where we can all geek out about photography.

See you there!


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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Future Past: 7 Wonders Predicted 100+ Years Ago

08 May

[ By Steph in Technology & Vintage & Retro. ]

Future Past Predictions Main

“These prophecies will seem strange, almost impossible,” reads the intro to a 1900 article printed in the Ladies Home Journal entitled ‘What May Happen in the Next Hundred Years.‘ And over a century later, many of them do. The “wisest and most careful men in our great institutions of science and learning” envisioned that by the year 2001, we humans would have willfully made all wild animals extinct to make room for ourselves, and we’d be eating sterile foods zipped from laboratories to our homes via pneumatic tubes. But some of these ideas are more prescient than others, accurately imagining innovations like factory farming and even the internet.

Wild Animals Don’t Exist Anymore, Except in Zoos

Future Past Predictions Wild Animals

(image via: paleofuture)

“Man’s steadily increasing need for more space will eventually force untamed beasts to pay their way in the scheme of things, or join the species already extinct,” reads a 1926 article in the Galveston Daily News. That attitude was surprisingly common during the early 20th century, despite the fact that the predictions in the Ladies Home Journal article underestimated a century of future population growth by billions. The Ladies Home Journal article predicted that animals wouldn’t exist in the wild anymore at all, and would only be found in zoos, unless they were in use as livestock or service animals.

The article predicts that rats and mice will have been completely exterminated (along with mosquitoes, flies and roaches, which would require filling in all swamplands and chemically treating all still-water streams) and that cows will be so fat, they’ll be as slow as livestock pigs. “Food animals will be bred to expend practically all of their life energy in producing meat, milk, wool and other by-products. Horns, bones, muscles and lungs will have been neglected.” Sounds like modern-day conditions at many of America’s largest factory farms.

Purchases and Pre-Cooked Meals Are Delivered via Pneumatic Tubes

Future Past Predictions Pneumatic Tubes

(image via: machinelake)

In an era when compressed food tablets actually seemed like a great idea, sterile pre-cooked meals made in laboratories rather than kitchens were an appealing concept. The Ladies Home Journal article imagines that ready-cooked meals would zoom from these central labs to private homes via a vast system of pneumatic tubes. Equipped with all manner of electrical gadgets not found in homes, these laboratories would also be able to supply food cheaper than it would cost to cook for yourself, since they’re buying ingredients in such large quantities. You press a button, your food zips to you within minutes, and then you send the packaging and utensils back to be chemically cleaned. Store purchases and mail would be delivered in much the same way.

Furthermore, you’d never have to worry about anyone breathing on your food, or exposing it to the atmosphere of the busy streets. Shopkeepers would be arrested if they dared to store food that wasn’t essentially hermetically sealed, or if they sold “stale or adulterated produce.” The miracle of always-fresh produce would be achieved using liquid-air refrigerators.

The idea of pneumatic delivery hasn’t gone away altogether – some cities use pneumatic tubes to dispose of trash, and a company called the Foodtubes Project aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by transferring much of the UK’s deliveries from trucks on the roads to underground tubes.

The Suburb is the Promised Land for Taller, Healthier Americans

Future Past Predictions Broadacre Suburbia

(image via: mediaarchitecture.at)

The suburbs seemed like utopia for people living in clogged, smoggy cities. The predictions of the day envisioned Americans not only living much longer thanks to quiet lives in the peaceful suburbs, but also be one to two inches taller on average thanks to better health “due to vast reforms in medicine, sanitation, food and athletics.” In fact, suburbs would be so amazingly beneficial for mankind, city housing would be practically eliminated, and building in blocks would be illegal.

Americans, and humans in general, are indeed taller than we were in the year 1900, thanks to ample amounts of nutritious foods, though that could very well change with the unhealthy fast-food diets that have become increasingly common over recent decades. The suburban dream hit its peak during the ’50s, however, and is now starting to fizzle, with many young people choosing to live in cities for access to efficient transportation, jobs and culture.

Zero Traffic Noise in Cities as Transit Goes Underground

Future Past Predictions Carless Cities

(image via: wikimedia commons)

The dream of the suburbs would be achieved with quiet, high-speed transportation that was virtually invisible at surface level, with “well-lighted and well-ventilated” underground railways in broad subways or tunnels, as well as monorails and elevated streets. Trains would take passengers from New York to San Francisco in a day and a night (imagine!). It’s easy to see why this seemed so readily achievable in the year 1900; the first underground railway in the world opened in London in 1863 and transportation grew more efficient by the year. People hadn’t yet been seduced by the status and freedom of individual automobiles.

We may have high-speed trains in much of the world (though sadly, still not in most of America), but car-free cities “free from all noises” are far from our current reality. However, at least one city may be able to achieve that ideal: ‘Great City’, a dense carless metropolis being built from scratch in a rural area outside Chengdu, China.

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Future Past 7 Wonders Predicted 100 Years Ago

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[ By Steph in Technology & Vintage & Retro. ]

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Looking into the future of mobile photography

08 May

glass1.jpg

As smartphone cameras continuously improve, this dynamic technology has us wondering what’s in store for both the future of such devices and the way we use them as photographers. Will the constant upgrade cycle and users’ desire for new features make for smartphones with super cameras? Or maybe they’ll play more nicely as companion gadgets to dedicated cameras, rather than attempting to do it all themselves. Looking at what’s currently rumored to be in the works, maybe we can wrap our heads around what the future of such connected cameras – and photography – might look like, today on Connect.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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8. Mai 2013

08 May

Ein Beitrag von: Thomas Lieser

feinkot © Thomas Lieser


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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HCAC: Soprano Rebecca Hargrove

08 May

It's May. Which always means two things for me: dealing with heavy allergies and beginning my next batch of portraits for the Howard County Arts Council.

The drudgery of allergies is offset by the pure pleasure that is getting to work with a group of insanely talented young people. Doing the portraiture for the Rising Stars program is one of my favorite projects of the year.

One of the first this year was soprano Rebecca Hargrove, who we photographed in the venerable Garaj Mahal Studios…

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Strobist

 
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8 May, 2014 – Bye Bye Facebook?

08 May

Well, I tried. I joined Facebook a few days ago, and today found myself locked out of my account. The Facebook security system asked me to indentify a series of people by their picture. In most cases the pictures were babies, school kids or of animals.  WTF?

So, for the time being, my flirtation of Facebook has come to an abrupt halt. Maybe when I can log back in, I’ll once again be part of the global breakfast club… or maybe not. I’ll keep you informed.

In the meantime I’ll use this space to send out a smoke signal that Chris and I are currently in Chicago shooting a Lightroom 5 video tutorial update with Jeff Schewe.

See… I don’t need no stink’n Facebook.

      

 

 "Every time I go back to a module I had already seen, I learn additional things.  I have never seen tutorials that have the excellent mix of what the features are, 
how to use them, enough of the under-the-hood information 
and concepts so that I can utilize the features creatively and efficiently, 
and just enough humor to keep the motivation level high.  Wow!"

 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Backlit Photography 101: Secrets of Expressive Backlit Portraits

08 May

Do you want to avoid an overworked edit in order to obtain golden portraits with sunrays and lens flares? Shooting against the sun is challenging, however three factors and a bit of practice can easily transform your backlit photography. One of the leading rules in elementary photography is to avoid shooting against the sun. Usually you will end up with Continue Reading

The post Backlit Photography 101: Secrets of Expressive Backlit Portraits appeared first on Photodoto.


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Die flackernden Bilder der Jone Reed

08 May

Als ich Jone Reeds Bilder vor ein paar Tagen das erste Mal sah, wusste ich, dass sie zu den Fotografinnen gehören wird, die ich weiterhin beobachten werde. Denn ihre Bilder sprechen. Sie schütteln und liebkosen mich. Bild an Bild werden sie zu einem Film ihrer Selbst.

Ich denke, das ist es, was mich immer wieder in diesem Bildermeer aufhorchen lässt: Ein Mensch, der seine Sprache gefunden hat, ist ein Mensch, dem man zuhören sollte.

© Jone Reed

Jone Reed fing im Jahr 2005 ernsthaft mit der Fotografie an. Wie viele andere auch bestanden die Anfänge aus nichts Ernstem, wie sie selbst sagt und auch jetzt, so meint sie, ist es noch nicht Ernstes, denn es soll vor allem Spaß machen und ein kreatives Ventil zur Selbstfindung sein.

Diese Aussage nehme ich ihr auch unumwunden ab. Man sieht ihren Bildern an, dass sich hier etwas entwickelt. Dass sie sich Stück für Stück an sich selbst herantastet, auskundschaftet, was da in ihr ist und wie sich die Umgebung in ihre Welt interagieren lässt.

© Jone Reed

© Jone Reed

Was sie umgibt, das ist ihre Familie. Die gebürtige Lettin lebt mit ihrer kleinen Tochter und ihrem Mann, die auch immer wieder einmal auf den Bildern zu finden sind, in London. Was sie inspiriert, ist das, was um sie ist.

Ein Blick, ein fremdes Gesicht, ihre Stimmung, die Vergangenheit oder zufällige Gesprächsfetzen lösen in ihr Bilder aus. Sie sucht nicht danach, diese Bilder kommen zu ihr, wie sie selbst sagt.

© Jone Reed

Sie fotografiert alles digital, bearbeitet es so lange, bis ihr Gefühl stimmt und sich eine Art innere Zufriedenheit einstellt. Dann weiß sie, ist auch das Publikum draußen für dieses Bild bereit und wird es unter Umständen vielleicht verstehen oder berührt sein.

Denn das ist es, was sie möchte: Die Bilder sollen einen Eindruck hinterlassen, einwirken oder wie ein flackerndes Bild auf der Innenseite unserer Augenlider warten, bis es Zeit ist, zu verstehen.

Wenn Ihr noch mehr sehen wollt – wovon ich ausgehe – dann schaut mal auf Ihrem Flickr-Stream vorbei.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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