RSS
 

Archive for October, 2013

Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide – Review

29 Oct

It’s a little past 4:00 a.m. and I just finished watching all three hours of the just-released Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide.  A lot of photography-related books and videos come across my desk, and my favorites are always those that have something to offer not only the beginner, but the advanced photographer as well. This is absolutely one of them. In this follow-up video to his Fro Knows Photo Beginner Guide, Jared Polin (the aforementioned Fro) leads you on an off-camera flash adventure, taking you from hopelessly intimidated to supremely confident in a style all his own. Not bad for a three-hour tour.  With expert assistance from friend and professional photographer Adam Lerner, viewers have a front-row seat to everything from breaking down the contents of an affordable-but-effective light kit, to a behind-the-scenes look at six professional-grade photo shoots, all lit with a single speedlight and a convertible umbrella.

fro-knows-photo-flash-guide

The Beginner Flash Guide starts literally from the ground up, planting a light stand firmly on the floor and explaining not only the contents of the light kit, but how those five or six pieces all work together to achieve professional-quality lighting without breaking the bank. Jared launched FroKnowsPhoto.com in 2010– a brand and a website that quickly became synonymous with making advanced photography techniques accessible not only to professional photographers, but also to beginners, hobbyists, and enthusiasts. The Beginner Flash Guide maintains and elevates that educational philosophy, taking what can be the confusing language and landscape of photographic lighting, and essentially handing the viewer a dictionary and a road map.

Among the nuts and bolts laid out are: The Lighting Kit Explained, Four Ways to Trigger Your Flash, Flash-to-Subject Distance, How Shutter Speed Affects Ambient Light, Understanding Flash Zoom, and Quality of Light. Plus, thirteen “Quick Tips” interspersed throughout the lessons cover some minor and some not-so-minor details on topics ranging from which rechargeable batteries you should use (lithium) to how best to interact with your subject. Word to the wise– make sure you take notes– they’ll make retaining and applying the information to your own photography much easier. An additional, non-video element is the included Flash Photography Field Guide– a six-page PDF designed to be printed and tucked away in your camera bag for quick, easy reference. The field guide does a great job of summarizing the basics covered in the videos, as well as offering suggestions for overcoming some real-world lighting challenges.

Not everyone is lucky enough to have a mentor or someone to show them the ropes when they are first trying to learn this stuff. The BFG can and will fill that void. But even if you already have a firm grasp of off-camera flash principles– or just need a refresher– the lessons in this video guide can enhance and build upon what you already know. There will always be trial and error when it comes to learning and experimenting with photographic lighting. The Beginner Flash Guide, though, can help you minimize the error.

Get your copy of the Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide here.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide – Review

The post Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide – Review by Jeff Guyer appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Fro Knows Photo Beginner Flash Guide – Review

Posted in Photography

 

Amazon Biosphere: Retailer Gets Glass Dome Headquarters

29 Oct

[ By Steph in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 1

How much more creative could you be if you were working in a stunning faceted glass dome every day? Some lucky Amazon workers will get to find out, as the City of Seattle’s design panel has approved plans for new structures at the company’s headquarters. Designed by international firm NBBJ, the project will consist of three connected biospheres with a steel framework.

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 2

Each of the 25 to 35-meter-high biospheres will offer five floors of flexible work spaces along with about 65,000 square feet of open green space with both new and mature trees. The futuristic-looking design is meant to feel like a public park, and will be part of a larger green space known as ‘Block 19.’

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 3

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 6

The geometric pattern of the steel is is called a ‘Catalan Skin,’ based on a pattern of numbers in mathematics. The resulting shapes look a bit like sand dollars.

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 4

Amazon Biosphere Headquarters Seattle 5

Not everyone is a fan of the planned additions. Curbed Seattle said “Our initial thought was that they resembled spores, slowly growing and spreading across the city until they encase all our trees.”

Share on Facebook



[ By Steph in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


    




WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Amazon Biosphere: Retailer Gets Glass Dome Headquarters

Posted in Creativity

 

Hurry Up! Premium Stock Photos For Ultra-low Prices At MightyDeals.com

29 Oct

Stock photos are professional images of ordinary locations, events, nature, landmarks and people. They’re purchased as well as sold on a royalty-free agreement, and what makes them so useful is, of course, the fact that they can be constantly used for commercial-design applications. The photographer who snapped the stock photos owns them, but the person who purchased them gets to Continue Reading

The post Hurry Up! Premium Stock Photos For Ultra-low Prices At MightyDeals.com appeared first on Photodoto.


Photodoto

 
Comments Off on Hurry Up! Premium Stock Photos For Ultra-low Prices At MightyDeals.com

Posted in Photography

 

Blickfang: Tankstellen

29 Oct

Tankstellen haben ja oft etwas Schäbiges an sich und wenn man nachts noch schnell Chips oder Schokolade braucht, dann hält man sich dort nicht länger als nötig auf. Die Architektur dieser Orte habe ich bis zum Bildband „Experimentelle Wege zum Bild“* von Tim Hölscher noch nie beachtet.

Tim fotografierte historische Tankstellen und bearbeitete sie digital zurück in ihren Originalzustand. Zusätzlich löste er sie aus dem urbanen Kontext und retuschierte Hintergründe und störende Elemente weg. Zurück blieb meist ein kleines Häuschen mit eigentümlichem Dach und der Beweis, dass Tankstellenarchitektur durchaus spannend sein kann.

„So soll die bauliche Vision des Architekten, die heute durch die Umnutzung in den meisten Fällen nur noch zu erahnen ist, wieder in den Mittelpunkt gestellt werden“, heißt es in der Projektbeschreibung.

Tankstelle Hannover aus Tim Hölschers Buch "Experimentelle Wege zum Bild"

Diese Tankstelle zum Beispiel steht in Hannover. Auf dem grauem Beton und mit dem geschwungenen Dach sieht sie surreal und unwirklich aus. Die weißen und dunkelgrünen Fliesen am Haus erinnern jedoch wieder an die 60er Jahre und das wahre Alter der Tankstelle.

Unter dem Bild ist vermerkt: Lambdaprint, 125 cm x 75 cm, 2008. In dieser Größe ist es sicher noch beeindruckender. Neben diesem Foto gibt es fünf weitere aus der Serie „Tankstellen“. Sie entstanden zwischen 2008 und 2011.

Der Bildband „Experimentelle Wege zum Bild“* zeigt auch die bei uns bereits vorgestellte Serie „Albanische Landschaften – Lochkamerafotografie mit Bunkern“ sowie weitere Projekte des Fotografen. Auch ein Blick auf seine Homepage ist sehr lohnenswert.

* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas kauft, erhalten wir eine kleine Provision, Ihr zahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
Comments Off on Blickfang: Tankstellen

Posted in Equipment

 

Complete control: Olympus OM-D E-M1 review posted

29 Oct

em1-editorial.jpg

With a rugged, weather-sealed body, hybrid AF system, 5-axis image stabilization, Wi-Fi, and seemingly endless customizable controls, the Olympus E-M1 is arguably the most enthusiast-friendly Micro Four Thirds camera on the market.  We’ve put Olympus’ latest OM-D through our usual battery of tests – follow the link to see if the ‘Pro’ Micro Four Thirds camera has finally arrived.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Complete control: Olympus OM-D E-M1 review posted

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Canon PowerShot G16 updated with test scene samples

29 Oct

shared:TestScene2.jpg

We just updated our first impressions review of the Canon PowerShot G16 with our studio test scene showing image quality in both JPEG and Raw capture modes. It includes downloadable Raw files of both the daylight and low light scenes. As usual this allows you to compare the G16 with other cameras. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon PowerShot G16 updated with test scene samples

Posted in Uncategorized

 

creativeLIVE’s entire photography catalog on sale until 31st October

29 Oct

FlashSale_950x360.jpg

Photography education resource creativeLIVE has announced a sale on all of its online photography workshops from now until the end of this month, plus a free three-day ‘Autumn Photo Critique’ evaluating submissions in three categories: wedding and family, commercial and fine art and portraiture. Click through for more details of the promotion.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on creativeLIVE’s entire photography catalog on sale until 31st October

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Glow in the Dark World: 12 Smart Illuminated Inventions

28 Oct

[ By Steph in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

Glow in the Dark Tech Applications

Glow in the dark tech doesn’t have to be limited to novelties like glow sticks – it could be used to make the roads safer, provide illumination without the need for electricity, and allow surfers to see each other in dark waters. These 12 applications of luminescence include everything from clothing and pillows to cars and architecture.

Glow in the Dark VW Golf

Glow in the Dark VW Golf Car

Bright green luminescence ensures that nobody has any trouble seeing this VW Golf MK7 at night, which has been covered in a special phosphor-foil 3M wrap. Created by the tuners at Low-Car-Scene and Blackbox-Richter, this glow in the dark car looks white and pink during the day, and green and black at night.

Urban Dwelling by Jiri Prihoda

Glow in the Dark Urban Dwelling

This glow-in-the-dark urban structure is a two-story dwelling with a secret compartment hiding a pull-out bed. The installation, by Czech artist Jiri Prihoda, is built into a reclaimed railway yard and features an outer shell made of Corralit material, a luminescent substance that absorbs daylight and later glows for about eight hours. While this mini dwelling was installed in a very urban location, the idea is that it would make a tranquil place to stay in the woods or by the sea in more private surroundings.

Glow in the Dark Skate Park

Glow in the Dark Skate Park
This sculptural skate park located on Vassiviere Island in France solves a problem of keeping the surrounding woods natural and free of harsh lighting at night by glowing in the dark. Koo Jeong A and Belgian firm L’Escaut Architecture wanted a ‘dreamlike’ setting for skaters at night that would blend into the environment.

Solar Activated Glowing Bike by Pure Fix Cycles

Glow in the Dark Bicycle

Riding a bike at night can be a bit unsafe. ‘Kilo’, a light-activated glow in the dark bicycle frame from Pure Fix Cycles, fixes that problem with highly reflective paint that can be applied either to the frame or the wheels. In addition to being more visible to oncoming traffic, the glow illuminates the road a bit.

Next Page:
Glow In The Dark World 12 Smart Illuminated Inventions

Share on Facebook



[ By Steph in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


    




WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Glow in the Dark World: 12 Smart Illuminated Inventions

Posted in Creativity

 

‘Light Goes On’ – stunning video by light painter Darren Pearson

28 Oct

lightpainter.jpg

Darren Pearson is a ‘light painter’, who creates photographs and videos that feature elements which are ‘painted’ with light during long exposures. Most photographers have probably tried painting with light at least once, but Pearson takes it to a new level in his video ‘Light Goes On’ which features a skeleton (one of his common ‘characters’) drawn with light, skateboarding through various locations. Click through to watch the appropriately halloween-themed video.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on ‘Light Goes On’ – stunning video by light painter Darren Pearson

Posted in Uncategorized

 

DIY: Polaroid Frame Tea Bag Tags

28 Oct
Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3

Wouldn’t it be great to drink tea and show off some happy snaps at the same time?

It turns out you totally can! Talk about a multitasking tea break.

Take your tea parties to the next level by switching your boring ol’ tea labels for a custom polaroid frame.

It’s super easy, and best of all, you can make these in about the same time as it takes for a cup of tea to steep.

So dah-ling, can we interest you in a spot of tea?

Learn How to Make Polaroid Frame Tea Bags
(…)
Read the rest of DIY: Polaroid Frame Tea Bag Tags (311 words)


© Erika for Photojojo, 2013. |
Permalink |
No comment |
Add to
del.icio.us

Post tags:


Photojojo

 
Comments Off on DIY: Polaroid Frame Tea Bag Tags

Posted in Equipment