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Archive for August, 2015

Turned up to 20MP: Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX8 added to studio scene comparison

06 Aug

The Panasonic GX8 introduces a new 20MP Four Thirds sensor to its class. It provides dual IS, ISO up to 25,600 and UHD 4K video recording. It’s an all-around enticing update to Panasonic’s Micro Four Thirds lineup, both for the potential of its new sensor and its rich feature set. We put it up against our studio test scene – take a look and compare it to its peers. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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How To Transform Your Photos In Just One Click

06 Aug

We’re super-excited to let you know about a brand new dPS product that’s just launched, to help you transform your photos into stunning images with a single click:

A mega pack of 101 Lightroom® presets (Please note: a copy of Adobe Lightroom is required to use these presets.)

NewImage

Best of all, for a limited time, the pack can be yours for the special introductory price of just USD $ 20 (that’s 60% off).

Check it out now!

Final Portraits 1

Following the incredibly popular preset offerings in our 12 Days of Christmas and Mid-Year Summer sales, we’ve been inundated with requests for more…

So we decided to bring in pro photographer and Lightroom expert, Cole Joseph, to handcraft the first ever dPS set, including 7 high quality collections:

  • Plush Portraits – bring the “wow” factor to your portraits while preserving natural skin tones
  • Lively Landscapes – add vibrance to your lush landscape images
  • Street Grit & Grunge – give your photos a unique and cutting-edge look
  • Bangin’ Black & White – for images with classic charm, romance and soul
  • Sleek Sepia – stylize with a cross-toned black and white edit
  • Classic Vintage – step back in time and relive the good ol’ days
  • Quick Adjustments – quick and easy fine-tuning to simplify your editing process

Final quick adjustments

With 101 presets to choose from, Cole’s done the hard work for you so you can get the perfect edit for every photo without any fuss.

Simply apply the effect and adjust as desired… It’s that easy!

Final Vintage 2

You’ll save a whole heap of processing time, while giving your images an instant “pop”.

See Cole demonstrate in this video:

If you haven’t used presets before? No worries. Full instructions are included in the pack and as with all our products if you pick it up and don’t find it’s for you – you can ask for your money back anytime within 60 days and we’ll give you a full refund.

Transform your photos in just one click.
Pick up our 101 Lightroom Presets Pack today!

*Please note: a copy of Adobe Lightroom is required to use these presets.

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The post How To Transform Your Photos In Just One Click by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Flip, Stack, Connect: 13 Highly Customizable Furniture Designs

05 Aug

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

customizable facile sofa

Somewhere between half-hearted DIY jobs and expensive custom-created solutions, there’s customizable furniture kits, which make it easy to create the ideal setup for your home and life without requiring special skills or tools.

Hacka IKEA kitchen

customizable ikea hacka

customizable ikea hacka 2

People hack IKEA products all the time, creating new items from cheap components available at the Swedish big-box store. The ‘Hacka’ concept is a kit that makes it even easier to do using a series of orange joints and wooden beams. You essentially create your own framework around IKEA products like countertops, sinks and storage cabinets for a completely customizable setup that’s easy to change around at your whim.

The Homework Desk

customizable homework desk 2

Start with two simple trestle legs and add whatever surfaces work best for you, whether that’s a flat desktop, a self-healing cutting mat, storage for writing implements or some combination of the three. With The Homework Desk, you can incline your surfaces like a drafting table, hang felt slings for additional storage or connect various compartments including pen holders, vertical filing systems and even a hidden phone charger. The whole front ledge of the desk functions as a ruler, too.

Push-Pull Foam Chair

customizable push pull foam

customizable push pull foam 2

Do you like chairs that are deep and low to the ground, or prefer a higher perch? Do you like armrests, or would you rather have that space free for a better range of movement? The Sink In chair consists of foam bars enclosed within a wooden frame so it’s incredibly easy to create a seat that’s tailored to your exact desires.

Dots Storage System

customizable dots 2

customizable dots
Protruding cylinders attached to wall panels in a grid pattern support a series of boxes for storing and displaying various objects in the ‘DOTS’ system by PolarisLife. Move them around, add more shelves, arrange them however you like them. When the cylinders aren’t supporting a shelf, they can be used to hang things like coats, bags and plants.

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Flip Stack Connect 13 Highly Customizable Furniture Designs

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[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

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5. August 2015

05 Aug

Das Bild des Tages von: Stephan Ohlsen

Eule hinter Gitterstäben, schwarzweiß.

Im Ausblick: Ein Fotofestival, syrische Kinder im Nordirak und Prediger.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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Put the Fun Back into Your Photography with a Cow Safari

05 Aug

Whether you are a pro photographer or a dedicated amateur, sometimes when you are photographing a lot you can get so caught up in achieving the perfect image, that you lose the sense of fun that got you interested in the first place.

Actively putting the fun back in can not only help you to enjoy your regular photography work more, and assist in getting your photo mojo back, but can inspire new ideas you otherwise might not have come up with. My favourite way to do this is a Cow Safari. It’s kind of like an African safari, but with cows.

Fun-photography-safari-01
Why cows? Well, for a start they tend not to eat you as much as lions and it’s much cheaper than a trip to Africa. Cows are not the most athletic of creatures, they tend to just stand around a lot and are not well camouflaged, so are pretty easy to capture in a photo. They generally hang out in very picturesque areas, perfect for a day out photographing.

Cows generally hang out in very photogenic areas.

Cows make a great safari subject and are generally vegetarian so your risk of getting eaten by one is fairly low. Can’t say the same for lions.

However, if you don’t live close enough to a cow hang out, you can make up your own safari. For example; if you’re in the city, maybe a pigeon safari, or seagulls if are near the beach. Perhaps a people walking their dogs safari, or even a flower safari – it doesn’t really matter, just so long as you can find your subject in various different places that you can travel around to easily over a few hours, a day, or even a road trip weekend.

My first safari was some years ago by the seaside with my father, the subject was seagulls. We set up a small wager, winner gets bragging rights. There has been no definitive winner, because the safari still continues years later. Even when we’re in different parts of the country, there is an occasional exchange of seagull photographs. It’s been inspirational, I’ll be bogged down in the photographic process and my phone will light up with something like this:

It's all about fun with these safaris.

A photograph sent to me by my father while on a seagull safari. I don’t think that seagull is very well, in fact I don’t think it is actually a seagull, I suspect foul play! Photo credit: Chris Hawkins

The main point of the safari is to step away from your usual photography routine and just enjoy taking photographs for the sheer sake of doing so. No planned images, no trying to achieve anything or get that perfect shot, just fun photographic play time with the idea of loosening and lightening up a bit as a photographer, and not taking yourself or your images too seriously.

Once you take the trying hard part out of the picture, you can get back to experimenting, and maybe surprise yourself, just like you did when you first fell in love with photography. Of course you may not end up with anything worth saving, and that’s not the point of the exercise. But, then again, you never know what you might come across in your travels.

You never know what you might find on your safari.

Had I not been out on a cow safari, I may have missed the opportunity to capture this cow doing a remarkably good impersonation of a horse.

Your safari is a great time to experiment with things you might not normally try when you’re too busy trying to get that perfect shot. Try the lens you haven’t really played with yet, test out some of the features on your camera you haven’t gotten around to trying. If you are a pro who is dedicated to manual setting, maybe just try out some of the Scene Modes, or vice versa, play with manual settings if it’s something you have not really tried. Maybe even pick up one of those cheap disposable film cameras, or test out some different mobile phone apps.

A safari is a great time to experiment with your gear.

Use the photographic time-out to slow down and experiment with things like mobile phone photography apps. 

How to Conduct Your Safari

Step 1: Grab a fun friend or two

They don’t necessarily need to be photographers, although I’m willing to bet they’ll end up taking a shot or two on their phones. Encourage them to bring a camera, or bring one for them. They could also come in handy as a model.

Take some friends, photographers or non photographers, it doesn't matter, it's about fun!

Safari fun is best shared.

Step 2: Bring some supplies

Depending on where you conduct your safari, you may not be close to a convenient cafe or food place, so why not take your own. Pack a few sandwiches or a whole picnic.

Supplies are a good idea, less time hunting for food places, more time to photograph.

Maybe pack a healthy picnic for your safari. It’s all healthy as long as there’s some fruit right?

Step 3: Get out there and have fun

Jump in the car, on your bikes, the train, or get your walking shoes on and head out. You can map your trip beforehand, or perhaps toss a coin for which direction to go, as you step out the front door. Just so long as you travel around a bit, and have a few different spots to stop and take some photographs.

Taking time out to have photographic fun with friends or family  is worth it, and not just for your own photography.

It’s thumbs up for the cow safari. My little friend here really got into the spirit of the day. He even took some great photographs and video on his portable gaming device. By the end of our safari he wanted to know how much he had to save up to buy a camera. Safari success!

Safari Tips:

  • Experiment: Use the safari to experiment with different lenses, settings, or cameras.
  • Go Mobile: Don’t disregard the phone camera, even if you are not a fan of phone photography.
  • Do variations: Try all versions of the above at each place you stop. See how each setting/lens/app deals with the same situation.
  • Don’t trespass on properties, as much as you might be tempted to slip under a fence to get that perfect cow shot, these animals can be dangerous, as can farmers who don’t appreciate trespassing.
  • Don’t hassle the cows. If they are close to the fence, keep a distance and approach very slowly. If they start to get up and move, back off. No shooting off a flash in their moo-ey faces.  The same applies to other subjects. Just be kind and respectful.
  • Set up a challenge with your co- safarians (I think I just made that word up), such as best, funniest, or worst pic of the day. Just don’t get too serious about it!
  • Keep it going in the processing stage: The fun doesn’t have to stop when you get home from your safari, take the same approach to editing. Use some of your images from the day to experiment in your editing program with different effects and techniques that you wouldn’t normally try.
  • Take it global: You could do your safari with online friends, just set up a date or an event on Facebook. In this day and age of instant online access, you can safari with friends from around the world.
Get out there and start having some photographic fun!

The final shot on our cow safari, taken through the car window on the way home.

Above all, have fun, relax, enjoy, laugh, play. This is about taking a photographic break of sorts and getting outside your normal photography practice. You never know, you may end up with that coveted perfect shot in the process. Or, maybe not. It doesn’t matter, as long as you were having fun with your camera. Although I am sure you will end up with at least one shot that makes you smile, and I would love to see that shot or any others you take on your safaris.

Please do share in the comments below, any safari shots inspired by this article or from a previous safari, or any tips or safari ideas you might like to share with fellow safarians (yup, it’s a word now). They don’t have to be great shots! It’s about sharing the experience and having fun with your photography.

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The post Put the Fun Back into Your Photography with a Cow Safari by Lea Hawkins appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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One One-Thousandth of a Second: Shooting Sports and Fast Action

05 Aug

Whether you’re a sports fan or not, if you’re a photographer, you’ll probably find yourself taking photos of some fast-paced competitive action at some point. If you’re used to shooting in a nice, controlled environment, like a studio, or if you’re used to street photography, where your subjects are probably walking at a normal, relatively slow pace, shooting a sporting Continue Reading

The post One One-Thousandth of a Second: Shooting Sports and Fast Action appeared first on Photodoto.


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Less is more? Fujifilm X-T10 review

05 Aug

The Fujifilm X-T10 puts many of the X-T1’s capabilities into a smaller, less expensive body. It uses the same 16MP X-Trans CMOS sensor and EXR Processor II and, despite a more compact body, offers an additional custom function button and even squeezes in a pop-up flash. Is the X-T10 capable of holding its own against APS-C competitors? Read our full analysis. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Der Schlüssel ist, nicht zu blinzeln

05 Aug

© Ulrik Tofte

Der dänische Fotograf Ulrik Tofte konzentriert sich in seiner Serie „The key is not to blink“ auf die Jugend in Nordghana. Zwischen alten Traditionen und neuen Möglichkeiten stehen die jungen Afrikaner, die der er portraitiert hat, denn das Land entwickelt sich rasend schnell.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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LxMeter transforms your smartphone into a light and flash meter

05 Aug

The LxMeter from Italian manufacturer Optivelox has introduced an accessory that turns your smartphone into a light meter. It’s similar to the Lumu light meter, but provides flash meter functionality and is capable of working with Android devices via a dedicated app. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photoshop CC 2015.0.1 update addresses healing tool issue

05 Aug

Adobe has issued an update for Photoshop CC 2015 with a number of bug fixes. Notably, an issue with the healing brush tool has been addressed, as users reported that the tool was creating unwanted artifacts in images. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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