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Posts Tagged ‘just’

Opinion: Why the FZ1000 isn’t just another superzoom…

12 Jun

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Superzoom cameras offer DSLR-style ergonomics and enormous zoom ranges, which make them very popular among novice photographers and enthusiasts looking for a ‘take everywhere’ option for travel and day-to-day shooting. They have not, traditionally, impressed us with their image quality. The Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ1000 is a very different beast though, and has impressed us with its specification, performance and price. In this short article, editor Barnaby Britton explains why the FZ1000 is definitely not ‘just another superzoom’. Read more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just Breathe: Portraits of adults with Cystic Fibrosis

10 May

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Cystic Fibrosis is an incurable, life-shortening genetic disease which affects roughly 70,000 people around the globe. Commonly thought of as a childhood disease, photographer Ian Pettigrew was diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis at the age of 37. He is currently trying to raise money to support a project entitled ‘Just Breathe’, which will feature portraits of adults living with CF. Get more details and make a contribution

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Just Breath: Portraits of adults with Cystic Fibrosis

09 May

ianp1.jpg

Cystic Fibrosis is an incurable, life-shortening genetic disease which affects roughly 70,000 people around the globe. Commonly thought of as a childhood disease, photographer Ian Pettigrew was diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis at the age of 37. He is currently trying to raise money to support a project entitled ‘Just Breath’, which will feature portraits of adults living with CF. Get more details and make a contribution

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Did Amazon just patent the seamless background setup?

07 May

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On March 18th the United States Patent and Trademark Office granted a patent to Amazon covering a specific method to achieve the common photographic technique of capturing an image of a subject against a plain white background. Patent No.US 8,676,045 B1 describes a setup using multiple lights and a white backdrop which results in images that require no post-process retouching to remove shadows. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Spite Houses: 12 Structures Built Just to Annoy People

31 Mar

[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

Spite Houses Main

These houses, apartment buildings and commercial structures weren’t built as they are because the owners really loved the view or particularly wanted a five-foot-wide house just inches from the neighboring building. They came into being out of pure spite, or gleeful revenge, or the desire to seriously annoy adjacent property owners and city planners. Here are 12 amazingly spiteful structures, starting with a very recent example that riled up members of a certain infamously hateful church.

Gay Pride Flag Spite House Across from the Westboro Baptist Church

Spite House Gay Pride Westboro 1

Spite House Gay Pride Westboro 2

A house across the street from the Westboro Baptist Church compound is now one big gay pride flag thanks to a man whose nonprofit group Planting Peace purchased the home and painted it in rainbow colors. That’s probably not exactly a welcome sight for members of the church, who are known for their virulently anti-gay views and for picketing military funerals. Five local Kansas City painters declined to participate in the job after learning what Jackson had in mind, but ‘Equality House‘ was finally completed and unveiled in March 2013. The house got lots of attention for the right reasons, but of course, the church had a typical response to it: “We thank God for Sodomite Rainbow House!” they said in an email to TIME, claiming it helps bring attention to their message.

Pie-Shaped Montlake Spite House, Seattle

Spite Houe Montlake Seattle

Measuring just 55 inches across its narrowest point, this wacky pie-shaped house was reputedly built to cut off a larger home from the street. According to local legend, a neighbor approached the owner of the land to purchase the plot in 1925, but at an insultingly low price, spurring the owner to build the ‘Montlake Spite House‘ in retaliation. Another story claims that the house was built when the wife of the owner was given the tiny, awkardly-shaped lot in the divorce settlement, while her ex got the rest of the property. The most recent homeowner has said that for the most part, the narrow profile of the house wasn’t a problem, except when she was cooking: she had to stand to one side to open the oven door to avoid pinning herself to the wall. The house recently sold for almost $ 400K.

Hollensbury Spite House, Alexandria, Virginia

Spite House Hollensbury

John Hollensbury, the owner of the white and red houses pictured, was sick of loiterers hanging out in the alley. So he built the Hollensbury Spite House, a 7-foot-wide, 25-foot-deep dwelling in the Old Town district in Alexandria, Virginia. The house’s two main walls are the brick walls of the adjacent structures, making it more of an enclosed alleyway than an actual house, but it has been used as a residence ever since.

The Skinny House of Boston, Massachusetts

Spite House Skinny Boston

Boston’s narrowest house measures just 10.5 feet across at its widest point, with the smaller portions about 6.5 feet wide, and can only be entered through a small alley. The four-level house was built shortly after the Civil War when two brothers inherited land from their deceased father. The legend claims that while one brother went away to serve in the war, the other built a large home, leaving the soldier little more than an alleyway. So when he returned, the soldier built the narrow house to ruin his brother’s view and cut off air and sunlight to the larger home.

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Spite Houses 12 Structures Built Just To Annoy People

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[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

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Grab our 67 Portrait Posing Printables Set for Just $10

13 Mar

A little over a month ago here at dPS we launched Striking the Pose – an eBook all about posing portraits – our fastest selling eBook ever.

As an Early Bird bonus for those who picked up that eBook we gave everyone who bought it in the first month a Posing Printables bonus that contained 67 Poses that you could use in your posing shoots.

Printables graphic

This early bird offer is now over but we had so much positive feedback about these printables that we’ve now made them available for you to purchase as a stand alone product for just $ 10.

It includes 67 poses which are broken down into 7 different sets. There’s a set for each of the following categories:

  • Posing Women
  • Posing Men
  • Posing Kids
  • Posing Groups
  • Posing Couples
  • Posing in Corporate Settings
  • Lifestyle Portrait Posing

When you order you’ll receive two versions:

1. A printable version that is designed for you to print, fold up and pop in your camera bag for use at your next shoot

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2. A digital version that is designed for you to keep on your phone or tablet for screen viewing.

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While we designed these printables as a companion for the larger Striking the Pose eBook where we do a heap more teaching on the topic – they’re going to be useful for anyone shooting portraits who wants a little inspiration.

Grab your Posing Printables Here for just $ 10

How One Reader Used These Printables to Become a ‘Cool Uncle’

A few weeks back we got this feedback about the printables from one of our readers – John Warren.

“I just wanted to swing back here and let you know that last week I was asked to photograph my niece (16) and was very worried I wouldn’t be able to pose her in a way she’d want to be photographed. Reading this book gave me the confidence I needed to work with her and let me approach the shoot knowing what I wanted to do.

The printables were a life saver. Between each setup I’d show her a pose and she found being able to visualise what I was asking her to do helped a lot.

The results of her beyond anything I expected and now all her friends want me to photograph them too! I just became the ‘cool uncle’!”

Get Your Posing Printables Here

The post Grab our 67 Portrait Posing Printables Set for Just $ 10 by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Perspective in Photography – Don’t just stand there move your feet!

21 Jan

Photographers often fall into the bad habit of shooting everything we see from eye-level. We are walking around, something catches our eye, and we take a picture right from where we are standing. If you want to make an immediate impact in your photography, you need to get out of your eye-level (or tripod-level) rut. You need a change in perspective.

McEnaney road

Sure, you can change your composition by zooming in or out with your lens, but if you want to change your perspective, you are going to need to move. Don’t let your feet, or your tripod, root you to the spot: get ready for some bending, turning, walking, and climbing. Start working with perspective in photography, your images will thank you for it.

Get Low

Get your camera down towards ground level, and see how it impacts your perspective. Getting down low allows you to feature the foreground of your composition, and gives your viewer context for the rest of the photograph. Use a wide angle lens to feature the foreground, while pulling the viewer into the image, as below.

McEnaney wide angle leaves

Getting down low can change the way your viewer feels or reacts to your subject. Getting low can make your subject appear taller or more imposing. Subjects viewed from below can look commanding and powerful. Even a simple sunflower can be seen to tower above its surroundings.

McEnaney sunflower

Getting low can also completely disorient your viewer. This near water-level view becomes a study in colour and texture, as the water and the fallen autumn leaves interact with each other. From eye level, this would simply have been a photograph looking down into a storm gutter. Getting low simplifies the composition and puts the viewer into a different, and unique perspective than their everyday viewpoint.

McEnaney gutter

Get Up High or Look Up High

You can get low and look at subjects from their level, but you can also get up high and take in your subject from above. Getting well above your normal line-of-sight will certainly give you a new perspective. In the photograph below, the other tourists on the decks below give context to the passing iceberg, as seen from the cruise ship. This higher-up view also provides a sense of scale for the large size of the ice berg and hints at the size of the ship.

McEnaney iceberg

If you do not want to physically get up high, standing and shooting does not mean you only have to shoot straight ahead. Spend some time looking up, and you will find plenty to improve your compositions and your perspective. With very tall subjects, looking up from below will accentuate their height and size. The power and immensity of these redwood trees are best emphasized by looking up, from directly below.

McEnaney redwood

Go for the Lateral

Finally, do not forget to think laterally. Beyond just changing your stance or your direction of shooting, you also need to remember to move yourself. Talk the time to walk around your subject, to consider the background and foreground. Think about how all the pieces of your final composition fit together. Your first view and your first angle are often not the best available, but you cannot be sure until you have taken the time to investigate others. Walking all the way around Buckingham Fountain allowed me to choose this final composition and perspective featuring the downtown Chicago skyline. I also made the choice to position the spray from the fountain directly in front of a building to make it more visible.

McEnaney fountain 600

Moving your feet can change the way that different objects in your photograph interact with each other. While the top photograph of the Wisconsin Capitol in lights was an adequate shot, moving just a few feet to the right and squatting down allowed me to feature the lit outline in the foreground with the actual Capitol building in the background. This juxtaposition of elements improves the story-telling ability of the photograph.

McEnaney lit capitol

McEnaney double capitol

Summary

Do not fall into the trap of shooting everything you see at eye-level, just as you see it. Take the time to explore your subject, and considering changing your perspective. Get low and see what changes, get up high and explore a new view, or move laterally and watch different interactions occur and disappear between objects.

McEnaney chairs from above

McEnaney chairs get low

You may have a hard time choosing a favourite view: from above to emphasize the view of the foreground lake, or get low to show the expanded context and the threatening winter sky? Share your thoughts or your own perspective images in the comments below!

The post Perspective in Photography – Don’t just stand there move your feet! by Katie McEnaney appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Deal 9: Discover the Secrets of Post Production for Just $7

22 Dec

On the 9th day of our countdown we’re putting up for grabs our very own post-processing eBook “Photo Nuts and Post” for just $ 7.

To order before time runs out head here.
Photo nuts and post 1

A little bit of info about this Post Processing eBook

The creative choices and opportunities in ‘post’ are almost as great as they are in the capture of the photo itself, and almost every photo can be improved with a little post-processing.

Photo Nuts and Post will help you tackle post processing head-on and give you the tools and the courage you need to make it work for you.

Today it’s a steal at just $ 7 (normally $ 29.99) — but the clock is ticking – this offer lasts for 24 hours only.

Want the Complete Neil Creek eBook Collection?

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Photo Nuts and Post is just one of 5 dPS eBooks by Neil Creek.

Today you can grab the entire photo nuts collection of 4 eBooks plus we’ll include our Trick Photography eBook for just $ 39.99 (normally $ 120).

That’s $ 8 per eBook and a pretty massive saving!

In the bundle you’ll get:

  • Photo Nuts and Bolts – Know Your Camera and Take Better Photos
  • Photo Nuts and Shots – Tools and Techniques for Creative Photography
  • Photo Nuts and Post – A Guide to Post-Processing
  • Photo Nuts and Gear – Know Your Gear and Take Better Photos
  • Photo Magic – Special Effects Photography Made Easy

This bundle is ideal for anyone wanting to get creative control over their camera and create beautiful images.

Grab Yours Today

The choice is yours – you can grab Photo Nuts and Post for $ 7 or pick up the whole Neil Creek Collection – it’s totally up to you.

All the details can be found here – but don’t delay, this deal lasts only for 24 hours.

The post Deal 9: Discover the Secrets of Post Production for Just $ 7 by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Not just any competition: Roger Cicala’s First Annual Photogeek Contest

01 Nov

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Roger Cicala of LensRentals is man after our own hearts, never happier than when tinkering with lenses and writing about what he finds, however obscure it may turn out to be. And in celebration of this, he’s launched what we’d like to think of as the ultimate photo competition: The First Annual Photogeek Geek Photo Contest. Full of entertaining categories, and with at least one hugely desirable prize on offer, it’s open for entries until November 15th. It’s Roger’s competiton so we’re not going to reveal too much here; head over to LensRentals and have a look. If nothing else, it should make you laugh.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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What just happened?! Looking back on last week

21 Oct

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Last week was incredibly busy here at dpreview, with major new cameras from Sony, Nikon, Fujifilm and Panasonic as well as new lenses from Samyang, Sony and Sigma. It was a week of late nights and early mornings, and now that the dust has settled and we’ve had some time to breathe, we’ve prepared a quick look back to last week for some highlights of what what you might have missed. Click through for a recap. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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