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Posts Tagged ‘REVIEW’

Just Posted: Our Epson Stylus Photo R3000 review

15 Oct

We’ve just published our review of the Epson Stylus Photo R3000. The R3000 is the top of Epson’s non-Pro photo inkjet lineup. It’s a 13" / A3+ format printer with nine pigment-based inks that can handle a variety of media, including roll-fed paper and CD/DVDs as well as board up to 1.3mm thick. As with our multi-function printer group test, this review was produced in collaboration with Vincent Oliver of Photo-i.co.uk.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Pictocolor iCorrect EditLab 6 Review

28 Sep

www.TheArtofRetouching.com – This is a video PictoColor iCorrect Editlab Pro 6 Review. It’s Friday at 4 boss says that he wants you to get this group of images ready for a print proof on Monday morning. Ugh… you want to go home. Now what do you do? Go through several different adjustment layers in Adobe Photoshop… for each image? Nope. You open up Pictocolor iCorrect EditLab 6 and apply the SmartColor Feature. Bam, your going home on time. Use the PictoColor EditLab Coupon Code: “ART11” for 11% Off the entire order. Yeah, that’s 10%, that keeps on giving. Actually, if your boss doesn’t even want to buy Adobe Photoshop, you can tell him that iCorrect EditLab Pro is also available as a stand alone application for JPEG & TIFF batch processing. No need for that extra 0 investment, to get the same results. You can even work with 16-Bit images on a 64-Bit Processor. All the code is designed for optimal, professional use. No need to deal with any old legacy stuff. The program is made up with four distinct tabs: PictoColor iCorrect Editlab 6 ToolTab01 Color Balance: Remove color casts and balance the whites by simply clicking on any neutral colors. You can even manually adjust the color balance with sliders. PictoColor iCorrect Editlab 6 ToolTab02 Tonal Range: Full control over the tonal range by setting the white point, black point and midpoint of your images using an eye dropper, slider, or automatic SmartColor technology. PictoColor iCorrect Editlab 6 ToolTab03
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 

Nikon D7000 Review For Dental Photography

26 Sep

www.phelandentalseminars.com In this video Dr Stephen Phelan shares a video product review for the new Nikon D7000 Digital SLR. Clinical dental photography is a really valuable tool for patient communication, lab communication and personal education. In the video below I share with you some of the D7000 features and I also show you some settings to use for clinical photography; such as, your image size, white balance, picture control and colour space.

 
 

Just posted: Book Review – Subway by Bruce Davidson

26 Sep

Adam Koplan reviews the third edition of Magnum photographer Bruce Davidson’s classic series of images of New York City subway riders from all walks of life – including 25 never-before-published photos.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Book review: Saul Leiter- Early Color

24 Sep

Barnaby Britton takes a look at the work of New York photographer Saul Leiter. Although not as well-known as some of his contemporaries, Leiter is considered one of the most interesting photographers of his generation. This collection, ‘Early Color’ showcases some of his early experiments with color film and reveals a unique eye.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Sony SLT-A35 review published

22 Sep

We’ve published our review of the Sony SLT-A35. This latest model in Sony’s series of ‘translucent mirror’ cameras incorporates almost all the features of the original A33 and A55 but includes what Sony promises is an improved 16MP sensor, and handful of extra processing options. The only real losses compared to the A33 are the articulated rear screen and $ 50 from the MSRP of the 18-55mm lens kit, taking it down to $ 699. Is this enough to compete in the crowded entry-level segment? Read our review to find out.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Nikon D700 Dslr Review Part 1: By Dom Bower

22 Sep

much more detail on the blog, check the link dombowerphoto.blogspot.com If you like the video please subscribe and share on facebook and twitter. Also check out the links below. If you really like my work please feel free to check out or buy a copy of the my photography book: Getting There With Photography: By Dom Bower www.blurb.com Twitter page twitter.com Facebook page www.facebook.com Website www.dombower.com

 
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Just posted: Our in-depth Olympus E-PL3 review

20 Sep

We’ve published our Olympus PEN Lite/E-PL3 review along with studio comparison shots fron the Sony NEX-5N. The E-PL3 squeezes much of the capability of its big brother, the E-P3, into a smaller, simplified body. It gains the faster autofocus and Full HD (60i) video of the third-generation PEN models, while it also adds a tilting LCD and 5fps burst shooting mode. These all represent significant improvements over the larger, heavier E-PL2 it replaces. Could this be the mirrorless model that would-be compact camera upgraders should be looking to?
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Review: JPEGmini – Reducing Photo File Size, Not Quality

12 Sep

JPEGmini is a company that has a unique approach to optimizing your JPEG format images in an effort to help you save storage space. I took a quick look at their offering and shared my thoughts on it with Sarah Perez in a recent TechCrunch article New Startup JPEGmini Reduces Photos’ Size, Not Their Quality. I thought I would share a little more about my take on the service in the event it’s something you feel is worthy of trying or using.


Test1 – Web sized image (800 px x 500 px)
Test2 – Full size image (5616 px x 3744 px)

What is JPEGmini?

  • JPEGmini is NOT a new file format.
  • JPEGmini is a re-compression engine with a twist:

    JPEGmini works by analyzing the input image using a unique quality detector which imitates the human visual system, and based on this analysis applying the maximum amount of compression which will not cause visible artifacts. For further details, see the technology section

  • JPEGmini is an online service… for now

Does It Work?
The quick answer is yes and no. JPEGmini excels at compressing larger images versus smaller images. Compression gains are also made most significantly on “first-generation photos created by digital cameras”. In other words if you’ve edited a photo already in photo editing software you may not see huge file size reduction namely because the file has already undergone some level of compression.

I was a skeptic when I learned about this site. I ran a quick test to compare the following:

I tested two images of different types.

  • An image with not a lot of detail and similar tones. Such images have a lot of similar data that is easily compressed resulting in higher compression savings.
  • An image with a lot of detail and varied tones. Such images do not have a lot of similar data to compress resulting in less compression savings.

I also tested two different files sizes for each image:

  • Web sized image (800 px x 500 px)
  • Full size image (5616 px x 3744 px)

The results were notable with file size saving from 67% to 87%. But I also ran each image through Photoshop’s “Save for Web & Devices” at 60% quality to attain savings from 71% to 85%. Bottom line Photoshop reduces file size for web sized images better in this simplified test by 4-7%. On the other hand larger images attained greater file size reduction with JPEGmini over Photoshop by  4-7%.
Note: Photoshop is not optimized for compressing very large images with their “Save for Web & Devices” function and JPEGmini states they perform better with larger images.

Full Test Details

Pros, Cons & Thoughts
The pros clearly are that you can reduce the size of your large image files with the JPEGmini. In scale this could help you save money by reducing your demand for new hard drives. You can compress images without buying expensive software like Photoshop. All metadata is preserved.  Image quality suffered very little when comparing the original image and the JPEGmini version of the image at 100%. In fact most people would not notice a difference. That being said I did not run print comparisons of each file before and after JPEGmini compression.

On the other hand the service is only available online requiring you to upload images, wait for the compression engine to process your files (can range from minutes to hours) and then spend the time to download them. It’s also important to note that the service only works with JPEGs. The significance of this is that you’re compressing your image files multiple times and each compression ultimately results in loss of data. Compress an image repeatedly and you can impact image quality. For more on this refer to my previous article (pre-blog) guest written by Oskar Breuning JPEG Compression: Data Loss & Image Impact. Lastly the biggest concern I have surrounds the JPEGmini Terms of Service (TOS) namely the following User Submission section:

You hereby grant ICVT and our designees a worldwide, non-exclusive, sublicenseable (through multiple tiers), assignable, royalty-free, fully paid-up, perpetual, irrevocable right to use, host, store, index, reproduce, distribute, create derivative works of, and display and perform your Content on the web and on mobile devices, solely in connection with our provision of the Service

Uploading an image places the image on their server. While files are only kept for roughly 1 week, images can be used by JPEGmini’s parent company to market their service. Personally the broad nature of this section makes me too uncomfortable to use the service beyond testing. Of specific concern is the right claimed to sublicense images that they deem irrevocable. Not very photographer friendly in my eyes. Note: Dror Gill the CTO of the company has stated that photos are not used for promotion without confirmation from the owner in a comment on the TechCrunch article.

My hope is two fold for JPEGmini…

  1. Clarify Modify the ToS to be more photographer friendly and less JPEGmini-centric
  2. License their technology so it can be utilized in established programs and mobile applications or launch their own desktop & mobile applications.

Technorati Tags: photography, technology, JPEGmini, Photoshop, compression, JPEG

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Review: JPEGmini – Reducing Photo File Size, Not Quality

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Nikon 24mm f/1.4 Hands-on Review

02 Sep

The Nikkor 28mm f/1.4 was a legendary lens with stunning performance but was disappointingly discontinued. This new 24mm f/1.4 is somewhat taking its place as a fast wide-angle, but the question is – is it as good? We take the Nikon lens out to the Chinese University of Hong Kong to take some shots and find out what it’s like.

 
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