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Posts Tagged ‘Tips’

Camera Accessories – Hood Loops & UV Filters – Digital Photography Tips by Berger Bros Camera

05 Nov

www.Berger-Bros.com Yvonne Berger, head instructor at Berger Bros Camera in Long Island, discusses two items which should always be in your camera bag a hood loop and a UV Filter.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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flash photography tips, Umbrellas and shadows

04 Nov

This is a video showing the effect of having additional flash remotely fired and also the effect it has reflecting and bouncing through an umbrella If you enjoy my videos please post them on your Facebook page and let others know about this channel, 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 FACEBOOK Critique/advice GROUP www.facebook.com FACEBOOK PAGE www.facebook.com TWITTER page twitter.com WEBSITE www.dombower.com PHOTOGRAPHY CLOTHING Point and destroy clothing http For my AZ of Weightloss Tips check out: dombowerexercise.blogspot.co.uk And to donate to The Cancer Charity that I am doing a Trek for please visit www.justgiving.com

This is the Pirateship and the modifications that have been done to it…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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Natural Lighting Tips from Bob Holmes – Natural Light in Travel Photos

03 Nov

www.silberstudios.tv Who better to get natural lighting tips from than a three-time Travel Photographer of the Year award-winner? We’re at the studio of photographer Bob Holmes for today’s Marc Silber Show – Advancing Your Photography! He shares some techniques you can use to work with natural light and take better photos, no matter where your travels may take you. Bob has been all over the world and his travel photos have appeared in National Geographic, Departures, and 46 books as the sole photographer. Working outdoors on most of his trips, Holmes is an expert at using natural lighting in photos. He loves looking at natural light, and his unique tip is that you need to picture light the way your camera sees it, rather than the way you see it. And the key to learning how to use natural lighting is to practice — you can’t become a great photographer in a week, but you will get there by shooting as much as you can.

 
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Photo Editing Tips – Creating Vivid Blue Skies and Enhancing Your Photo

02 Nov

Thanks for watching, be sure to comment, like and subscribe for MORE! Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: facebook.com

Wes Maggio, Sr. Solutions Manager at Wacom Technology shares some tips for using blend modes, specifically the Soft Light blend mode when retouching portraits. Sponsored by Fotolia.

 
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Posted in Retouching in Photoshop

 

Tips on Posing for Photos (Portraits)

02 Nov

Makeup tutorial for this look here www.youtube.com New videos every Monday and Thursday! Here are some easy tips on taking portrait photos! If you’re already a pro at taking photos, then there is no need to watch this video haha! Let me know if you would like to see a video on posing with the body. I’ll get an expert fashion photographer to share some helpful tips! Music by Neon Hitch ft Tyga “Gold” Buy on iTunes bit.ly www.youtube.com Major props to the awesome Dr. Kathrina Agatep for correcting my smile and jaw! She’s the best on the West Coast for TMJ treatments! www.facebook.com www.dentaldesignsd.com special thanks to the talented Joshua for taking my photos and sharing awesome pointers! He is the photographer who shot my Ever Eden photos! Here is a some behind the scenes video of us working together that was shot in April 🙂 youtu.be Joshua M Shelton Photography His facebook page www.facebook.com joshuamshelton.com Brian Bins Design http Please check out my website, it’s updated daily! www.michellephan.com ? instagram is MichelleFawn ? Like me on Facebook! ? www.facebook.com ? Follow me on twitter! ? www.twitter.com this is not a sponsored video
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Pro Photographer Editing Workflow (TIPS)

01 Nov

Creating images is a process and, for me, pressing the shutter is only a small part of the journey to an image of sufficient quality to publish. In this article, part 2 to Architecture Photographers on Holiday, I will go through my image workflow.

All photography faces the challenge of scenes with a significant dynamic range. Landscape and architecture is really no different. I will capture as many frames as required to cover the entire scene’s dynamic range. For architecture and indoor 3 frames are enough for most scenes. The image above required 9 images; exposures bracketed at -2, 0 and +2 and 1 set for the lower half of the room and another for the ceiling. The additional set is to help me eliminate people from the shot.

You really should …

  • Shoot RAW too to retain maximum flexibility in images; we aren’t sports shooters firing a constant stream of images to a desk, where JPEG is pretty much mandatory
  • Keep ISO Low
  • Use a single white balance setting for the same set of images
  • Use the heaviest tripod you have and a remote shutter release, wired or otherwise



This image above, of Canary Wharf underground station, comprises 3 frames. The challenge for this scene was getting a good exposure of the dark surrounding areas, the bright metallic escalator and the ridiculously bright canopy. Each layer contains the properly exposed parts of the composition.

Principal Camera

Architecture and landscape images are pretty much covered with my 5D Mark II and 17mm TS-E Tilt-Shift lens. I shoot multiple exposures mostly due to the front element being convex and resisting any attempts to use filters. My bag will also always have an EF24 f/1.4 and EF50mm f/1.2. My tripod is a little ropey now; Gitzo legs and a Manfrotto ball head.

Computer & Monitor

All image editing is undertaken on a dual CPU Mac Pro with 24gb RAM. I frequently work with images in excess of 1GB, so a large amount of memory is a must. I have a Dell 27″ Ultrasharp monitor, which is calibrated using a Spyder 3 Elite.

Before any significant editing session I calibrate my monitor.

Importing Images

I realise many of you will use different mechanisms, like Lightroom, iPhoto, Picassa, etc. Call me a luddite, but I hate to relinquish control and so my import routine is entirely manual.

On location I will be filling 2 hard drives and, on my return, will be copying across 100GB of images in a single operation, to a location I have prepared. The folder structure on the left has served me very well for the past 10 years.

You’ll notice my prepared JPEG files are prefixed with pixel sizes for various web sites; 500px is 900 pixels wide, however 1x.com is 950 pixels. I will also add ‘bw’ to the file name for monochrome images. These naming conventions make it easy to search your hard drive for correct sized images.

Selection

Of all the numerous photo applications I have installed, day to day, I use Adobe CS5. It is a very reliable work horse for image processing.

Image preview and selection is accomplished quickly in Bridge. I select the images I am interested in – on the right. Once happy with this, I use the filter pane – on the left – to show only my final selection.

Camera Raw

If you are like me, everything on your camera is set to off or zero. Here in Adobe’s Camera Raw application, I will perform a few tweaks to all the images that will go towards a single composite image.

  • Ensure you are importing your images in the same color space as your camera. Mine is Adobe RGB, a wider color gamut than the internet’s sRGB. Work on the best quality image and then convert down for your target medium, like the internet
  • Edit images in 16 bit
  • Select the best and most evenly exposed frame and set your white balance
  • If there are hot spots, use the Recovery slider to compenstate. TIP: Press [alt][cmd] together whilst moving the Recovery slider and you will see where the hot spots are very clearly on the black background!
  • If you’re using the recovery slider too much, compensate with the exposure slider. Again, press [alt][cmd] together
  • You can use the [alt][cmd] again with the black levels – bring the black levels up to just before you start blowing the blacks
  • Select all the images, and Synchronize – top left – white balance to the other images in the set
  • Open All images into Photoshop


Photoshop Tutorial

My Photoshop workspace is quite austere and my editing process is also quite simple.

I have a number of actions set up for menial tasks, like image resize, colorspace conversion, etc. The discrete tasks I perform can be broken down as follows:

  • Layer blend multiple image exposures
  • Stitch these composite images if panoramic
  • Save the single composite image as a Photoshop PSD file
  • Use masking to select targeted regions of the image for color, contrast and exposure control. A simple example might be to process the sky separately from the building in the foreground
  • Resave this image with all the layers that have been created
  • Flatten the image and straighten. If necessary, crop.
  • sharpen
  • save a new version of this prepared image as a Photoshop PSD
  • resize for your target medium, example, 900 pixels across for 500px.com
  • Convert to sRGB and to 8bit
  • Save as a JPEG. Remember to prefix the file name with ’900px’ for easy finding later on

Manual Layer Blend

First, get your separate exposures into one image as layers. You can use the menu to automate this: File > Scripts > Load Files Into A Stack [Add Open Files]
Most Photoshop users are a little wary of masks and selections, etc, but they’re really quite simple. I shall demonstrate!

Choose your Selection Tool of choice. I have used the Quick Selection tool, highlighted on the very left. Press [Shift] to add to your selection and [alt] to remove from your selection. You can see I have selected the correctly exposed canopy in Canary Wharf Station.

This selection is very jagged and will be most visible if we don’t make it more smooth and elegant. So click on the [Refine Edge…] button, again highlighted at the top of the above image.

The red mask area is very useful for viewing selected vs unselected, but you need to set this option. Click on the View drop down at the top of the Refine dialogue and select Overlay.

We will use the Refine Radius Tool brush, highlighted on the left. It will allow us to paint the edge of the selection and Photoshop will take an educated guess on what should and should not be selected.


Increase the size of the brush with the [Size] option and ‘paint’ lavishly around the edge of the selection. Go over all the edges!

The selection edge is far more gradated now! Press [OK] to save this selection.


We now to need to create a mask layer. A mask will will make some of the layer image visible and other parts invisible.

Press the [Add Vector Mask] button, which is highlighted.

You can see the black and white thumbnail that has appeared next to my layer thumbnail (below). Black is invisible. Simple as that. Anything not black will show through that same area in the corresponding layer. In my image, the canopy mask is all white and so only the canopy will show through. This is good, as it will leave the layer underneath visible, apart from the canopy.

I have gone ahead and repeated the exposure layer mask for the escalator and canopy surround, which you can see below. The layers, at 100% are too harsh, so I have reduced the opacity of the canopy layer to 80% and the canopy surround/escalator to 70%. A little bit of work, but a very flexible method to be able to represent wide dynamic range scenes.

A great observation to take away from this section is the power and flexibility of layers and masking. It’s precisely how I will process color and contrast in the next section.

Flatten your exposure layers [Layer > Flatten Image] and Save as a Photoshop document. You now have a properly exposed version of your scene. A base you can come back to. Very useful if you want to convert to black and white later on.

Image Edit: Color and Contrast

I shall demonstrate this edit with this single capture from Kolmanskop, Namibia. I have overlayed the processed image to illustrate the differences from RAW to processed.

If I attempted to enhance this image as a whole, it would probably be a mess and manipulating color and contrast for one area would most definitely degrade another portion of the image. Working on separate parts of the image makes most sense to me and this is achieved, once again, with masking and layers.

Create layers of image sections to process using masking

  • Select portion of base layer
  • Refine Selection
  • Copy selection
  • Paste to a new layer; name it something sensible
  • Repeat for all sections that require separate attention

I will go through my process to apply color and contrast adjustments to the sand.

Saturation

Select the layer you are going to edit – I will select the ‘Sand’ layer.

Tick ‘Use Previous Layer to Create Clipping Mask’ to ensure your edit is only applied to the ‘Sand’ layer. You’ll see the new layer has a little arrow pointing down to reflect this.

I have selected a predefined level of ‘Increased Saturation More’.

Sand should be a nice warm orange, so I’ll add another adjustment layer of a Photo Filter – Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Photo Filter…. Select the ‘Sand’ layer first and remember to tick the ‘Use Previous Layer to Create Clipping Mask’ option.
I have selected the ‘Warming Filter (85) and increased the density to 50 for a fuller effect.

Lastly, I have added a curves layer for contrast. Select the ‘Sand’ layer and, from the same menu location – Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Curves… – select ‘Strong Contrast (RGB)‘.

Since we have multiple layers corresponding to ‘Sand’, I will select them all, group and them – Layer > Group Layers – and apply a label.

Now I can make the toggle the Group ‘Sand’ on and off to see the effect of my layer adjustments.


TIP: To adjust exposure by a stop, add a curve layer and set it’s opacity to 38%. For +1 stop, set the Blending Mode to ‘Screen’ and for -1 stop, ‘Multiply’.

All Edits done now and, by editing section by section, I have been able to control the image quite comprehensively.

At this point save the image with all layers as a Photoshop Document.

Straighten. Crop. Sharpen. Save. Resize. Save.

Straighten

I have 2 methods. Use the Ruler, illustrated left which is very quick once you identify the strongest line in the image, or select all layers, then select the entire image > Edit > Transform > Rotate.

Crop

Simple task, but difficult to undo once your image is saved. I suggest saving your image before proceeding.

Sharpen

There are numerous discussions on the subject of sharpening and I personally have tried them all, but the most elegant sharpening method is the High Pass filter method. The results are sharp, but without artefacts and ‘jaggies’. Sharpening after resize is a definite no no.

  • Duplicate the layer – Image > Duplicate…
  • Perform a High Pass Filter, 1.0 is a good radius for a well focused image around 10-20mp – Filter > Other > High Pass…
  • Set the Blending Layer Mode to ‘Overlay’ in the Layers Palette

Save

Flatten the image – Layer > Flatten Image – and save as a new Photoshop File and name accordingly.

You now have a full resolution properly edited image. When you are preparing images for publication or competition, this is the version you will come back to to resize, save as JPEG and distribute.

Resize

I prepare JPEG image versions for various Blogs, Flickr, 500px, 1x and competition. They are all different sizes.

Save

The final save as a JPEG needs to be converted to sRGB and to 8 bit. These attributes are standard for the internet. If you don’t do either, your image on the internet will simply not look, to others, the same as you processed on your computer.

  • Image > Mode > 8 Bits/Channel
  • Edit > Convert to Profile…


Well here you are, this is basically my image editing workflow.

I suspect a Part 3, Pro Photographer Monochrome Conversion (TIPS), will be forthcoming, so stay tuned!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Pro Photographer Editing Workflow (TIPS)



Digital Photography School

 
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Review of the UPstrap on Weekly Photo Tips

01 Nov

www.WeeklyPhotoTips.com Today we are reviewing the UPstrap from, well… UPstrap.. The UPstrap is a very well made, most customizable, and has the highest pull strength of almost any camera strap you can buy. With the amount of money photographers have hanging around their necks, the UPstrap will help protect your investment without putting strain on your neck (or your wallet) and will keep your camera from sliding off your shoulder. You can read more about the UPstrap along with links and pricing at Weekly Photo Tips. www.WeeklyPhotoTips.com

61 ways to make an interesting movie. www.elitevideo.com Learn in 10 minutes what takes people years. It doesn’t matter if you have a Nikon or Sony or Canon camera, you need to keep your viewers attention. (watch the movie first!- then watch this commentary on how to do it all. Everyone wants to make movies, you make them but your friends are afraid to tell you they are boring or just ok. . Learn the tricks of the pros fast. camera techniques, story techniques and more. Hey, please share this with your friends and get them to subscirbe!

 
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More Eye Retouching Tips in Photoshop Elements

31 Oct

If your are doing portraiture, especially glamour, retouching is an essential skill. Here are a few useful tips for enhancing your subject’s eyes. (Sorry…I said ‘pupil’ a couple of times when I meant to say ‘iris’.) Be sure to visit the PhotoBlog at kkeithphoto.wordpress.com !

 
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Canon EOS – Getting Started: Moving to the Next Level of Photography Tips

31 Oct

Here we introduce the next level of tutorials – Creative Tutorials, where you can increase your photography knowledge and continue on your journey from taking good photos to taking great photos. Join in, find the inspiration for your photography and share at www.canon.com.au/worldofeos
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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How to manually Focus the lens to Infinity the RIGHT way. DSLR Photography tips

31 Oct

razzi.me www.facebook.com www.PhotographersOnUTube.com https This tutorial will teach you how to set the manual focus to infinity on any lens that can be manually focused.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

by aplus [Nikon D90+18-105 vr]

 
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