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Posts Tagged ‘Year’

Popular Photographers, Bloggers & Entrepreneurs Share Their New Year Resolutions

31 Dec

New Year’s eve has always been considered the perfect time to look back at the year, reflect on what’s worked and what’s failed. It’s a good opportunity to start anew and think about the changes we want to make starting from day one of the new year. Among the most common resolutions people make as the year draws to an Continue Reading

The post Popular Photographers, Bloggers & Entrepreneurs Share Their New Year Resolutions appeared first on Photodoto.


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Post-Processing Tips of the Year 2014 on dPS

31 Dec

What to do with all those photos after you’ve taken them is the question. Do you do any post-processing? Are you a minimalist? Or maybe you like do to HDR?

Zvi Kons

By Zvi Kons

Whatever your tendency this year had some helpful post-processing articles. Here are a few of the most popular ones from the last year:

Lightroom

  • 6 of Lightroom’s Hidden Treasures
  • Useful Lightroom Plug-ins
  • How to do Noise Reduction in Lightroom
  • Photoshop Versus Lightroom Which is Right for You?
  • Lightroom How To – One Tip and One Trick
  • Seven Pieces of Advice for New Lightroom Users
  • Improve Your Images with the Lightroom Graduated Filter Tool
  • Save Tons of Editing Time with Lightroom Presets
  • How to Create a Vintage Look using Lightroom
  • Step by Step Portrait Processing in Lightroom
  • Lightroom 5 Tips – Hidden Gems
  • Mastering Color in Lightroom using the HSL Tab

Photoshop

  • >3 Easy Steps Using Photoshop to Making your Images POP
  • 5 Photoshop Tools to Take Your Images from Good to Great
  • How to Use LAB Color in Photoshop to Add Punch to Your Images
  • 6 Commonly Used and Confused Tools in Photoshop Explained
  • Ten Go-to Editing Tips for Using Photoshop
  • 4 Tips for Post Processing Efficiency in Photoshop
  • Understanding Masking in Photoshop
  • How to Watermarking Images With Photoshop and Lightroom
  • Two Quick and Easy Photoshop Head-Swapping Techniques
  • How to Use Levels in Photoshop Correct Color and Contrast
  • How to do Quick and Easy Curves Adjustments in Photoshop
  • 3 Creative Uses of the Drop Shadow in Photoshop
  • How to do Great Black and White Conversions Using Photoshop
  • 5 Creative Ways to Process Infrared Photographs in Photoshop
  • A Beginners Introduction to Using Layers

Other

  • Are You Guilty of these 5 Over-Processing Sins?
  • Luminosity Masks Versus HDR Software For Creating Natural Looking HDR Images
  • Better Star Trails Photographs with StarStaX
  • HDR Vertorama Photography – How to Create Mind-bending Images
  • Getting to Know Picasa – a Free Image Editor and Browser by Google

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The post Post-Processing Tips of the Year 2014 on dPS by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Top Portrait Tips of the Year on dPS

28 Dec

 

powerful-portrait-tips-17.jpg

If you like to do portraits here is a round up of some of the top portrait related articles on dPS in 2014. There are some really great tips here – get out and try them out:

  • 3 Simple Ways to Create Stunning Eyes in Your Portrait Photography
  • How to Improve Your Portrait Photography in Five Minutes
  • Using Composition to Create More Powerful Portraits
  • 15 Tips for More Powerful Portraits
  • How to Plan the Perfect Portrait Shoot
  • How to Create a Unique Bokeh Portrait for Under $ 10
  • 10 Portrait Tips to Take Your Photography to the Next Level
  • Tips for Great Beach Sunset Portraits
  • Tip for Using a Reflector for Portraits
  • How to Find Great Backgrounds for Portraits
  • DIY How to Build and Use a Reflector to Take Better Portraits
  • Tips for Taking Great Portraits in 10 Minutes or Less
  • 7 Tips for Interacting with People to Create Better Portraits
  • Tips For Great Indoor Portraits Using Natural Light
  • How Self-Portraiture Makes You a Better Photographer

Don’t forget dPS also has several portrait ebooks in our store. Check out the entire collection here.

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The post Top Portrait Tips of the Year on dPS by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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My Favorite Year: A Sony shooter’s inspiring 365 day project

28 Dec

With start of a new year, many photographers will take up a ‘365 challenge’, creating and sharing a photo every day of the year. If you’re looking for inspiration to start your own, Toni Ahvenainen’s ‘Year of the Alpha’ project is the perfect place to start. He’s a DPR reader, an enthusiast photographer and, of course, a Sony shooter. In our Q&A he tells us how the project started, how it evolved and what he learned along the way. See gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Long Now: Future-Proof 10,000 Year Clock Built into Mountain

26 Dec

[ By WebUrbanist in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

longnow clock face

Founded by futurists to engage in truly long-term thinking, the Long Now Foundation is best known to many for Long Bets or its recent placement of a Rosetta Disk on a comet, but the organization has an array of amazing projects designed to last hundreds of generations, including a 10,000 Year Clock. Something to consider before we go any further: civilization as we know it is arguably only around 5,000 years old – we are talking here about an technologically sophisticated endeavor aiming to span (and keep track of) twice that period of time.

longnow clock top

longnow clock tunnel

Designers and builders are used to thinking in terms of decades, perhaps even centuries, but are rarely called upon to consider millennia in their plans and calculations. In the case of the 10,000 Year Clock, environment is critical – in addition to robust materials and geological stability, predictable temperatures and relative isolation are key ingredients in siting the mechanism. Towering 500 feet vertically and with gears weighing up to 1,000 pounds each, the first clock is being built high and dry inside a West Texas mountain on property owned by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. Another is planned for Nevada – both are sited to avoid excessive rain or freeze-and-thaw cycles that could damage it over time.

longnow clock design sketch

longnow clock path

In the conceptual design stage of the project, polymath inventor Danny Hillis said of his aspirations: “I want to build a clock that ticks once a year. The century hand advances once every 100 years, and the cuckoo comes out on the millennium. I want the cuckoo to come out every millennium for the next 10,000 years.” Indeed, the experience of the clock has even more unique twists than initially envisioned: each time it chimes the sound is unique – with 3.5 million melodies in store, it will not repeat itself for the next ten thousand years.

10000 year clock face

piece of long now clock

Located in a separate space from the clock’s inner workings, the face of the clock “displays the natural cycles of astronomical time, the pace of the stars and the planets, and the galactic time of the Earth’s procession.” Prototype parts of the clock are on display in some places, like the Long Now’s bar and event space in San Francisco known as The Interval, where this author recently saw Kevin Kelly, board member of Long Now and founding editor of Wired, speak about his book and history with the organization.

Perhaps most impressive of all: the clock can keep itself going for the entirety of is planned existence. While it will not display the time unless wound it will continue to keep track, using the sun and stars for guidance and temperature differentials for power. “Thermal power has been used for small mantel clocks before, but it has not been done before at this scale. The differential power is transmitted to the interior of the Clock by long metal rods. As long as the sun shines and night comes, the Clock can keep time itself, without human help. But it can’t ring its chimes for long by itself, or show the time it knows, so it needs human visitors.”

longnow clock prototype design

While this kind of working technology over such a long time period has almost no precedent, there are many examples of things surviving for such long periods – human-made ceramics have lasted up to 17,000 years along with other artifacts. The biggest worries? Some moving parts will not shift for generations, so making them able to work after a millennium without motion may be tricky. And then there are human visitors, well known for vandalizing and stealing from historical sites over time – we may, once again, be our own worst enemies.

As shown in the video above, “This system will be suspended 400ft down in the 500ft deep shaft that was carved using a raise bore drill last year. The large structural elements and gears are made from marine grade 316 stainless steel, most smaller pins and rollers are titanium, and the bearings are all made from an industrial ceramic. The entire system uses no lubrication, but the first tests have shown that over 93% of the energy put into the system, comes back out to go to the Clock.”

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[ By WebUrbanist in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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15 December, 2014 – Camera Equipment Of The Year 2014

15 Dec

 

It’s been an interesting year photography wise with some groundbreaking new products.  The trend is towards mirrorless and the stand out products this year fell into the mirrorless category.  As always Luminous-Landscape has its eye on the hot gear.  Today Michael Reichmann and Kevin Raber share their Camera Equipment Of The Year report.  Read what they thought was hot and not as well as disappointments and predictions for the coming year.

We have an opening on the second Antarctica Trip in January.  If you are interested in this trip and a special offer please contact Kevin Raber for details.


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Seattle PI.com showcases its ‘pictures of the year’

14 Dec

Seattle PI.com, formerly the Seattle Post Intelligencer, was the first major metropolitan newspaper in the USA to go online-only. Since then, the website has gained a reputation for high-quality photojournalism, covering events in Seattle and throughout Washington State. Remarkably, the PI only employs two full-time staff photographers, who between them in 2014 covered everything from the Superbowl to the tragic shooting at the Marysville-Pilchuck High School. Click through for a small selection of the PI’s ‘pictures of the year’

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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UK Landscape Photographer of the Year winners announced

15 Nov

The winners of the UK’s Take a View 2014 competition have been announced. Taking the title Landscape Photographer of the Year and a £10,000 prize, photographer Mark Littlejohn beat around 20,000 entries with his picture of a temporary stream created by heavy rain tumbling down the side of a Glencoe mountain, in Scotland. See gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Europe’s Landscape Photography Event of the Year – Streamed Live

13 Nov

 

Image By Joe Cornish

onLandscape magazine’s landscape photography conference takes place amongst some of Britain’s most dramatic countryside in the English Lake District on 22nd and 23rd November 2014.

Billed as Europe’s biggest landscape photography event of the year it brings together some of the continent’s best known and loved photographers and the entire weekend is to be beamed out live via satellite and streamed around the world by StreamScape.

Luminous-Landscape is happy to announce that our readers can stream the video from the conference or download segments all for a special price. (see below)

Speakers

The Swedish photographer Hans Strand tops the bill talking about the opportunity and inspiration Iceland has given him in his photography. Rafael Rojas the Spanish photographer, now living in Switzerland, who runs whytake.net, a massively popular photographic website, will be looking at which ingredients are needed to produce fine art landscape photographs.

While Britain’s best loved landscape photographer Joe Cornish pushes photographers to think at a higher level about their photographs, discusses some lesser known works and provides some thought provoking concepts for landscape photographers to take on-board.

Other speakers include the critically acclaimed Jem Southam whose work has been displayed in the Victoria & Albert Museum, Alan Hinks OBE, the only British photographer to climb all 14 of the world’s mountains over 8,000 meters.

The list goes on with David Ward, Paul Gallagher, David Clapp and Paul Wakefield all offering inspiration and insight any landscape photographer would love to hear.

Streamed Live

The streamed event will give internet viewers the opportunity to question the speakers in special internet only “Green Room” interviews after each of their presentations. Particular need to viewers who are in different time zones has also been taken into account with special DVR functions allowing viewers to tune in at any time and rewind to the start of the day.

For those who are unable to watch over weekend all the videos will be available to watch on-line or download for at least 1 year after the event.

The cost of the streaming weekend pass with the Luminous-Landscape discount code is £12.95 – just over US$ 20 and offers amazing value. Tickets to actually attend the event are still available at £225 (US$ 375). 

The Luminous-Landscape discount code is LL35 and active till the end of the conference.

To book your weekend pass and for more information visit streamscape.uk

 


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Natural History Museum announces Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2014 winners

25 Oct

The Natural History Museum has announced winners of its 2014 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition. This year’s winning photos document all manner of creatures, from a pride of lions in the Serengeti, to a yellow scorpion in the northeast of Spain. The competition recognizes both adult and youth winners and awards the top photo with £10,000 and a trophy. See gallery

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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