Archive for November, 2009

Life Altering Photog Books

November 20, 2009

There are some amazing photography books out there, ones where I sit reading through the ideas, smack my head and think, “how did I not realize that?”  Two of the life altering ones that I’ve read this year are Joe McNally’s The Hot Shoe Diaries and the Photoshop Lightroom 2 by Scott Kelby.  

hot shoe

The Hot Shoe Diaries is the type of book that I’ve gone back to again and again…not because it’s much of a how to guide with steps, but because it provides this framework  for inspiration.  Joe McNally has about a billion speedlights, and he uses the portable light sources in some pretty unbelievable ways–imagine the small light source of a flash and then picture a giant airplane.  McNally uses his small speedlights and lights the giant airplane.  Ordinary photographers wouldn’t venture this in a billion years–they would pull in huge, heavy, power sucking studio lights and even with all this juice, wouldn’t come close to getting the brilliant shots that McNally gets.  Also, if for nothing else, this book was worth the cost just to see his flashes being used in turkeys…that right, a flash in a turkey…the man is crazy, but in a genius sort of way. 

A sampling of the book from the publisher is available here.

lightroom 2

So with Lightroom 3 around the corner like I mentioned in a previous post, a new book is likely to be coming out around the corner too…but for Lightroom 2, you can’t do better than this book. 

When I first started using Lightroom, I viewed it with strong suspicion and kept comparing its capabilities with those of Photoshop…as in, “why doesn’t Lightroom offer x feature, they have it in photoshop!” but soon realized that I was looking at it all wrong.  Lightroom is meant to help photographers with a heavy workflow, not to substitute Photoshop….this book not only whizzes through Lightroom’s many capabilities, but provides insight into how Kelby actually uses Lighroom after a shoot.  From this book, the single most useful thing that I learned about Lightroom is that you can copy/paste develop settings.  For example, if you have a series of photographs taken in the same location and under similar lighting circumstances, you will likely have to adjust the white balance/exposure/color in the same way.  In lightroom, all you have to do is adjust the first photo in the series, and then you can copy/past these same adjustments to all the other photographs in the series.  Usually this won’t be enough to make every photograph in the series perfect, but it is definitely a huge time saver when you’re swimming through hundreds of photos.

  • Share/Bookmark

It’s hard to imagine a wedding with more thought out and cohesive details than this one. Pamela and Steve had a halloween themed wedding the day after halloween (complete with a Fraggle Rock band in attendance!) and it was clear that Pamela had put in serious time and thought to every detail–from the red and black feather bouquets and the red ass-kicking boots, to the skull decorated favor boxes, the robot cake toppers (they’re a specific kind of robot but I can’t remember their names for the life of me), and the gummy wormed signature drink. More pics to come!

triptech details-1

  • Share/Bookmark

Business Cards are In!

November 12, 2009

Hooray!  The business cards are in! After designing them in publisher (would not recommend this program for designing business cards, other programs have been much easier to use), I uploaded the design to VistaPrint, and voila! just like that the cards have come back printed about two weeks later. These are the premium cardstock ones, although truthfully they could use a bit more heft. For the next batch, I will definitely, definitely be using letterpress, but for now, here are some pics of my very first photography business cards!

business card -1-2
The moody lighting in this was done with the Honl Photo Speedlight 1/8 Grid.  It’s a plastic piece that looks like a honeycomb — a common DIY is to take a bunch of evenly sized black plastic straws, glue them together and then put them in front of the flash.  Strobist has instructions for the DIY version here.  It was a bit tricky controlling the direction of the light and there were more than few trial-error error shots to get the light to beam on the logo without having the kickback glare of light hitting white paper….it could definitely be better, if I was going to do it over again, I would use a lightstand rather than holding the flash in my left hand as high as as I could while taking the picture. 

business card -1-3

business card -1

Please excuse the rather unkempt nails (sometimes sharp details are a bad thing!).   This pic takes advantage of the great macro capabilities of my G-9.  I have definitely not stopped being totally amazed with what this little point and shoot can do.  One of my favorite photography bloggers has jumped on the Canon G bandwagon and has the newest G11, with a discussion of the macro capabilities here.

  • Share/Bookmark

In a post earlier this week, I mentioned that I typically limit my photo effects to three main “looks”–black & white, natural vivid color, and a slightly de-saturated warmer white balance.  The three treatments are applied to the same photo from last week’s engagement photo shoot with Jackie and Mark (more to come after the post-processing!).

To create the different versions of photos using Lightroom, you need to create Virtual Copies. To do this, choose Photo in the main menu toolbar at the top of the screen > Create Virtual Copy, or press Control + ‘ (Windows) or Command + ‘ (Mac). From there, you can create a copy of the photo that can be manipulated in any way.

In the natural, vivid color version, I use Lightroom to recapture the vivid color that usually shows up in the camera’s LCD panel. Have you ever had that happen to you–when you look at your camera, and the colors look amazing, but then you look at the digital image and the photo looks dull because the colors are flat? You can fix this by going into lightroom, and in the toolboxes on the right side of the screen, scroll down to the Camera Calibration Section, and there is a pull down menu labeled “Profiles.” From there, you can select the profile that suits your photo–options include portrait and landscape. This re-inserts the brighter more vivid colors into your photograph that you originally saw on your camera’s LCD panel.

comparing effects 5 One Photo, Three Images in Lightroom

In this black and white photo, I first converted the photo to grayscale. After that, I increased the contrast slightly using the contrast slider (it’s best to avoid too much contrast, otherwise it tends to age the person in the photo by giving them deeper wrinkles and skin blemishes), increased the clarity slider (which sharpens details and is also located on the toolbox on the right side of Lightroom), and slightly increased the exposure.

lightroom sliders

comparing effects 6 One Photo, Three Images in Lightroom

In this last image, I added an aged look to the photo. First, I decreased the Vibrance slider by 25 (in the lightroom toolbox on the right), which desaturates the colors without making skin color look zombie like (if you use the Saturation slider, zombie skin is ineveitable). Then I manually changed the temperature of the photo which shifts the white balance of the photo.  In adding an aged look to the photo, I shifted the balance slightly to the right, which makes the photo warmer.  After doing this, I also slightly increased the exposure to increase the person-sitting-in-a-sunbeam look.   

comparing effects 7 One Photo, Three Images in Lightroom

If you’re interested in checking out Lightroom, there is a FREE BETA (!) available from Adobe at http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/lightroom3/. If you’re using previous versions of Lightroom, be forewarned that your photo catalogs will not update in the beta version of Lightroom 3, so proceed with caution if you don’t want your existing catalog to be emptied.

  • Share/Bookmark

Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

November 4, 2009

pamukkale 2 Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

On first glance, Pamukkale appears somewhat ordinary, like it’s just another snow capped mountain that happens to be in Turkey. Up close, it’s totally unbelievable looking. The “snow” is really travertines, which solidified from calcium carbonate that was deposited on the hills by water from the hot springs.   In Turkish, Pamukkale is aptly named “cotton castle.”  At the top of the mountain above the travertines, there are ruins from an ancient town Hieropolis, which was a spa town founded in the Second Century BCE.  While walking around, I could totally imagine what it was like centuries ago with people hanging out in togas (maybe?) in a town and then taking a stroll down to the hot spring pools. 

Despite the fact that it’s a World Heritage Site, we could walk and swim right in the travertine pools. We couldn’t walk around too long though–the white rock was both slippery and at the same time sort of stabbed your feet while you walked on it.  It took about 3 hours to get there from Ephesus, but it was definitely worth it to see the crazy looking cotton castle. 

pamukkale Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

pamukkale 5 Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

pamukkale 4 Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

pamukkale 3 Trip to Pamukkale, Turkey

Photos from hot air-ballooning in Cappadocia.

  • Share/Bookmark

There are a billion special effects that a photographer can apply to photos.  As a matter of personal taste, I usually don’t go too crazy and prefer to stick with three main looks:  (1) rich, vivid color; (2) black & white; and a (3) slightly desaturated look with a shifted white balance towards warmer colors, which makes a photograph look a little bit more aged and romantic.

It’s not always simple to decide how a photograph should look, but the majority of the time, I react to gut instinct.  If the colors in the photograph don’t add anything and the image itself can stand up well to a bit of a higher contrast level, then I’ll do a quick conversion to black and white in lightroom to test it out.  The higher contrast in a photograph helps to differentiate the colors in the photograph and prevent everything from being a flat gray.  For example, in the image below (from Flickr under a Creative Commons license), the photograph has been converted to black & white, but the scale is likely very flat since there are no true blacks in the photograph. It’s a great photo and the lack of color adds to the general feeling of melancholy in the photo, but for a typical wedding portrait with these colors, I would have decided against a black & white conversion.

D Sharon Pruitt

D Sharon Pruitt

In my opinion, photographs without true blacks tend not to be good candidates for conversion to black and white. Because there are no colors to amp up the picture, a black & white photo really relies on contrast. For example, in the photo below that I took while in Pamukalle, Turkey, there are true whites and true blacks. This contrast makes the clouds and the trees pop from the background, ultimately creating more depth to the photo.

black and white landscape picture  Deciding When to Convert a Photo to Black & White

The easiest way to tell if an image is flat (versus having true whites & true blacks that provide contrast) is by looking at the histogram on your camera or in lightroom. 

tut hist highcont hist Deciding When to Convert a Photo to Black & White

When there is a high contrast photo, and the image would likely look good in black and white, the peak likely will curve somewhere in the center and the edges of the curve will fall close to the left and the right of the histogram. If the photograph needs added contrast, you can drag the edges of the curve in the histogram in Lightroom as far to the right and the left of the histogram as you can go without “clipping” or going past the right and left perimeter of the histogram.  In lightroom, you can tell whether you have clipping (which means that you’ve lost detail because the colors have become solid white or solid black) by clicking on the triangles at the top right and left of the histogram.  Clipped areas that are black will show up in blue, and clipped areas that are too white and blown out will show up in red.

Stay tuned for a post on giving your photos the “aged” treatment in lightroom.

  • Share/Bookmark
SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline