Tag Archives: ebook

Dodging and Burning – An essential skill and a new ebook to help learn the basics…..

Many of us “old timers” got our start with film cameras and darkroom work with chemicals and all kind of trial and error methods to bring out the details in our photos like dodging and burning. I remember having all kinds of funny shaped cardboard pieces on little pieces of wire and cardboard with cut outs and sometimes just using your hand to help bring out details in a print. In newer terminology to bring the full dynamic range to view on a nice print. Today, of course, we can use computers, so instead of throwing away trial prints we can edit and experiment. Especially with tools like Lightroom, the changes are all parametric and we can always go back and re-edit. You can still do that with Photoshop but it takes a little more effort. Now we use pen tablets and a mouse to apply and change the areas, to make the highlights and shadows as we remember the scene or how we want it to look. All of us go through various learning curves and it is always useful to learn new techniques, so that brings us to the subject of this post. Here is a new ebook, available from the fine people at Craft and Vision. This new ebook is quite a package, it includes an ebook on Dodging and Burning, including lots of examples, but it also includes some Actions for Photoshop and a custom Panel for interacting with the Actions. The sample images discussed in the book are included so that you can follow along exactly with each step. These are set up for Lightroom 4 or Photoshop CS6, while they will work with earlier versions these are recommend because of the improvements that were implemented with the new Image Process in Camera Raw. Trial versions are available for download from Adobe. In case you are wondering about cost, the normal cost for this fine package is $10, however if you use the code “DODGE8” during checkout, it will only be $8. This is only for a limited time, so go and get the Dodge&Burn ebook through this link and use the code before midnight on July 22, 2012. The Craft and Vision book store also has a package deal, for the same limited time, in which you can get 20% off 5+ ebooks from the site, the code is “DODGE20”.  All of the books are worthwhile, however I recommend in addition to the Dodge&Burn, ebook to take a look at Up Close, Exposure for Outdoor Photography, Making the Print, and the Power of Black and White. There are many others that are excellent but those will give you some great information.

So be sure to check out the ebook, and learn how to Dodge and Burn effectively, bring up those shadows and modify the highlights to match your initial vision when you took the picture.  This is an art that does take practice and there is certainly many ways to accomplish the same effects but this book will give you a great start and some insight into improving your images. Not only are the traditional type of modifications discussed but also uses of sharpening, and tonal effects to add some depth to your vision. How to effectively do it in a non-destructive fashion in photoshop, but also how to use some of the tools from Nik Software as a way of making it more efficient.

 

Learning to Print……

Almost every photographer I know at some point wants to make some prints of their work. There are lots of options, you could buy an inexpensive printer and print yourself. You could also buy a more professional wide format printer and get as sophisticated as you would like, or you could use outside printing resources.  By outside printing sources, I mean uploading or taking a file and getting it printed. There are many online places and also Costco and other warehouse stores. There is also the local photo printing store, although those are becoming fewer and fewer.  A lot of choices, but it really depends on the desired results. Does the final quality of the print matter a great deal or just a little? What sizes and types do you want to make and this is just for starters. So where do you go to learn how to make a print? There are lots of references on the internet, some great, some not so good with outdated information. I know I went through this when I decided I wanted to get a quality printer. I went to a lot of sites and asked a lot of questions, and I finally settled on an Epson 4880 printer. Epson has come out with newer models since then but I love using my printer and the output is really great, much better than I had been getting using an outside printing source. The best prints come from a sound techniques and knowledge of how to control the process. So how do you get this knowledge?  I found two sources that really cover the material needed. Both are very new and I wish I had them when I was first going down this path.

For a really good introduction and to cover a lot of useful ground, there is a new ebook from the Craft and Vision people, called Making the Print by Martin Bailey. (If you use the code “PRINT4”  before midnight on the 21st of January 2012, you can get it for $4 instead of the normal $5, or save 20% on 5+ pdf using the code “PRINT20”.) This ebook may be low cost but it is packed with lots of useful information. Enough information to make you decide whether or not you want to pursue printing on your own, and it will also give you enough information to use an external printing resource with a color managed output. This little ebook covers all the basics from types of paper, to color management and printing. There is also a chapter on doing gallery wraps on canvas. While the ebook is not intended as an in-depth tutorial it will give you enough information to get started and perhaps enough to do just want you want to do. Like anything in life you can make this as complex or as simple as you like but what matters is the end result.

If you want to get more in depth discussions and you like learning by watching videos than this next item is for you. This is a video tutorial covering everything from capture to printing to displaying on screen. It is about 12.5 hours long and is broken up into chapters. This video tutorial goes into greater depth than the ebook but also costs more. The video features Michael Reichmann and Jeff Schewe, both very accomplished photographers with a tremendous amount of knowledge. It is available for purchase and download from the Luminous Landscape web site and is called Camera to Print and Screen. Production quality and the information is top notch. This was only recently made available and even though I have done a lot of research I still learned a lot from watching these video tutorials.

Both of these are very useful resources and will help to steer anyone interested in printing their own pictures down the correct path to yielding great prints. They are certainly not the only reference but I find both of them to very useful and will really streamline the learning curve.

 

Improve your photography – for FREE!

Well it may not be a completely truthful statement, it is however, still a free item. What I am talking about is the new free ebook from Craft and Vision. The ebook is called Craft and Vision, and if you click on that link you can download it for free. This book contains 11 chapters by 9 different authors that will give you tips and suggestions that might improve your photography and help you get to the next level. While it will not work miracles, it can provide food for thought.  Looking at new concepts and also re-enforcing standard techniques can help you help create better images.

There are chapters on how to read a histogram, on how to direct viewers eye to emphasize your intent, and composition. There are chapters with valuable advice, like how to take better portraits and make your images more dynamic, and much more. Is this a worthwhile ebook? Definitely and the price is certainly right, you cannot go wrong. While you are there you can check out the other volumes that are available, all for $5 each. There are some great informative titles.

One of the reasons I am recommending their books is that I have found inspiration from them. I have read many of them, and it has helped me get over a creative hump. I was getting tired of reading endless forums debating the same hardware issues, the same questions over and over, call it a form of burnout. I am now thinking more about the creative aspects, and looking at and seeing things in a different manner.  Trying to improve my craft. There is some great advice in these books and the price is reasonable which is refreshing in this day of over commercialism. So check out their free ebook by clicking on this link to the Craft and Vision free ebook.

Feel free to send a link to this blog post to all your friends and camera buddies, help them improve their photography. Feel free to comment here as well. I hope you find it useful. 

Studying composition is a good thing…..

I think every photographer goes through periods of change, ruts develop, distractions happen, and sometimes life just moves on seemingly without any control.  I know I go through periods when I can’t seem to get a pleasing image, at least in my opinion. Is this from lack of trying, or maybe trying too much? Sometimes a spark is needed to help provoke a new way of looking at the world. A type of creative spark, something to break out of the mundane.  I know personally I have been kind of uninspired in my photography, oh I still enjoy it, but maybe I needed such a spark. One thing that has been a distraction is my love for gear and things that are technical. I get wrapped up in it, and soon I am playing more with the gear and hanging out in the forums looking and reading about gear. While gear is good, gear is just a tool. The main part of the equation is the image.  So lately I have been trying to avoid the gear and focus more on the photography. In the field I am carrying fewer lenses and less gear and that is making things a little easier, easier to be creative. To use the tools that I have with me, rather than rummage through all the equipment.

I stumbled upon the Craft And Vision website and David DuChemin’s posts on the Pixelated Image Blog and a lot of things he had to say resonated with some of the feelings I have been having and helped me to look at things in a different “light”.  Namely, photography can be difficult, and it really is not so much about the gear, but about the “vision”. The Craft and Vision website has a lot of inexpensive e-books about various aspect of photography and essays to make you think about the “craft”.

The most recent one to be released is Beyond Thirds – A Photographer’s Introduction to Creative Composition by Andrew S. Gibson. While this ebook is not intended to be a full treatise on composition, it does give some fuel for thought. The book for me was a gentle prod to make me think about composition when I am taking an image. I know I get pretty reflexive about using the “rule of thirds”, it has been ingrained into my thought processes from reading many other books and making conscious efforts to use that rule in some of my images. Well, as the book points out “rule” is a harsh term and that it really is more of a guideline. Not all images work well using thirds as a guideline, this book served to remind me that there are other considerations and other ways to compose an image. The book does go through and shows some nice images and discusses the merits of the particular composition selected by the author. It did make me think about how I am creating images and to think about how I want to capture my vision and intent.

I mentioned that it is far from a textbook but it is gentle prod to think about how to express yourself and how to improve your images. The price of the book is a very reasonable $5, Click here to purchase Beyond Thirds – A Photographer’s Introduction to Creative Composition by Andrew S. Gibson. If you use the code BT4  when you check out, the price is only $4, OR you can use the code BT20 to get 20% off when you buy 5+ PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST November 19th, 2011.