Posts Tagged ‘Adobe’

Photo Fun: Whatcha Lookin At?

Friday, June 5th, 2009

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by Brian

Whatcha Lookin At?

A lizard on a lizard, love this juxtaposition and its really a lucky shot considering the narrow depth of field. I try my best to keep the eyes in focus and this time I got lucky! Taken at the Honolulu Zoo this past May. 1/250 sec at f/5.0 with Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM on Canon 40D at ISO400. Cropped and post processed in Lightroom/Adobe Photoshop CS4.1

For other Honolulu Zoo photos, check out this gazing lizard, this beautiful pair of cranes, and this poky friend.

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Today’s Bacon | Katie

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009


by Joe

I was inspired to do this piece because of a recent Art History lecture I had on Andy Warhol. Although most of his work isn’t done by himself, he was the first artist to really embrace ‘Hollywood plastic’, and question society itself. He loved the fakeness in Hollywood and loved the celebrity image and used it to send a message to people about the kind of masks people wear. So I was really inspired to create something about society, and how its never ending on how much they can criticize you and make you want to change everything about you. The technical aspect of the photo is this: AB800 with large softbox at 1/4 power to camera left. The editing is fairly simple, just some curves and color adjustments in Photoshop.

The soft lighting in this photo is what initially caught my eye. As Katie stated it was produced by using a softbox.

You can check out more Katie’s work on her flickr photo stream and her myspace.

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Brought to you by iLovePhotos


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Today’s Bacon | Jill

Monday, May 11th, 2009


by Joe

This is a square crop off the original photo (taken with a wide angle lens) and although I’d composed the original with a large expanse of sky I had to add some more to get the “big sky” look I was after. I did this by cloning the lower sky, that done, I added about 3 different texture layers and “played” with opacities and blending modes until I got something that worked -sometimes I work for hours on an image but this one came together fairly quickly.

Make sure to check out the other amazing photos Jill has taken.

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Brought to you by iLovePhotos


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DIY: How to Smooth Skin

Monday, May 11th, 2009

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by Joe

This tutorial shows you how to smooth the skin out and remove blemishes and imperfections.

Before
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After
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DIY: How to smooth skin from Joe Philipson on Vimeo.
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Brought to you by iLovePhotos

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Today’s Bacon | Nicola

Friday, May 8th, 2009


by Joe

With a craft mad 3 year old we often have pencils out. On this occasion we’d just sharpened them ready for another colouring session. Lining them up just reminded me of the way the teeth interlock on a zipper. It was shot with a Canon 400D with a 50mm f/1.8 lens with screw on macro filters. Colours were brightened post production.

Thanks Nicola and great idea. Next time I see colored pencils around I think I’ll take a shot just like this. Very creative.

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Brought to you by iLovePhotos


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Today’s Bacon | Jason Samsa

Monday, March 9th, 2009

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by Joe

I took this photo of Hilary at 1:30 on a very bright and sunny day. Walking through a garden we came across a path under a bridge. I asked Hilary to step into the shade and took the shot. A lot of the light in the photo is sunlight reflected off the pavement. I love how the other side of the bridge frames her into the photo.

In photoshop I used a pair of Hue Saturation Lightness layers to convert to black and white and a curves layer for the split-tone.

Jason Samsa
jasonsamsa.com

Nikon D300
Nikkor 24-70mm at 55mm
f/2.8 @ 1/1250 sec.
RAW conversion using Adobe Camera Raw CS3

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Photo Lover: In the realm of Digital Voyeurism

Friday, February 20th, 2009

In the realm of Digital Voyeurism:
Justin Jernigan on photography

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by Jesse

0315082053On a late night subway ride through Brooklyn, Justin Jernigan reaches into his pocket. He sees a grimy weirdo across from him. With the flip of his cell phone he nonchalantly takes a picture, capturing a moment that normally would have gone unnoticed, never mind undocumented.

“One of the reasons I enjoy taking photos so much is the voyeuristic aspect of the medium. I love the ability to capture people’s private moments discretely - taking their angst, joy or indifference and blowing it up - exposing their fragile emotions and surroundings. In this way I think of graffiti, another passion of mine, which is raw, disposable, in your face and around every corner,” Jernigan says.

The 23-year-old self-proclaimed freelance photographer and fulltime troublemaker lives in an inconspicuous warehouse in Newark New Jersey-A.K.A. “Brick City,” across the Hudson River from New York. Riding bicycles and frequenting underground electronic music parties consumes his life, with a camera always in reach.  What began nine years ago while tinkering around with his parent’s two-mega pixel point-and-shoot Canon has developed into a daily expression that merges art with the exponentially growing digital age.

0406080030“For me digital photography is the ultimate disposable medium; light converted to numbers saved to magnetic media- the miracle of transubstantiation ready to be washed/electro-shocked/censured away in the blink of an eye. Film is so expensive, so physical, so spacious- I like that digital is cheap and dirty and easily disseminated to the masses at the click of a button,” he explains.

His current weapon of choice is a Nikon D90 that he totes around in a bright red canvas lunch bag.

“I can’t put it down and it takes HD video. The new live view on it is nice when trying to capture hard angles in precarious spots and the stock 88-105mm lens is pretty solid, especially with its built in vibration reduction mechanism. When I was commuting to work in Manhattan I liked to take photos with the camera on my cell phone as I rarely had my DSLR and the lighting on the subway is usually very bright,” Jernigan says.

dsc_0059Recently Jernigan worked on the Obama campaign in Reading, Pennsylvania, snapping photos whenever he could.

“I didn’t have a lot of time to shoot because we worked so hard for so long, but I got a few quality shots, including some with me and Howard Dean. Probably the worst experience I had there was carrying trays of catered food from a car into an office with my camera around my neck and having soup leak out onto my lens,” he say.

Though he assured it would, “pale in comparison to my time trying to shoot Bike Kill VI in Brooklyn a few weeks later when my camera faced a constant onslaught of rain, beer, fireworks, CO2 dust from a fire extinguisher, glitter, food fight food, blood, spit, flying bike parts, mud and grime to name a few.”

3201409315_c022027da5While backpacking across Puerto Rico over the holidays he constantly found himself having anxiety over his camera being exposed to the elements, including booming surf and unpredictable gusts of sand on the beach.

Editing from his lofty studio, Jernigan has experimented with a variety of programs in both the PC and Mac world, using Adobe Bridge for its RAW support, Creative Suite, Adobe Photoshop and had some time to explore iLovephotos along with Bacon Lettuce Photo.

“Both Windows and Mac OS X have horrible built in photo organization software and after using iLovePhotos on a friend’s laptop it seems like a steep improvement compared to using iPhoto/Finder to find and organize your photos. Bacon Lettuce Photo is a good blog, useful information and nice shots. Could do without the meat-centric title though,” Jernigan says.

With the exponential growth of digital photography, he believes it has irreversibly changed the photo world forever.

_dsc4871“On the one hand it’s great that more people are taking more pictures - but at what cost? My concern is that instead of entrusting a young child with a disposable Kodak point and shoot - which can weather the woods, beach and other adventures without fear of too much wear and tear - we are tying a whole generation of photographers to a new form of a technology that is entirely dependent on a fragile and expensive digital backbone,” he explains, adding,  “A child in Africa or Latin America cant take pictures anymore because their family cant afford a computer and the camera shop in town doesn’t sell film for his old hand me down camera.”

Recently he was inspired by a photo essay on a man who fitted his cat with a camera and sent it marauding around the neighborhood, as the camera remotely took photos every minute. This endeavor is something Jernigan believes could have not been possible on a consumer budget 10 years ago.

Thirsting for a Mac and eager to travel again, Jernigan will continue to shoot openly-and secretly for as long as he can get away with it.

“I hear they’re trying to pass legislation mandating all camera phones make a ’shutter click’ sound - no fun.”

Justin Jernigan’s work can be seen at http://fakedomainname.org

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