Saturday, August 26, 2006

Calling Aussie Photographers


To all the Australians out there! Especially those in Flickr already. We would like to invite you to come join the Australian Photographers group! meet other australians, make friends and organise shoots together! also there are WEEKLY AND MONTHLY COMPETITIONS! a great way to get feedback on shots and to get some ideas and inspiration! so come join!!

Also it is good place to start, if you just want to find some good Australian Photos


Blogged with Flock

Friday, August 25, 2006

Spring is spring'ing



further evidence it is almost spring

Monday, August 21, 2006

Flock, cut & paste simplicty

I recently got a bit annoyed at blogger’s internal photo uploading features (basically it didn’t work) so I went over to photobucket to see how their tools had changed, What I found was Flock, a web browser that works with photobucket to easily upload photos and then creates the HTML to paste them into web pages, blogs & mySpace all using drag and drop.
The Image slider for your Photobucket photostream
Seems very simple, and works well but for me not a lot of formatting options. Everything is thumnailed to the size below

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Accessories

Whenever anyone asks advice on good accessories as a present for someone keen on digital photography, I always answer “tripod” and “extra rechargeable batteries”. The tripod helps to get clear pictures in low light, something most digital cameras are still struggle with. The rechargeable batteries, they must be Ni-MH & are really a necessity not an accessory, are needed because most digital camera are very hard on batteries.

I decided to look inside my own kit, which I tend to carry everywhere, so it should in theory be just the essentials. I have a medium sized camera bag (sturdy but not an expensive one, by the way) and a shoulder carrybag for my collapsible tripod (again not an expensive one but a good compromise between weight and sturdiness).  The “clip-on” yellow & blue pouches are for glasses.

Emptying the bag was a real revelation. Do I carry around that much! Do a really need all that? Starting just left of the center, I have a nice portable battery charger that also doubles are a battery container (from Sony). I have spare memory cards, my camera uses smartmedia cards (no longer used in newer cameras). There are also, at least a couple of, soft white teri-towel cloths to keep my camera clean. Also a blower brush and lens cleaning fluid (many purists would be horrified, but I get out into the real world, where it rains, the wind blows and things can get wet, dusty and dirty) So my advice is just don’t over use the fluid on the lens, wherever possible just you’re the blower brush. Yes that’s an iPod next. I don’t use any of the iPhoto stuff, or any fancy device to transfer my photos to it as portable storage. I just like to listen to music as I walk around taking photos. The little card is a nifty reference I made myself for scaling close up photos (mainly used in photos for reports). The yellow/orange thing in the middle is an LED torch that doubles as an extra battery case. Next is my trusty card reader, which often doubles as a memory stick, since it has a USB Cable. Finally I have a couple of cables, the white one goes from the camera to USB and whilst I tend to use the card reader >(it doesn’t drain the batteries of the camera, but otherwise performs the same task). The black cable with the yellow tag (sorry it is not really visible in my photo) goes from my camera to any yellow RCA video socket on a TV or video. This cable is surprising useful to let others “preview” images. I loosely roll up the cables and put them in pouches to keep then from getting tangled. Well that’s it, all useful stuff.

Opps I forgot the camera also goes in the bag

Friday, August 18, 2006

The geotagging buzz

The geotagging buzz

There has been a fair amount of discussion on the web and flickr in particular about geotagging, even flickr central is a buzz with rumors. Most of what I read is so amusing, having watched geogagging in flickr grow, mainly from the effort of key geotagging group member.  So I found the average “Joe in USA” complaint, about really needing a GPS in their camera, or cameraphone before they will tackle geotagging sad but it is a just another reflection of the self opinionated “net celebrity” appearing all over blog space I guess

Now there is a bit of diversion on which tools may be used. Will flickr railroad members to use yahoo maps?  Sergey Chernyshev has a nice Google versus Yahoo Maps comparison tool. It really brought home to me, why trying to using Yahoo maps, here in Australia, for locate anything is such a big ask. I’m happy to stay with google earth (via picassa) and google maps (via flickr using the localize bookmark applet)

Using the google versus Yahoo maps comparison this is the most detailed I could get with Yahoo. I’m lucky to guess where I am (since few minor roads are shown on the yahoo map) with a kilometer or two.

Switching over to satellite image, I can zoom in a little.

But Yahoo gives up well before google maps. Even thought the satellite image is starting to pixilated I can still see enough detail to get routinely within 3 meters using google maps/earth.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Four views (of the same) bird in flight.

 

Created using autostitch, this is based on four photos of the same bird in flight. The photos where taken in mutli-shot mode as I panned on the bird's flight path. Then I used the patterns in the clouds for reference to "merge" the images into one.

For Photo friday's topic: Four Posted by Picasa

Saturday, August 12, 2006

The surreal lighthouse

The surreal lighthouse

Panoramic Photomosaic of the Light House at Cape Liptrap (made with 29 photos using autostitch). The reason the base of the lighthous is very pale is simple. The images was taken in three strips, using my camera in mutli-shot mode. At te strt of each "run" the camera sets exposure and focus. In the first two upper strips the camera was aiming at the sky and "stopped down". In the last strip the camera was aiming at teh ground and "opened up" the aperture. The results is a big mistake but the merged image definitely has a very mysterious and surreal feel to it.

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Beach collage


There is something in this collection of photos that doesn't belong. Can you spot it?

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

What about Picasa Web Album?

I have previously discussed the new geotagging with google earth feature in the lastest Beta release of picassa, but the feature google are promoting is the new Web Album.

Well Picasa's web page looks (to me) like most other web albums. Ok its free up to a certain storage limit (around 250MB). It is easy to use from with picasa.. Do I sound under whelmed, well yes i was. I had expected a bit more. Perhaps i naively expected something that would automatically updated an album,or two I had on my picasa desktop, that i wouldn't have to push buttons to do everything, upload, organize, share. well they have thought through the button pushing so there aren't many. The sharing with your friend is achieved by sending them a link, and there is a button to help you do that. There is also a neat embed in Blog/Myspace, which gives you a snippet of HTML code to cut and paste into your blog (thats how i got the links below)

Here are a couple of albums, I prepared earlier.
McNaught's Comet


Sorong

Finally here is a a link to google's user forum on Picasa Web Albums so you can read a few other opinions.

Now you're just are being ridiculous

I have seen a couple of wild curving photomosaics on flickr so I’d thought I’d investigate making those as well. I took on sequence turning the camera as I went, (moving form a landscape orientation to portrait as I reached a large tree)

My Olympus software just refused to work. Autostitch selected those it could match, ingnoring the rest. Then it blotted its copybook by trying to straighten the horizon (well the image is sort of interesting in a distressing way)

So I had to fall back on my trusty version of Corel Photo, which allows a more manual stitching by identify two matching point of adjacent photos. While I could assemble them but the between image blending doesn’t exit and it is very “Cut & Paste” looking result

I can see there is plenty more to investigate, with free form photo stitching effects

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Weaving a series



Experimenting further with my skyline mosaic series. I used Jasc PhotoShop Pro’s Weave Effect to create an interesting set. While the colour saturation has been lifted in picasa, it is the dark silhouette of trees that make the composition interesting (for me)

The making of these images also itself makes an interesting screen wallpaper for my free wallpaper set on flickr

the bath duckies photoshoot



Yes it is a family of bath duckies at home in the pond below the MGA Gallery & Library at Wheelers Hill. They are part of sculpture in the park program, and look very much at home. They make a great photo subject



See where these photos were taken

Friday, August 04, 2006

This morning on the beach



It might officially still be winter, but lets keep this weather a secret. This image is my biggest composite photomasaic yet, it is based on 27 images assembled with autostich

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Comparing stitching methods


I love the auto panoramic feature of my Olympus camera. The big limitation is you must have a special card (supplied only my Olympus) to be able to use that feature. On the positive it is well thought out and it gives a reference guide over the image on the LCD to help you give the best overlap between shots. Once uploaded to the computer it is simple a matter of selection your series and pressing the create/auto panorama button. It is even fun to watch the images being positioned and the final product is generally good.

The big exception being when taking a strongly graduated sky the “seams” at the photo overlap are frequently visible in the sky.

So this time I also tried using the Autostitch program, and at least at the time of writing this, the demo version can still be downloaded for free for those who might be interested. Whilst it doesn’t show you what’s going on till it has finished. Compared with my Olympus auto panorama, I think it has done a better job with the blends between images (particularly) in the sky and the perspective is slightly different (layout out the outer images, a bit like a fan) Still I’m very impressed.


A small amount of straightening, cropping and using autocontrast in picasa and I have a nice wide panorama of the sunset

Researching a sunset in photomosaic


I’m back down at the beach and thought I’d do some more research on making big skyscape mosaics. This time I took a few sequences, using my special panorama card, with my Olympus camera, and some free format sequences.

The skyline is simply the sunset from the lower deck of my place, the images runs from slight west of south to almost east. As the sun was setting I didn’t have much time and I didn’t trust the exposure my the light meter was giving, so I took a range of exposures using bracketing using five (EV steps (the same process I had used up in New Guinea). I also took three different approaches when using the Olympus card.  First I just took a normal sequence, letting the camera select the light metering on the first image (this washed out the center exposure, where I actually wanted the best exposure)

Second I took a deliberate first image at the sunset, to get correctly exposed, then moved onto the normal panoramic sequence (this gave good exposure at the centre but I had to “burn” the first image)

The last approach was to aim at the sunset and have press the button to get the camera to focus and take a light meter reading (Achieving much the same as the above but without having to waste the first shot). I have also turned the camera to take a “portrait” orientation so I get a taller (in the vertical) strip.