How many times have you heard an "expert" claim you can't get bokeh with a M43 (micro four thirds) sensor, zoom lens or stopped down to more than f4?
Sometimes you just need to ignore those rules.
Sometimes you just need to ignore those rules.
Nothing brings the finer points of a debate into the spotlight than personal involvement.
The big AIart news of the last few days is that Stable AI will allow artist to opt out of being included in the next dataset being used to train the neural network to be used for Stable Diffusion 3. Well at least you can opt-out for the next couple of weeks, so follow this up now.
There is a site, that can check whether you have been included in the massive Laion-5B & Laion-400m neural networks used in Stable Diffusion & Google's Imogen, yes they were trained on 5.8 billion images. I haven't established its legitimacy as an ethical stance, but it does seem legit. It doesn't appear to be a sneaky way to get more images (with so much hacking and phising establishing trust is a big issue in the #AIart discussions)
It took me very little time using the image search feature, to find two of my works. They were part of my Retracing Darwin exhibition in early 2010 and very early examples of my personal technique I call photoimpression. I actually don't mind if others study my method and even create examples of their own. I would like them to acknowledge me, which is becoming a hollow wish on today's web. I don't blame redbubble either, I am sure they didn't know and/or had not given permission either,
I really don't want my work, especially my own special techniques, style, mark-making colouring or composition used without my permission. This is the stuff that makes my work original. Firstly because I know I'll never be acknowledged, that others could profit from this work or contribution to this work to what is presented as their original, I also actually find a lot of the so-called art generated by these AI's a bit scary and I don't approve, and finally I find the whole process a bit morally questionable and not ethical.
So I've made up my mind, Now I do want to opt out.
Damn! I have to do it image by image. Cest La Vie
It's December already and I'm still contemplating the Backtober idea. Something more distracting seems to arrive everytime I stop to consider a NAS (network storage) option, and I really haven't given trueNAS a real work-out yet either. What I have done is dropped back to the very old Grandfather, Father, Son Archive strategy from the days when anything off the computer was stored on large reels of magnetic tape. In those days Backup was rightly considered as different to Archive. Usually the backup set was in two parts Full (everything import) and Incremental (only those files that have changed since the last full backup).
The three disks on the green sleeve also act as my Backup set, they are kept on my desk under the shelf/alcove lifting up my monitor to eye level. They are normally not connected to any computer but can be. When I retrieve my grandfather copy from remote storage I immediately clean off the disk (a full format as that does checks of the disk for problems and will map out and mark any problem areas).
The developments in AI (well large-scale machine learning in natural language and image generation areas) have been astonishing. However, the "viral" usage seems to be sliding towards that all to common race to the bottom. Well, several bottoms, exploiting others to make money for nothing, chasing fame and likes, selling AIart as NFTs and now creating and selling books (children's stories in fact). All that as others question the ethics and legality of profiting off someone else's work.
Today I became aware of two books that have been raced into production using these AI tools. (I say this confidentially because the tools to create them have only been available in recent months and the better version in the last weeks)
"I think this book is a glimpse at what anyone can do with merely some AI software, basic Photoshop skills, and an idea. If my [idea] can be turned into a book, then I'm sure your far better ideas can, too!"
—Mark Terry of The Truth About Bees
Yet I do see that there is great potential for many artist being able to use these Ai tools as aids to improving their skills, helping with inspiration and understanding, and even making their own unique tools on a much smaller scale. As Alice's story says there is power in these tools which can be used for good and evil, depending on how they are guided (what they given to learn)
So I started thinking could Lunimar Neo's new-ish RelightAI tool help out? It has sliders for adding brightness near or far and/or warming to cooling again near or far. Whilst the result is definitely not yet spectacular but it is a definite improvement.
I couldn't help noticing a couple of items lower in the creative block was the Sunrays tool and I just couldn't help myself!
So that means the sunset was a little ordinary. BUT still great to watch it set.
You really don't have to photograph everything, just being there can and taking time to gather in the ambience is all you need. Way better than a selfie on your phone that you never look at again.
All I wanted to do was leave Facebook, so I decided to create a goodbye profile picture using a text-to-image AI art algorithm. Really puzzled why I ended up with blood on my hands?
However, I did make the mistake of making my goodbye message public instead of just to my friends warning them not to click on any request from me, this started a flood of uninformed comments not to be so angry (which I wasn’t just frustrated) and each with convenient links to go somewhere else. If you see those please don’t click on them either.
So my facebook account should be gone (well in 30days)
The general vibes I am getting back from my fairly intermittent and probably very personalized investigation of the massive deluge of commentary on "text to image" AIart is that of two extremes. Those vehemently against it (with the argument that it will be the end of artists, whatever that means) and those who see it as a wonderful new technology (bringing artistic creation to everyone). I don't agree with either. Like all technology there are pluses and minuses.
Created with Google Deep Dream Generator |
Let's begin by discussing a small personal project of my own. Can AIart tools be used to inspire my creativity? Specifically help me create a new cartoon character, I'm just using a simple prompt.
"cartoon of a watercolour artist painting with red hat"
I submitted this to a number of the more popular AIart tools. I definitely didn't expect similar results as I have been following most of the technical issues how each system has been created. The biggest difference is the data selected to train the neural networks, and remember there are usually two neural nets, one to review images (usually scrapped fairly randomly from the broader web, and the second to analyse associated text (usually within the websites or social media posts as an alternate text caption). Finally, it is very important to recognize that these systems are not copying the original images or even parts of those images. In the case of the image-based network it is just using "abstracted" dimensions (descriptors) that allow it to differentiate or group parts of the image. A previous post includes a video that explains these steps clearly. These could be shape, colour, texts, line ... I'll call them patches of style ... or perhaps how marks are shown might be a better description. Well, the results are a lot different.Created in Nightcafe using a variety of methods but the same prompt. |
I am late discovering this experimental tool from google labs, called autodraw.com. It dates back to mid 2017 and uses the same technology to guess an object as google's quickdraw. Only this time it lets you sketch out the object you want and "It pairs machine learning with drawings from talented artists to help everyone create anything visual, fast."
Its as simple as that. The graphics are good (created by graphic artists), with Creative Commons Licensing, so free for non-commercial use, easy to download and use. Its also a bit of fun although you may find it quickly reaches its limits of what it might recognize.
Finally biting the bullet, I had undertaken a little review of what backup/archive space would cost at the moment, specifically on devices I owned. Using USB expansion style hard drives started at around AUD$ 32 to AUD$35 per TB (terabyte=1,000,000 megabytes) or 3.2 to 3.5 cents per GB (gigabyte=1000 megabytes), this was still way cheaper than SSD offering or even old fashion magnetic tape.
But I'm sure I mostly ingored these ads. Until in a different electronic store by chance I saw the 4TB drives again but for a higher price. I casually mentioned I had seen them cheaper and got an instant price match and even a little extra discount, damn again targeted advertising and slick salemanship. I decided quickly I bought two.
Now to catch up on the important archiving and backing up that was
sliping behind. No more excuses.
Prices have come down a little, as capacities have increased but things are relatively similar to my article back in 2018 The Myth that Digital Photography is free.
Whilst I have long since stopped using Lightroom and other Adobe products, I do still take a keen interest in what is going on at Adobe and more particularly what they are working on. So I have been attending the virtual aspects of adobe’s big MAX conference for the last few years.
Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen described how the company is determined to develop "AI for social good” in his keynote address. They are certainly using AI within many of their tools. Creating a wealth of “one-click”, “fix-it”, “make it better” tools within their existing suites of applications. For sure it will take a lot of tedious hack work out of making visual images and video, but I don’t think this is going to re-assure the real creatives worried about the rise of AI art.
The hyped “new” tool Adobe Express has a lot of the look and
feel of Canva, perhaps with nicer integration with other adobe tools (so you
need to pay more rent), The photographic enhancements in lightroom and photoshop are mainly not new and exciting, being offered in a number of other pieces of software, just not integrated so again you have to spend more renting it all. The sneaks segment usually my favourite to see what new technology might be coming up was a disappointment. Perhaps with the exception of project blink (for AI-powered video editing on the web)
I did like the short presentation by Relu Ou on "the
myths and realities about Artifical Intelligence", Particularly his closing
remark “Please let your imagination direct how you use these tools.”
A lot of people on the Internet express the opinion that artist will go extinct because of #AIart. I am not one of them.
AIart Selfportarit of Artist on the Beach (Style tranfer of a photo using a stable diffusion reference) |
The current crop of text to image neural networks can be quite amazing, very good at capturing style, colouring and texture aspects of artistic mark making. Not so good at expressing an artist intent, specifically originality. Unfortunately, most of the current neural networks I’ve been trained up on rather depressing and dystopian art and images. I’m not sure that this is really the direction of art, more to do with the wasteland of trends on social media, where most images are found these days. Further so much depends on how you express yourself in the text prompt and modifiers. Will poets become the new visual artists? Further it’s become common practice to keep refining the image and prompt. This is a lot like building up glazes or over-painting, creating layers of added texture and form and more eye appeal.
Already I can see that the simple first attempt text string
output on social media from any of the AIart systems around at the moment, looks much the same, not
quite right, unusually cropped and frequently scarily dystopian. Hopefully those jumping on the “one-click” filter style of social media influencer posts will soon become bored
with the method. Leaving those interested in the potential for artistic expression time to
experiment and refine methods. Thereby expanding the range of tools and media
they have to hand. I for one look forward to this time.
I do realize that Instagram's reels are just meta/facebook's copy of Tik/Tok BUT why are they so tediously phone oriented. I have a good little project going where I was submitting the prompt "Am I an Artit Now?" to a variety of common AIart tools and felt it would make an interesting video. Which I still think it will.
However after a week of frustration trying to load & edit a decent reel from my PC, I've realise why should I even bother with such un-socialable media. So sorry folks if you are on instragram, you'll have to put up with my Inktober etchings for a while.
I recently listened to a one of Brooks Jensen's "Here's a Thought" short daily podcasts called backtober Its about how he uses October each year to thoroughly review his digital back up and archives. He might be a bit obsessive, replacing any spinning hard drive older than 3 years, never less it has made me realize I need to totally re-evaluate my situation.
I have not found a good solution to replacing my little NAS unit. So automatic daily backups are not being made anymore!
The developments in Text to Image AIart generated images are amazing. Things are changing, and largely improving in image quality almost weekly. However one thing I had noticed that was staying fairly constant was unnatural looking crops, the weird truncating of the subjects, particularly people. Surely this was not a new artistic trend I had no knowledge of, or perhaps the artist who's work is being used to train these systems had an aversion to conventional composition.
Example of a headless figure based on stable diffusion promptAm I an artist now? John Singer Sargent |
Turns out there is a simpler explanation (see quote from a NovelAI blog post below). The unnatural crops are a result of the training set being converted to a square format (so the images are the same ratio) and just arbitrarily using the center of the image.
One common issue of existing image generation models is that they are very prone to producing images with unnatural crops. This is due to the fact that these models are trained to produce square images. However, most photos and artworks are not square. However, the model can only work on images of the same size at the same time, and during training, it is common practice to operate on multiple training samples at once to optimize the efficiency of the GPUs used. As a compromise, square images are chosen, and during training, only the center of each image is cropped out and then shown to the image generation model as a training example.
It hasn't taken long for my AIart works to fall foul of the censors. Ok not the real censors, the perceived NFW (not for work, standards of the USA based morals on the internet) Whilst I can only see blur in one of the images generated, I expect that it was being interpreted as NUDITY. Which isn't surprising for anything Salvador Dali inspired
I also believe the warning is probably coming from Stable Diffusion itself. That might be a very good thing, indicating they are concerned with the ethics (aka complying with social norms) of the types of images they are being asked to generate. I do know that certain words are not allowed in the text submitted. Again, a bit restrictive but overall, a good thing.Back to what I was playing with, just having fun. Which I learnt from a Catherine Price in a recent Ted Talk, involves Play, Connection & the Flow State. I like self-referential (meta) subject so I have submitted the phrase "Are we having fun yet?" Firstly the phrase just by itself and the results were totally underwhelming. Perhaps AI doesn't know what fun is yet?
Then by 3 well known artists / cartoonists / photographers each as modifiers. The results are more encouraging. I've picked the most appropriate in each group of four thumbnails.
Moral: Be careful what you ask for!
The question everyone seems to be asking is AIart really Art?
My view is that it is just a different form of expression and it does have many of the characteristics of Art. It certainly will give more people the ability to create things. Something they probably lost as teenagers when they decided they couldn't draw. (Some of us continued to draw and maybe never grow up as suggested by Picasso) However, it is already being exploited by copycat and wannabe influencer types that are on that constant production of "content" treadmill for social media. When you first see an image created by DALL-E or Midjourney it's quite amazing but once you have seen a few the novelty does wear off, and with so many similar dystopian examples now being shown it's becoming a little disturbing.
Yet I see AIart in its many forms as a powerful tool in the hands of creatives. Something that is very clear in the above video, which is also worth watching as a simple explanation of what text prompted image generations actually is and the basics of how it works. So I'm keenly following the developments. On the upside, this technology can save a lot of time getting inspired and just fooling around with concepts. On the downside I do worry that the copycats will exploit true artists' ideas and styles, monetizing such works and thereby ripping off the less-discerning public. I can also see that many artists will not wish to have their works included any publicly available neural network, which inevitably means not having any of their art published on the net!. I don't have an answer to this.
Such is (modern) life.
Due to the miserable weather last Saturday the "Birds in Flight" Photowalk has been rescheduled to Saturday 1st October. If your were already registered from previous Saturday no need to register. Otherwise, you can still book through Eventbrite. Fingers crossed for nicer weather.
I can't make promises about the weather, but if its overcast and drizzly the birds will still be flying, so come and bring a raincoat and/or umbrella.
I was trying to read an article in a well-recognized photographic website. However, it had become somewhat tedious, I could really only read a sentence of two at a time and it was being squeezed out by Ads some of which were flashing and cycling through different screens and our show a thumbnail of a video.
I decided to do a couple of screen captures and colour in the article itself (in light blue) versus the areas of Ads (in red). It quickly became very depressing. Its not just that website its pretty much most popular site now, The saddish part for the advertisers is all the ads are for place or things I might already use or vist regulkarly enough, ok except for adobe.
Are you surprised it's pretty much its 50% ads wrapped around just 50% for the article's content?
It seems like only yesterday that I wandered in Mid Journey while looking to get an invite to DALL-E. It was actually almost a month ago but a lot has happened in the field of AIart, especially using artificially intelligent processes to create an image from a text prompt. (I prefer to consider these tools large scale and targeted neural networks, not intelligences)
Vermeer's "Girl with a Pearl Earring" extended by DALL-E Outpainting |
This illustration is from a PetaPixel article about a technique called outpainting, were an image can be extended seamlessly, The approach uses shadows, reflections, and textures to extend the created background that is designed to blend perfectly with the original image, and uses its ability to pull in details from the millions of images run through its reference neural network. Not by finding actual object but shapes we see as real objects.
These technology advanced are truly amazing and wonderful tools for the creatives and original thinkers. Yet I am willing to bet that the technology will be dragged down on social to just create very dystopian, offensive, distastefully, look at me and wanna-bee influencer copycatism. They are already filling my Instagram feed. One bright outcome could be, it will probably lead to a big popularity to post AIart as static images back on Instagram, making it largely a photo and interactive place again (#makeinstagramgreatagain) and not just a place to be force feed with ads, reels and the misguided opinions of the haters.
So what is my opinion, have we created ART?
No! The generation of this image by computer is amazing but it has taken a compellingly beautiful and intriguing work of art and made a mundane domestic scene with lots of clutter, you are unlikely to stop and wonder what she is looking at and just swipe past!
And nothing New.
I haven't actually touched the Air-Gapped Archive in over 2 years. It seemed a good idea at the time, but I am very cautious about computer viruses and malware, also I see hardware failures as a much bigger issue. No point having a theoretically nice archive but finding the hardware is out of date, not working and/or unfixable just when you need it.
So I've dusted off the little netbook, and its still running Linux fine. It has no trouble recovering everything from the Stora. Getting it set up on my Microsoft based LAN was easy but not exactly transparent.
Looking around there are plenty of options to create a new NAS, but I will start with the Open Source TrueNAS. Most folk will recognize that it used to be FreeNAS, which seems to be well considered and still widely used. It seems to have a nice simple UI and hopefully will run just like my Stora, only now I will not be mirroring by working directories. Instead storing my complete photo archive on larger external USB drives attached to this NAS. I do expect the performance accessing the archive to be a lot slower. However I hope to make up for this with better organization.
My Linux/Mint Fileserver has already died three times in the past few weeks, The last time terminally, well I'd already swapped out two hard discs, which both crashed, didn't fancy wasting a third. So the much-altered old HP, aka Obsidan, has been consigned to the hard waste collection.
Graveyard of Hardware killed by Window10 Updates |
Ok back to the Stora, but that's a hard luck story as well. It works but none of my current PCs, and other devices can run the software (incomnpatible drivers stop installation) or even access it via a browser, because Adobe flash is required, which even Adobe no longer support and have removed it from downloads. I had to use my Linux netbook to reconnect (it had old version of the stora software) and "recover" the data from the stora onto already overloaded external USB drives.
Rather than panic I'm going to limp along with a monthly backup based on two copies of data but an old fashion SON - FATHER - GRANDFATHER set of Archives of keepers (files & photos I believe are worth archiving. This involves serious CULLING.
Returning to the #handrawphoto project |
I'm not sure how I managed to wander into the beta of Midjourney in a search to find Dall-E 2 (an AI based graphic tool that uses text to create an image, well so the claim goes!) I've registered an interest but not got into Dalle-E yet.
Ok what does midjourney make of the phrase "wandering in the light"?
These are just four alternatives and I haven't, figured out how to refine one of them, yet. They do look like wandering, but out of the shadows rather than in the light. Amazing but still a little uncanny valley.
And here is a nice summary of how this form of AIart (text to Image) has been developing.
Will AIart replace artists any day soon?
No I don't think so.
Yet all the developments are occurring rapidly and amazing, and I'm guessing social media will soon be flooded with these unique-ish but not quiet original creations and like fake news how will we be able to tell the authentic,
The theme of the next Photowlk in Jells Park is Birds in Flight (details and registration on Eventbrite)
I'm definitely not a sky replacement guy, but there has been so much discussion and hype about it I figured I should at least try it. This is a photo I was looking to capture the "sparkle" on the lake with a low winter sun backlighting the scene. This is a challenging photo from the rigors of exposure given the Dynamic Range to be captured, Getting detail in the foreground shadows means the sky (which was the vivid Australian sky blue becomes a blown out grey/blue. Importantly I hadn't taken a bracketed set., to no real chance to recover the sky
Original Photo |
My recent purchase (Update?) to Luminar Neo. With it big promotion of the ease of Sky Replacement meant I really should try it out, despite my reluctance to do such things. So here are three results, all achieve with one click to select a sky from Luminar Neo's library and a couple of tweaks for Sky Orientation (the positioning of the sun) and also the Scene Relighting.
Adding a blue sky (clouds) & relighting |
Making it Overcast |
Moving to the Golden Hour? |
Shadows are an example of something visual that our conscious mind normally ignores. Most often folk don't really see them or at least can't recall them.
Yet they can be wonderful aids to getting interesting compositions or even telling an intersting story. Also on a sunny day they can help get the best exposure (even without a light meter)
So remember "Whats in the Shadows
Stitching panoramas has become a lot simpler, but different programs did have different tolerance (or lack of) when stitching a handheld series of photos. Particular in three areas.
1) Near Perfect alignment woes, one photo out of alignment could sabotage the series.
2) Exposure varying from frame to frame, particularly in a clear sky for super wide views, could lead to obvious striping in the sky rather than a smooth blend.
3) Variable overlap, often tripped up the merging or just stop the merging.
I've been sending my updated ON1 Photo RAW 2022 many of these issues in hand held panorama sequences and I've been pleased that it is handling them well. Its also faster off the blocks (to preview) and much more efficient with time and space with the final render. You still have to export the propriety .onphoto file, which can be easily edited with any other tools in ON1 The export can now be a DNG file (ie.a RAW style format)
A Great Day in Jell's Park |
During the Stora's life the disk space was expanded from a 250GB single drive up to two 1TB disks, mirrored internally. In the early days it also gave family members their own shared space (discontented because it was seldom used). Then was my photo backup area until I started taking RAW format photos and movies and I soon overflowed space available.
I'm actually choosing to go back to having a traditional files server, (locked away in my old comms room). I have a couple of candidate computers that windows 10 updates have killed, well as far as Microsoft is concerned. I want it to be on 24/7 but secure. I also want this computer to have a DVD reader, perhaps even tape or Zip drive (to allow different media backups and/or reading old technologies). Finally, the ability to have two or more external drives connected (ie be able to copy whole archive disks setup). The downside is this will take up a lot more space than the little black box
Despite having used Ubuntu for some time on my little air gapped archive computer, which I have only been using roughly at six-month intervals and thus I hadn't time to become friends with Ubuntu. I've moved to using Linux Mint (it seems a lot cleaner and simpler for the stuff I want ie. little or no learning curve).
So I'm probably going backwards in technology but I trust I will be keeping things simple and reliable in the old fashion dependable sense.