MagCloud Update

A while back I wrote a two-part article (Part 1, Part 2) about a recommended workflow for publishing with MagCloud which has received favorable feedback from both MagCloud and other readers. In those posts I mentioned that MagCloud used two different profiles for saddle-stitched and perfect-bound magazines and suggested that I would most likely stick with the perfect-bound option. I have been recently informed that MagCloud now uses a unified profile for both binding options which should make life a lot easier for all the publishers using their services.

The new soft-proofing profile is available for download. After downloading it, you should go back to the original articles and replace the references to the profiles with this one. The earlier articles did not include links to any profile but MagCloud had allowed me to share them with anyone who wanted to use them. This should make the series of articles on this subject more complete and useful.

Remote Control Canon DSLR with Android Devices

Back in February 2010 when they introduced the first iPad I wrote a wishful post and speculated on a killer application for iPad. Yesterday on one of the sites I visit I came across the following video that demonstrates the same idea using an Android phone. That is excellent news since I now use an Android phone and have an Android tablet and I intend to try the software as soon as I get my tablet keyboard from repair. [Read more...]

A Great Resource For Photographers

NAPP, National Association of Photoshop Professionals has been around for quite some time now. Its founder Scott Kelby and his cohorts, Matt Klaskowski, Dave Cross, and others publish a very fine magazine, Photoshop user, and offer online content in variety of formats.

Where everyone learns Photoshop - National Association of Photoshop ProfessionalsI have been a NAPP subscriber for many years, and also joined the sister service KelbyTraning.com a few years back. I like the group not only because of the fine magazine and the NAPP Web site, not only because they bring varied programs to their members from shooting to outputting, but also because they bring unique programs like A Day With jay Maisel. I enjoy following these programs, that alone is worth the money. But I also want to support them by my membership so that they continue offering their rich resources to me and photography fans all around. [Read more...]

Photoshop Lightroom Resources

Photoshop Lightroom has become a very powerful, almost indispensable tool in photographers’ workflow; and for good reasons. It provides an environment for digital asset management, image editing, and output creation. It has easy to use tools for totally nondestructive editing at speeds that far exceed that of Photoshop’s in many, if not most cases. I now do most of my photo editing and outputting in Lightroom, pushing the photograph to Photoshop only when Lightroom falls short for some editing I need to do on an image. Even then, the round trip to Photoshop and back is only for that specific function. I like it!

Photographers and programmers have been trying to expand the capabilities of Lightroom by developing plug-in modules for it to perform functions that are not available in the core program. I will share several with you in this post. What you will read in this post will be the tip of the iceberg as there are many more such add-on modules, I will only share those that provide functions that I consider of use. Furthermore, this review excludes paid plugins from vendors like onOne, Nik, SlideShow Pro, and others. What you will find here are plugins that are free to try, and donate to own. The developers put many hours to developing these programs and deserve to be compensated no matter how small or large you decide to donate. [Read more...]

A New Lens

Photographers love lenses, I am no exception. I have a decent collection of lenses that I use on different occasions. Recently, I have added a unique lens to my collection; quite possibly the most expensive and equally valuable. This one is quite tiny, 6mm in diameter and with its extensions, about twice that. Now, you may be thinking “how on earth you use that lens?” You are right, it does not fit on any of my cameras, does not zoom, has no focusing mechanism of its own, no built-in f-stops. But this one is implanted in my eyes, each eye has its own after two successive cataract surgeries. It is remarkable that I can now see, reasonably clearly with no glasses at all. Yes, it is not yet as clear as it will be in the next few weeks and, yes I have to wear glasses to read; but being able to see the world with “naked eyes” is a treat. I thank Tom McCauley who performed both surgeries with great success and has been taking care of our eyes in the family for decades.

Here are two photographs of a sample lens similar to those that are implanted in my eyes. The numbers you see below the lens are the ISBN numbers on the back of a book. That should give you a sense of scale. The process by which they implant the lens it is also quite interesting. The incision in the eye is quite tiny and they roll up the lens lengthwise into a thin tube and inject it through that small opening where it unfurls inside the eye’s own lens sack. One of my eyes has an implant that lets me see near to mid distance and the other from mid distance to far. Amazingly, in time, the brain learns how to use this oddity and I expect to need to wear glasses less and less.