Create Your Own Planets from Panorama Pictures! – Polar Panorama Effect

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:14 pm on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 —

I found this a while back on Digg I think, it’s really neat!

Creating your own Planet style pictures from Panorama shots. Most compact cams have a panorama mode and even the newer phone cameras have the feature which allows you to easily stitch a few shots together.

Our pal Dirk wrote up a tutorial that shows you how to turn any panorama or landscape photograph into a full-fledged planet!

Best of all, once you’ve selected an image to work with, the process takes only 5 minutes. (Launching your new planet into solar orbit may take a bit longer.)

Panorama

360 degree shot of San Francisco taken from the Coit Tower made into a planet.

Pretty neat eh?

You can find the full tutorial and examples here:

How to Create Your Own Planets Using Your Panoramas

There is also a big Flickr set of examples and a Flickr Group dedicated to this.

Tags: , , , , , ,

2,188 views - Filed under: Adobe Photoshop,Cool Stuff,Other,Software

Pictures That Lie – Manipulation of Press/Media Pictures

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:07 pm on Monday, January 29, 2007 —

There was an uproar a while back about the media in Malaysia altering press pictures to make them more attractive or slightly change the meaning/context by removing/adding people or merging two pictures.

It also happens to big shot AP photographers and many other press agencies, there is a full gallery that shows the extent of the manipulation and the stories surrounding them. And it’s been happening for a long time.

Like this for example:

Trotsky…now you see him, now you don’t.

Trotsky

And this LA Times pictures which turned out to be a composite of two pictures to ‘improve the composition’.

Composite

In most of these cases the photographers were fired. I believe this is rightly so, in the case of media photography or photojournalism, you are taking the scene, the reality, what occurred, it’s not down to artistic interpretation or manipulation.

Source: News.com

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

3,371 views - Filed under: Photography

London Strippers Exposed – Raw Photojournalism by Gail Orenstein

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:13 pm on Friday, January 26, 2007 —

I discovered this very interesting blog by a lady in London that does photojournalism style shoots of strippers in London.

Are Leopards An Endangered Specie?

Are Leopards An Endangered Specie?

Her name is Gail Orenstein and she really keeps it on the ground, her pictures are gritty and sometimes moving as she depicts the lives of Strippers in the underground world of the pseudo sex trade in London.

Lesbian?

Nobody Knows I’m a Lesbian

You can visit the blog here:

http://gophotosthenakedtruth.blogspot.com/

Sadly it hasn’t been updated for a while.

Her normal site is here:

http://gophotosblog.blogspot.com/

She shoots with a Nikon D50 as well, so it shows equipment is not all.

Both of her sites are not safe for work of course, so be warned.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

5,437 views - Filed under: Cool Stuff,Other

A Look at the Nikon D80 Reviews – 10.2 megapixel DSLR

ShaolinTiger posted this at 11:27 am on Thursday, January 25, 2007 —

This is the camera I recommend most people to get if they have the budget, an excellent entry into the world of SLR and about 70% of a D200 (feature wise and build quality) for much less money. I think the D80 kit now is around RM4200.

Nikon D80

We covered when the D80 was announced in August last year.

It’s a great camera, enough megapixels for anyone, good features, nice external controls, great image quality and the room to grow with support for plenty of pro quality lenses.

One thing I do recommend though, if you buy this camera don’t take the kit lens (the 18-135mm) as it’s not a great lens. Get the D80 body with the 18-70mm (Around RM650 second hand) lens from the D70s kit or get another lens completely like the 18-200mm VR (if you have the budget of around RM2500) or a third party lens like the Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 (RM1550) or the Sigma 18-50mm f/2.8 (RM1800).

The D40 is ok for real beginners, but people with some good photography experience might find it limiting, also the lack of support for good but cheap lenses like the 50mm f/1.8D is not there.

The reviews are generally excellent, so here’ a summary for you:

Nikon D80 Review (DPReview)

The number of cons, and the fact that there are no serious ones, is a testament to the thought and work that has gone into the D80′s design. It’s one of those cameras which just feels ‘right and sorted’ from the moment you pick it up. Things just get better the more you use the camera, you will begin to discover the usefulness of major features like the customizable automatic ISO and the subtle touches like being able to tap the DELETE button twice to delete an image (sounds insignificant, but in use things like this make the D80 far more usable than other cameras).

Nikon D80 (Nikonians)

After following the speculation in our Nikon D80 Users Group forum at Nikonians I’d say Nikon has delivered on many fronts. It’s clear this new D80 DSLR can not be slotted simply as a straight replacement for either the Nikon D50 or the Nikon D70, but that’s not to say it isn’t. It’s shaping up to be a lot like a Nikon D50 in terms of size, but these comparisons can no longer be simply made.

Nikon D80 review (Photography Review)

Like the D100-200 upgrade before it, this upgrade from the D70 to D80 is a worthwhile step up, both in ability and performance. The jump in pixel count and autofocus ability alone warrants the change, but there are literally dozens of other tweaks as you delve further into the menus. The price also seems to be pitched about right, although market forces will soon see it settle into a slightly lower slot, which is all good news. Highly recommended.


DCRP Review: Nikon D80

The Nikon D80 is a fairly inexpensive digital SLR that packs spectacular performance and excellent (though somewhat soft) image quality into a well-built, solid camera. . For under $1000 you get quite a lot of camera, and it will certainly make people think twice about spending hundreds more on a D200. The D80 was a joy to use, and I’m certainly going to miss it when it goes back to Nikon. In other words, the D80 easily earns my recommendation.

Nikon D80 (Ken Rockwell)

When the D80 came out in mid-2006 I bought one immediately because it gave the same resolution as my D200 in a more portable package. My D80 is as small and light as my D70 with the same sensor as my D200. Whoo hoo!

Nikon D80 review (Camera Labs)

The Nikon D80 is without a doubt a very classy camera. It feels great, handles well, performs superbly and has one of the best viewfinders around. At times when rivals struggled with various lighting conditions, the D80’s metering remained unfazed and quite simply delivered great-looking images every time.

Once again I say if you have the budget, go for it, you won’t regret it.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

8,112 views - Filed under: Equipment,Nikon

Sony GPS Tracker for Digital Photography (GPS-CS1) – Flickr Geotagging

ShaolinTiger posted this at 12:24 pm on Wednesday, January 24, 2007 —

With the advent of Geotagging and similar (tagging the EXIF info of your pictures with your GPS co-ordinates) and the collaboration between mapping and photography, you can now show exactly where your picture was taken and see pictures taken in certain places or areas.

One gadget to help you do this is the Sony GPS tracker.

Sony GPS-CS1

The Sony device very interesting little device for recording the position where photographs are taken. The GPS-CS1 is a small (9 cm / 3.5 in) cylindrical device which you simply attach to a backback or belt loop and carry with you while you shoot, it records your GPS location and this information can later be synchronized with your digital images to provide a map of where your photos were taken. We assume it does this using date and time information stored in the image header (which obviously requires your camera’s clock to be synchronized). Interestingly the mapping solution is an online website with maps provided by Google Maps (it appears that the synchronization software will write the GPS location into JPEG EXIF headers).

An example of the Sony mapping site is here and the Flickr geotagging map is here.


2,370 views - Filed under: Equipment,Flickr,Sony
Next Page »