DOWNTOWN: Weekend Photography Challenge

Posted in Articles on April 30th, 2010 by Darren Rowse

Downtown Vancouver - by runningclouds

Your challenge this weekend is to take and share a photo on the theme of ‘downtown‘. The theme was suggested on our facebook page by Danielle Bright and seconded by others (make sure you ‘like’ our FB page to see when we call for suggestions next week).

Feel free to interpret the theme in any way you like. Downtown for some of us will mean skyscrapers and crowded streets, for others it might be a rural setting and others of us might like to take a different approach altogether and go with a play on words and photograph your own personal ‘down’ town…. it’s totally up to you.< ?p>

I’m personally looking forward to getting a glimpse of the variety of ‘downtowns’ in different countries and settings around the world. Our community is from all corners of the globe so the result of this should be quite diverse!

Once you’ve taken your Downtwon photos – choose your best 1-2, upload them to your favorite photo sharing site and share a link to them here in comments below.

If you tag your photos on Flickr, Twitter or other sites with Tagging tag them as #dPSDOWNTOWN to help others find them. Linking back to this page might also help others know what you’re doing so that they can share in the fun.

PS: if you enjoy these kinds of challenges, don’t forget that each week in our forum we run a photography assignment section where you’re also given a theme and can take a shot to share with the dPS community.

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

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DOWNTOWN: Weekend Photography Challenge


AKVIS releases AKVIS MultiBrush v.5.0

Posted in Articles on April 30th, 2010 by Digital Photography Now

Version 5.0 is a major leap forward from previous versions. It not only offers tools for easily retouching and enhancing photos, but now also includes drawing tools and the ability to edit a photo in layers.

Winning Digital Photo Contests [Book Review]

Posted in Articles on April 30th, 2010 by Barrie Smith

Winning Digital Photo Contests.jpgEntering and hopefully winning contests was “all the go” when film camera clubs were all the go. Those were the days of clubs and societies that encouraged members to meet regularly, discuss new equipment and lavish attention on the art of photography.

Well, film groups may have nearly disappeared but contests — of the digital kind — are thriving, thanks to the Internet.

This has given new life to photography and stimulated creativity, raised the quality of the captured image and encouraged the competitive urge. Not only has the Internet stimulated the whole business but, as author Wignall points out in his book ‘Winning Digital Photo Contests‘ “there are the prizes” … publication print, new cameras, exotic trips etc. There’s even a list of hot sites at the back of the book!

How to go about it? Take chapter one on Pictures that Win. Most contest winners are of ordinary subjects but stand out because of technical precision, along with the ability to elicit an emotion, recreate a mood and deliver a feeling of passion. Not so easy!

A superb example of this is found on page 13: an Air France airliner lands at a West Indies airport, making a low approach just metres above surfers at a beach.

Other examples are immensely stimulating and will jolt you into action: a baby, one eye closed, looks over a mother’s shoulder; a line of four frogs, about to jump out of frame.

The illustrations in the book, along with advice offered, is unique and little short of superb.
If this does not activate you, nothing will.

More Information on Winning Digital Photo Contests

Author: J Wignall.
Publisher: Lark Books.
Distributor: Capricorn Link. 192 pages.
ISBN 978 1 60059 397 0.
Price: Get a Price at Amazon on Winning Digital Photo Contests

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

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Winning Digital Photo Contests [Book Review]


Photo of the day: Glen Coe

Posted in Articles on April 30th, 2010 by Dphotojournal com


Glen Coe
Glen Coe by Bev Hadland

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Review

Posted in Articles on April 30th, 2010 by Barrie Smith

Panasonic has followed this design path for five years now… so I guess you could say things seem to be working for the approach.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1.jpg

The essence is an attractive, slim camera with touches of steel, easy to find external buttons and a delightfully simple viewfinder menu to adjust the taps and tools in your picture making … and available in black, silver, red and blue.

The Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 ventures into areas not touched before: for a kickoff, the CCD can capture 12.1 million pixels, a maximum image size of 4000×3000 pixels, imaged by a Leica-designed 8x optical zoom that gives a 35 SLR range equating to 25-200mm.

The camera continues to use the company’s optical image stabiliser that offers twice the shake suppression power of previous approaches — and the lens is described as having “the world’s first 0.3mm super-thin aspherical lens.” This allows the body — at rest — to have no more than an easily pocketable 26mm thickness; lens extended, it pokes out to only 42mm.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Features

In even more ways this camera steps out from the crowd.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Boat.jpg

Take its continuous shooting feature: you can shoot 2.3 full resolution shots in one second; select a lower res, like 2048×1536 pixels, and expect to snare a run of 30 shots at a rate of ten pictures in each second. Pretty quick!

The exposure options are fairly basic: auto, intelligent auto and a bundle of scene modes. For newbies, Intelligent auto can take a lot of the angst out of photography and ensure you get the picture by taking care of the ISO setting, face detection, red-eye flash correction and any necessary backlight compensation.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 People in kayak.jpg

Face Recognition is interesting: if a familiar face is recorded several times, the camera will prompt the user to register the face; if that face reappears in your frame, the camera displays the name you specified and optimises focus and exposure. Up to six people’s faces can be logged.

A useful feature is High Dynamic mode that handles scenes with extremes of brightness and contrast. Fiddlers can also dabble with the camera’s ‘artistic’ effects that can heighten colour or transform any shot to a B&W version or even add a photo frame to a picture for printing.

ISO 80 f5.1 1:13 second.JPG
Fine performance at ISO 80, as you would expect.

ISO 800 f5.1 1:125 second.JPG
Still surprisingly good at ISO 800

ISO 1600 f5.1 1:250 second.JPG
With care and the right subject, ISO 1600 is useable.

In my ISO tests I found the ZR1 performed admirably at ISO 80, with a sharp, noise free image but I was agreeably surprised at the ISO 800 level, believing this setting could be used for most applications — noise was low and definition high. Carrying further, ISO 1600’s performance was excellent, making it a real choice for photography at night and beneath low light levels. Very surprising.

I should also mention the manner in which the ZR1 handles ISO: you can select any ISO figure, from 80 to 1600. But there is an additional mode: Intelligent ISO … this sets up the camera to hover beneath three ceilings — ISO 400, 800 or 1600 — and allows the camera to vary sensitivity and shutter speed beneath these three levels.

Movies

Panasonic claims that all LUMIX cameras can shoot Full HD stills at 1920×1080 resolution. However, when it gets down to video it is really only average for cameras at this level, recording 1280×720 pixel movie clips. However, you can replay stills or movies through the camera’s AV or component output.

Distortion

The wide angle end of the zoom showed some barrel distortion, while the tele end displayed a touch of pincushion distortion.

Startup Time

You can shoot your first shot about two seconds after power up, with follow-ons coming in at about a second a shot.
Panasonic ZR1r_Image.jpg

Comment

Quality: without doubt this camera can take above average snapshots that, when downloaded, print out with great clarity and vivacity.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Fire tender.jpg

Why you’d buy the Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1: you can enjoy a stabilised 8x zoom lens in a small, compact, stylish camera.

Why you wouldn’t by the Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1: not Full HD video capture; only auto operation, with no options for controlling lens aperture or shutter speed.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Specifications

Image Sensor: 12.1 million effective pixels.
Sensor Size: 11mm CCD.
Lens: Leica DC Vario-Elmar f/3.3-5.9/4.5-36mm (25-200mm as 35 SLR equivalent).
Shutter Speed: 60 to 1/2000 second.
Focusing Range: Normal 50cm to infinity; macro W/T 3/100cm to infinity.
Metering: Multi zone.
Exposure Control: Program AE.
LCD screen: 6.9cm (230,000 pixels).
Memory: SD, SDHC and 40MB of internal memory.
Image Size (pixels): 4000×3000, 4000 x 2672, 4000 x 2248, 3264×2448, 3264 x 2176, 3264 x 1840, 2560×1920, 2560×1440, 2560×1712, 2048×1536, 2048×1360, 1920×1080, 1600×1200, 640×480. Movies: 1280×720, 848×480, 640×480, 320×240 at 30 fps.
File Formats: JPEG, Motion JPEG.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 80 to 1600.
Interface: SB 2.0, AV (PAL/NTSC) and component output, DC input.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery.
Dimensions: 97.8×54.6×26 WHDmm.
Weight: Approx. 160 g (with battery and card).

Get a price on the Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 at Amazon (currently 33% off recommended retail price).

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZR1 Review