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Entries in Scrapbooking + Photography (5)
A Scrapblog
Lea Sanders emailed me to get her blog onto my lists (which I've started doing again now). And taking a look, I thought it worth sharing with you. She takes fantastic photos, has recently won the Lil' Davis photo competition, and has a perchant for garden photos. Some lovely images found on her blog.
Photology - A New Way to Find Photos
photology makes finding photos easy, fast & fun
Steve from Photology wrote me a quick email, which I’m quoting here, as it pretty much gives you the information needed here -
We’ve just released a software application that we think Scrapabilityreaders will love. It’s called Photology, and it helps people organizeand search their digital photos in a totally new way. With digitalcameras, we’ve found that people are drowning in a mess of unorganizedphotos. Photology automatically organizes their photos for them basedon what’s in the picture; things like “faces”, “sky”, colors and date. Then Photology lets them search their photos using these features. Oneof our scrapbooking users has already chimed in on how useful just our”Search by color” feature alone is in helping her find good photos forher pages.
So, instead of having to tag all your photographs in a photo organiser - although there are many good ones out there - you can have the Photology application filter and find these, by colour, faces, sky, location, time of day ie find sunsets) etc.
I can certainly see the helpfulness in this, so took a very quick look using the free download and trial over the next few days. Currently, the application itself is on special for $29 USD until December 31st.
Quick Look at Photology
Install
Firstly, Photology uses Microsoft’s .NET framework 3. Quite a few applications out there do use .NET, so you may already have this installed onto your PC (similar to things like Java for other applications to run with). Being an ex-I.T. person, I certainly had it installed, but apparently not the latest framework. So the install of Photology took a little longer, as it helpfully downloaded and installed this for me also - sometimes applications just refer you to go get the latest upgrade to something like this. Providing the download needed directly from the installation gets the Photology makers big points from me, despite the relative long time in doing this (17 minutes it calculated!).
This slow install would not happen again, if you do already have .NET 3 installed with other applications. During the install, some adverts show you some of the features of the product also.
At the end of install, Photology nominates some standard folders you may want it to browse - I chose My Pictures and the desktop only. Install did not give me any other options like not having an icon created on the desktop, but that didn’t perturb me.
What I Had to Work With
I’m actually quite a good digital media organiser - by ambition anyway. I have a very strong file / folder structure for my digital photographs, and backup those often. My folders are catergorised and dated as appropriate, so I can normally find the photograph I want.
I also use photo organisers for organising my huge collection of digital elements - but that is such a huge ambition, that I readily admit that I haven’t tagged for a good long time. Which is the reason why I don’t use this to tag my digital photographs also.
Initial Use - Search
On opening, the initial reaction is that Photology doesn’t look like many windows applications - there is no file menu or similar. Icons on the left are your function filters. The initial startup obviously has the application browsing through your photo files, as does any photo organiser. This is interesting in itself, as images popped up as thumbnails which I had forgotten about. Although the main window can be minimised to the taskbar, a smaller toolbar browse function hangs out of your right hand side, and this sits ontop of any other programme you may be working with, allowing you a view of these thumbnails as the Photology program browses and finds these.
As the program was still going through it’s browse, I began to explore the search filters. Some of these didn’t work for me - particularly for locations which might be snow or water - these appear to be based on snow = grey colours and water = a light blue, so that’s the photos which were found. The colour search is obviously very defined - and matched many photographs for an apple green colour which I had forgotten about. This would be helpful for a scrapbooker doing a colour-themed layout.
The Features filter is interesting - I chose the no-focus filter from here, and it came up 95 photos immediately (without having finished browsing through all my folders.) I would like to suggest that this is a specific style of mine regarding photography, but in reality many digital photographers may probably be confirmed as keeping quite a few rubbish photos out of their hundreds taken, just out of bad housekeeping.
You can add a filter to a filter, so to prove this I started off with those of a high exposure level, then filtered down to those including a certain pink. You can also search for text strings, and dates - if you have changed the names of your photographic files. I normally only title the folders I organise into, and leave the jpgs from the camera at their normal numerical name until using them.
I then struck resource problems on my PC, with the Photology browse getting stuck on a photograph image it found in a folder which I know is huge in size. This is a portrait shot sent to me on a CD by a supposedly professional photography studio several years ago. It is huge because they didn’t at the time understand DPIs, and had originally sent me the images in 72dpi, and at a thumbnail size. To make amends they sent one next time which is around 100 inches wide, and several hundred megabytes in filesize. And with other resource-hogging applications open like my email application which was bringing in emails, and Paint Shop Pro which has difficulty with holding onto RAM, the Photology thumbnail browse brought my system to a grinding halt for a while. I corrected this by closing down two other applications and therefore giving up the RAM required. Photology is now continuing on with it’s browse. I would therefore suggest that this was an anomoly created with the size of the file, and some other known resource hoggers processing at exactly the same time, and something which most users will never encounter.
I’ve not got the time to work out how some of the filters do work. I did a date search for instance, which searched simply for photographs earmarked for 2002. I knew that technically I didn’t have any on this PC, as it was purchased later than that. But there would be a few copied over photographs from that year, as it was the year of our daughter’s birth and I kept hold of some of those baby photos. However, the search came up with 316 photographs, mostly of ones which I know belong in years from 2005 onwards. Whether the search is using exif data - which I don’t use - and is somehow reading 200+2 from elsewhere in this data is beyond me.
Initial Use - Other Features
Like many other browse systems, photographs can be rotated, or previewed in real size. They can also be grouped, and from the preview screen, a caption added. From this preview screen you can also print the photo, set as wallpaper, or adjust / edit (red eye, crop and some simple colour managment features). You can also chose the Share button, and choose to share on the web, into a file, or through your Flikr web album.
I pressed the web option on this file, then wasn’t quite sure what I was doing, as Photology started uploading to - somewhere. As this was my daughter’s image, and I don’t like sharing direct pictures of a little girl to all and sundry, I was a little scared about this option. At the end of the upload I was given a weblink to copy. I had to paste it into here to see where it lead me. It appears that this web image, in a zip file, is held on the Photology server now, and without contacting them, I have no way of getting it deleted. However, the zip file has an encrypted title, and on clicking the weblink, the zip downloads to your own PC, and you will then need to unzip to find the original photograph.
This sharing facility and free service from Photology is actually quite helpful. I added some photographs to a small group, then shared this via the Web share function. So, instead of gifting you with a photograph of my daughter accidentally - no matter how cute she may be in it - I have overwritten the weblink with another one, this time of a zebra and Sydney Opera House, which is some stock photography supplied on my HP PC at the time of purchase. It would be an easy manner to use this service to share photographs with your family members via zip files by putting this link into an email to them. However, I also obviously see the vulnerabilities here with providing another file sharing service which could be exploited for sharing digital designs as piracy. However, remember this is not a free service once the trial is over - the application itself is sold and users will therefore be registered and presumably locatable should they use such a function for piracy sharing.
Photology Summary
I am not going to suggest any recommendation here. Regarding many of the filters, they are extremely helpful, and certainly quick to find photos to match your criteria. For a scrapbooker, this may be even more helpful, especially if combining colour selections with some features / faces etc. This would allow you to find all those beach shots of your daughter where she is wearing that bright red swimming costume, for instance. But for me, some of the filters don’t work as I intended, so the application may need more thorough testing from my side to work out it’s features.
I would suggest that if you do find this interesting, give the free download a shot and have fun playing with the filters. As the very least, it brings up so many photographs and memories that you will have forgotten existed - and all on your computer, too.
Photography Challenge Blog
her space : my space
One word, that's all they give you. Test out your photography creativity, and capture a snap of your everyday life.
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Colour Challenge Week
Firstly, I have to apologise and explain towards the {21} Challenge. I mucked up. My ambitious project to do something arty with my 3 year old daughter every day for the 21 days just didn’t work out. Day 1 - 5 was okay, as these projects were created on weekend days or the first three days of a weekday. But by Thursday of that week, both she and I were drastically lacking in any push to do anything. We both get home at 6pm at night, which gives us an hour together to do this, before it’s her bath and bedtime. And we were just too tired. It was more like Art for Hell’s Sake, to be honest. And I began to wane even more in trying to later find time to simply do up any page. This wasn’t the sleep or relaxation I desperately needed, it was pressure. So I didn’t make the {21} Challenge - sorry Rhonna. My daughter and I continue to create art often, but only when we’re not too tired.
My Colour Challenge
Introduction
I am about to commence a Colour Challenge with photography and images however. The original idea comes from Mecozy’s blog here. Mecozy introduced a concept of taking daily photographs to a colour theme. She has some nice colour quotes on the challenge also.
I wanted to extend this concept, as I believe in the power of colour to extend a message also. And I wanted to get back personally into taking more photographs - something I’ve not done that often for a while and in gathering some digital images for my image library - which I use for digital collages etc. So I’ve set myself a daily challenge commencing from tomorrow to document my day in a particular colour. If some good photos come out of it, all the better.
The Colour Challenge Day by Day
Sunday - Neutrals - soft browns, whites and tans to relax to.
Monday - Yellows and Oranges - Time to Wake Up!
Tuesday - Greens - Sustenance from the EnvironmentWednesday - Blues and Turquoises - Drift Off and Relax Again
Thursday- Blacks, Greys - Back to Business
Friday-Reds or Purples - Party for the Weekend, Energy Attack!
Saturday-Pastels and Pink - Relax and Enjoy
Colour and Meaning
Mere colour, unspoiled by meaning, and unallied with definite form, can speak to the soul in a thousand different ways.- Oscar Wilde
The Colour Links:
- Color Symbolism : Using Color for Meaning
- Interactive Color Theory at Poynter.Org
- Discover Your Colour Profile by taking this survey - it uses smells, photographs, textures, and sounds to conjure up your colour likings. At this moment in time, my own colour profile is one of Water Beads - aquas and tropical blues. Mmmmm…
Brief Explanation of Colour Meaning:
- Purple and Gold - associated with Royalty, Wealth, Richness, Luxury, Wealth and Opulence, Quality
- White - Purity, Faith, Innocence, Peace, Quiet, Safety; Cleanliness
- Green - Ecology, Environment, Nature, Growth, Freshness, Go-Ahead (from traffic lights)
- Red - Heat, Hot, Hunger, Anger, Rage, Blood, Romance, Lust, Energy, Danger, Stop! (from traffic lights)
- Orange or Yellow - Fresh, Energy, Happy. Cheerful; Instability; Attract Attention; Dull Yellow - Sickness, Decay
- Brown - Dryness; Seasonal connotations - Fall / Autumn; Earthiness, Natural; Stability; Masculinity
- Blues and Aqua - Water, Coolness, Depth, Dependent; Often used in National Flags; Masculine
- Primary Colours (Red, Yellow, Blue) - Fun, Kids, Energy
- Pastel Colours - Babies, Spring, Easter
- Pink - Relaxation, Femininity, Peace, Love, Romance
- Grey, Black - Conservatism, Stability, Business-Like; Power, Elegance; Death, Mystery, Fear, The Unknown.
Image Links:
- Art Images for College Teaching - Royalty Free Images to download based on Ancient, Renaissance, Medieval, Modern and other periods.
- Images by Genre - at Art in Context Org
- Art-E-Zine - fantastic wealth of vintage images downloadable from here. Donate for even more.
- Vintage and Retro Links at Scrapability
- Paper Doll Links at Scrapability
And that’s all there is too it!
Photography and S-Curves ala Tara Whitney
This via Lee Woodside’s blog (whilst profiling Tara Whitney).
I’ve long since bookmarked Tara Whitney’s blog - undoubtedly the best photography blog linked into scrapbooking out there. But I had lost site of her instructions towards how to create the fine black and white portrait shots she is reknowned for (and features through her own online portfolio here).
- So, here are Tara’s instructions for using the Photoshop Curves features to create fantastic and deep black and white photographs conversions. (See my speil on S-Curves below)
- And here are some FAQ questions answered by Tara on photography.
From my own perspective, the curves features in photo editing programmes are a feature which I utilise quite a lot. Paint Shop Pro provides lots of curves to play around with, and the results can be quite spectacular. A missing curves feature was one of the reasons I considered whether Photoshop Elements was a good program to go with, but have since found that there is a free add-on to give back some of these curves to PSE.
S-Curves in My Other World
I hadn’t realised that S-Curves give you a black and white conversion as per Tara’s instructions linked to above. I did know that a W curve is worth playing around with for metalic effects. And I do know about S-Bends of course, as any good plumber should.
But, I have an other world experience with S-Curves in my own career as a software tester. S-Curves are a form of metrics measurement for software quality - plot the defects or faults found in a cumulative format, and if you ever get to the point where your plot graph is leveling off at the top of an S, then the software looks like it is finally stabilising and less defects will be found in further releases.
There, it’s not often I get to bring in some industry knowledge that has absolutely no relevance to the scrapbooking subject at hand. I presume you never got to reading this end bit, anyway.


