Sunday, December 6, 2020

Sharing Photos - Quandry

There are two ways to share your favorite pix, well three plus ways. 

  • #3 Sharing directly in Messages makes the receiver do cleanup 
  • #2 Shared Album by invitation is good for commenting and posting by others too
  • #1 Temporary iCloud link that is viewable for 30 days without comment or you posting 

Does your audience have a preference? 

Actually, all of these strategies ( and more social media services ) can be applied anytime depending on the event and how important it is to “build community” among subscribers. 

#3 Messages is clumsy to select and delete images. But some control in Settings > Messages > Keep Messages > 30 Days/ 1 Year/ Forever. Yikes! Do your audience a storage-space favor by Settings > Messages > Low Quality Image Mode. 


Thursday, December 3, 2020

iPhone 12 Pro Camera notes

In our scavenger hunt meeting today we got the iPhone 12 Pro unboxing reports from several attendees. There were questions about the improved camera quality over earlier iPhone models. Take some time to do research and experiment with cameras & iPhone models to see for yourself. 

Some discussion revolved around shooting RAW on iPhone 7 and later models using 3rd Party camera apps like Obscura2, Camera+2, Halide, ProCamera, Moment and others. Apple will soon release Apple ProRAW and that will be reason for more experiments. 

The earlier post today about Derrick Story's Creative Printing eBook I suggested putting his website on your regular reading rotation (new version of 3Rs) because he also links to other websites that track the technology we all use. Here are links to get you started: 

The Digital Story - also has a Facebook page and he mentions "the iPhone 12 Pro Max. Bottom line: it's like the full frame version of smartphone cameras" when referencing the DPReview article "Halide's deep dive into why the iPhone 12 Pro Max is made for 'Real Pro Photography'" (His Facebook page visible without FB account posted on 11/20/2020.) 

Derrick also wrote "A RAW Look at Image Differences Between Smartphones and Cameras" where he reviews images from iPhone X and Fujifilm X100V for file size, dof, color science, sharpness, shadows and highlights. (What iPhone app was used to shoot RAW photo? Maybe the Lightroom CC app.) 

The Digital Story - Apple ProRAW - The Best of Both Worlds 

DP Review - Apple's new ProRAW image format will capture in 12-bit RAW DNG files

DP Review - Halide Mark II is a redesigned RAW camera app for iPhones with over 40 new and improved features - with onboard machine learning. 

DP Review iPhone 12 Which models have which cameras

Fstoppers - Apple ProRAW Redefines the Meaning of Raw Files - might be indicating that the old RAW file required processing to bring it back to life and Apple is bringing a processed RAW in our up-to-date world. 

Apple Insider - Apple announces ProRAW image format for iPhone 12 Pro 

Apple - iPhone 12 Pro - scroll down the page to read camera details on Night Mode, sensors, Portrait Mode, Deep Fusion and Smart HDR3. You've heard of Image Stabilization and on the 12 Pro Max is Sensor-shift OIS on the wide camera. 


Not all of us will be updating to the newest iPhone. But we can keep our iOS up-to-date and update our apps. Some 3rd party cameras have advanced features that allow iPhone X and 11 Pro make amazing photographs that approach iPhone 12 Pro quality. 

A recent field trip/picnic at Ice House Reservoir tells an interesting story of many camera apps. I saved 55 photos for later review, the camera apps used include ProCamera with VividHDR saved as TIFF, Apple Camera saved as HEIC, Hydra saved as JPEG and Moment saved as RAW. Many of these files range from 10MB to 18 MB. My intention is to keep several of the images as a reminder for this trip and then archive the other photos to an external hard drive. That way I'm keeping available space on my iPhone and in my 200GB iCloud subscription. 

Free eBook - Creative Printing

Derrick Story is a photographer, writer, podcaster and all-round educator located in Santa Rosa, California. Visiting his website regularly for inspiration and resources is a great idea - The Digital Story. I'd like to point you to his recent article, 5 Great Printing Projects for Creative Photographers, for the audio podcast episode or a link to the free eBook. He likes printing with Red River Papers, check them out. 

Over the years, I have purchased several of Derrick's paperback books on digital photography and attended one of his weekend ipad + photography workshops. 

Friday, November 13, 2020

Custom Colors for Collage Background

Interesting discussion this week - how can we add a custom color to PicCollage or Diptic layouts? So far these apps do not offer a way to customize the background color. Huh? What workflow could we add to processing to make custom colors? 

Several apps on our list would import an image and allow a color to be selected to fill the canvas, for example Procreate, Pixelmator and Graphic. 

We settled on a free app with the eye-dropper tool - Apple Keynote! This is the software for creating presentations - it can open Powerpoint presentations or save as PPT and PDF. 

Roughly, here are the steps: Open Keynote to any template with a white background. Use the default title page to make notes to yourself about how to use this slide deck. Add a second slide. Import a photo with the color you want as a background. Add a small square shape to this slide on top of the photo. Use the Paintbrush tool to show how the shape can be stylized with border or color. Look for the Eyedropper tool. Now move your finger/pencil/stylus/mouse over the photo to see a circle of changing colors. Stop moving to set the shape's color. Tap the Eyedropper tool again and practice changing colors. 

Watch for more hints on the Keynote slide process coming soon. 

Wow - learning all the time. The screenshots I made and then added to a new Shared Album using the iPad are out of sequence on iPhone and computer. What?? Need a workaround ...

Created a Google Slide Deck called Custom Color Background with the screenshots and comments. This is best viewed on iPad or computer. The slides auto advance every 10 seconds or you can force the next slide by swiping right to left. (Also swipe left to right to go back a slide.) Start your own Keynote presentation or download my template with slides and shapes in place. OK, third time is the charm. Keynote saved to my Dropbox account. If you see a log-in screen, try to cancel and access the file. 

Remind me to write up a little tutorial page on Tools for Sharing Online. Hint: WordPress or Blogger for websites, Google Forms for surveys, Dropbox for posting documents ... all tools and skills for contributing to a family reunion or a volunteer organization. 


Thursday, November 12, 2020

iPad OS 14 Tips

Several tips were shared today and work on iPad and iPhone. 

Find a website using the Safari browser. In the URL bar, on the left edge is AA button to indicate options for this page. The popup menu offers to change text size, show Reader View (without ads!) and if the page is in a foreign language - to Translate to English. Also added with 14 is the Privacy Report

Create a PDF from website in Reader View for off-line reading (while camping/glamping) using the Share button > Print > using two fingers pinch-out on the page to open a PDF instead of printing to paper. Tap the Share button again to save the PDF to the Books app or Save to Files app (create a new personal folder on iPad (for camping when no wifi allows you to connect to your iCloud). 

Control Center has Do Not Disturb and if your calendar includes an event - like this class - press and hold on the crescent moon icon to see options for DND. This feature stops Notifications from appearing on screen when activated. My devices try to get me to refocus on new Messages, new email, new Shared Album postings, upcoming appointments and News items. Control Banners, Sounds and Badges from individual apps in Settings > Notifications > ... 

Monday, November 9, 2020

Services and Tools

Services

  • Cheryl is pleased with the prints she ordered from CanvasDiscount and shipping charges were reasonable. 

Tools - specifically backup - check compatibility with Apple File app and that photos are "browsable" without downloading to your device - so you can see a preview or show photos in a folder. 

  • Power and backup with RAVPower Wireless Travel Router - wireless media sharing, wireless backup to SD cards or USB flash drives. Creates a wifi ad-hoc network that can be shared with 5 users. Can use the Apple Files app to see USB drive or download their app FileHub Plus
  • The SanDisk Connect wifi/USB drives are another option with storage capacities of 32GB, 64GB, 128GB and 265GB. Remember a backup strategy is to not just have one, but multiple copies of important photos and documents! In other words, buy two, back up twice. 
  • SanDisk iXpand Drive Go has a Lightning connector and a USB connector. Capacities come in 64GB, 128GB and 256GB.  If your next iPhone has a USB-C connector, then look at SanDisk Ultra Dual Drive Luxe USB-C flash drive. Capacities range from 32GB to 1TB. Buy two and backup twice. These are such little things and could be lost easily. Plan ahead! 
  • SanDisk is now part of Western Digital and they offer solid state drives, SSDs, with USB-C ports. My Passport Ultra mobile capacities range from 1TB, 2TB, 4TB and 5TB. This could be used for your computer-based photo archive. Remember, buy two and backup twice. 

Photo Workflow Strategies

 It is time to review storage status on iPhone, iPad and iCloud or other online service. Maybe because you are considering upgrading to the iPhone 12Pro or because your iCloud storage is straining at the seams and devices cannot back up (my story). 

Colleen sent me an article in Apple News: iPhone Trick Lets You Delete Photos Without Losing Them Forever - Hello extra storage 
Read in LADbible: https://apple.news/AioBufqNzQ_WuB0K4HBvhiA 

How have you organized your devices and iCloud? 

This might be a good time to remind everyone that workflow and storage are moving targets. As our operating system updates and new features are released, we want to review how to modify our settings and choices to maximize the newest security and features presented. Back in the day, this included moving your files from floppy disk to optical (CD/DVDs) and now to USB or SSD (solid state drive) drives. It also means evaluating the amount of storage space we are using and what our needs will be in the near future (one-to-two years). 

Some photographers still keep working computers with optical drives around in case they need to retrieve old images on discontinued media formats. 

My 200GB iCloud storage was too full to backup my iPhone. So began the ultimate purge of photos. Looking at the iCloud Storage graph, Photos is over 100GB. My shooting style is to take many shots of some subjects and then edit the best using many apps thus creating more images. Because of this class I often make Screenshots as well. That was the easiest group of photos to cleanup. My current iCloud settings allow for syncing between iPhone and iPad (iMac is not yet in this mix). It is easier to review photos on the iPad:
  • Tap Library in the sidebar
  • Tap Years in the top menu then tap the year to review, scroll to January
  • Tap All Photos in the top menu (now duplicate/same photos appear!) 
  • Tap the box to hide the sidebar list 
  • Pinch in to shrink the thumbnails or pinch out to see bigger thumbnails
  • Swipe up to see other photos
  • Tap Select then tap on thumbnail to mark with check
  • Tap on other duplicate images to mark 
  • Tap Trash Can to delete marked photos
  • Also, look at a photo full size to choose to delete
At the beginning of this semester I had 24,170 and now 18,813 with three years yet to review. This is important because there are may old digital images I want to add back into my Photo Library from 1995 to 2008 from earlier digital cameras. Eventually I will scan older 35mm slides to add as well. 

As you adventure down this road, take Before and After Screenshots to remind you of what changes have been made. 

Monday, November 2, 2020

HP 564xl black cartridge - available

Nov 2, 2020 - Irene has a free black cartridge for HP Photo Printer. Check your printer to see if it can use the 564xl size ink. - Let me know and I will get you connected. 

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Apple iPhone 12 - Camera Presentation

On October 13th Apple announced new products including the iPhone 12 with 5G cellular. View the keynote presentation beginning with iPhone 12 Pro. There will be Apple ProRAW going further into computational photography, deep fusion, depth and multi-image processing. As with RAW, the image captured has instructions that can be modified when editing unlike the JPG format which bakes in the scenes. 

More about LiDAR on iPhone 12 Pro. This feature will help with low light photography. 

A Treat for Your Imagination

Just stumbled through the Internet and found this on YouTube - Apple Perspective. The tag line is "Here's to those who have always seen things differently." 

For an uplift, watch Creativity goes on

The Hermitage: 5 hrs 19 min 28 sec in one continuous take - Official Trailer | Shot on iPhone 11 Pro is just a glimpse of the full length video - linked at the end of the trailer. The production value is as amazing as the 5 hour continuous take. 

Apple has collected tips into one playlist - How to Shoot on iPhone.  Just 35 videos all under one minute long. 

Saturday, October 10, 2020

iPad OS14 and iPhone OS14 - Good to Go

 If you have not already made the leap, there is no reason not to update. Especially now that most of the eager beavers hitting the servers have finished and our requests and validations will happen quickly. 

Read Apple's page Update to iOS 14 or iPadOS14 - Here's What You Need To Do before you start down this path. 

Widgets on the iPhone are the biggest change for me. I have changed the Home Screen view to show the App Library (you know how many apps I have and rarely use). But App Library does not seem to be a feature in iPadOS14. 

Read the iPad online User Guide or iPhone online User Guide. Also remember to download the Books iPhone User Guide for offline reading. 

Mark your calendars for November 5th and 12th to share your discoveries with iOS14 and iPadOS14. "Same time, same Bat Channel." 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Look at the details in the Cheatsheet page

On this site is a long list of app settings and editing features called Cheatsheet. You will want to look at the information provided as a starting place for using Camera+2, ProCamera, Obscura and others. The editing features section lists the apps by technique. This webpage should change each time an app is updated but probably gets reviewed just before the semester begins. 

If you do not find your workflow represented or your favorite app's features are missing in the details on this page, email me the specifics. 

The most useful way to view the tips page is in Safari's Reader view and use the Find search field to target the references or hints.  

HOLD OFF on iOS 14 install

Updated 9/16/20 user guide links

Apple made their announcements on Tuesday, September 15th and we suggest you NOT INSTALL iPhone or iPad operating system updates until the early bugs are worked out. 

Books and the Book Store is the place to download your iPhone User Guide iOS 14 and iPad User Guide iOS 13.6 because you don't get a guide in the box with the device. iOS 14 is FREE and tap the Get button to download. This book is searchable, add highlighting, bookmarks and your own notes. In the Books app go to Search and type "user guide ios 14" or user guide ipad 14" (not available yet). You can also view the Apple user guides as online pages (not a downloaded book) when you have wifi access - iPad 13.6 User Guide or iPhone iOS 14 User Guide and specifically read about What's New in iOS 14 for iPhone and What's New in iPad OS 14


Sunday, September 13, 2020

On the Big Screen

 Actually on your home screen if you are a Netflix subscriber check out these design and technology titles:

  • Abstract - The Art of Design - 2 seasons featuring the breadth of design
  • The Social Dilemma - the impact of social networking 
What other titles would you add to this list? Let's start an Amazon Prime list and a PBS list ... 

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Your websites for inspiration

For Day 3 we would like to know what websites and social media references you use to be inspired in new ways of seeing. Ok, inspired to take photos. Inspired to see in new ways. 

For example, Karen knows that I take lots of cloud photographs. So she sent me an article from PicturePerfect Cloud Photography Tips by James Newton. She gets tips by email from this site and the message is easy to share. 

Look through your email for your subscribed photography hints or at your bookmarks to see where you go for new ideas. Copy the URLs and paste into a Notes page. Add descriptive information about the site or the specific article. Once Day 3 class begins, we will prompt you to open your Notes page, copy the information with link and then return to Zoom, open Chat, paste  and tap the Return key to send. 

Possible references are general photography, or specific genres like macro, architecture, landscapes, cityscapes, portraits, travel and sports. Also techniques black and white, night, patterns, composition, and panorama. 

The websites will often include other tutorials or tips to explore. On social media sites, you might need to create an account before you can explore. Flickr is requiring my username and password. Oh, where did I put that info? Pinterest is a site where I do not have an account - yet. Instagram (as close as I get to Facebook) has several hashtags related to clouds: #cloudscape, #clouds, #clouds_of_our_world and clouds_and_sky to cite a few. 

Covid-19 changed everyone's travel plans. Instagram and Flickr were helpful in researching my trip #scotlandhighlands and now who knows. How do you use social media to plan photography and travel? 

Sunday, September 6, 2020

Workflow - Camera+2

Professional photographer Rachel Johanna gives a quick overview of workflow from shooting to editing to backup in this YouTube video and there is a workflow blog post as well. 

Review these articles and associated videos:

Instagram hints 

  • Vibrance - boosts muted colors 
  • Saturation - boosts all colors
  • Brilliance - one fix for darkening highlights & lightening shadows
  • Contrast - increase to boost texture and color

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Day 1 Zoom Start

This report will touch on thoughts whipping through my brain during our introductions. Actually, from your interests and comments to references on this site, workflow ideas and links to inspire further investigation. 

You will get an invitation to subscribe to our Shared Photo Album. This is our place to post, comment and appreciate the exploration and play this semester. This album #1 does not count against your iCloud storage space! #2 We have 6 meetings but the album will last 6 months - or close just before the spring 2021 semester begins. The invitation will come as an email message and will also show as a red button on the Photos app. You will join using your Apple ID credentials - and that might be different than the contact info I have for you. Just do it! Join/Subscribe/WhateverTheTerm. 

Next - Take a picture of a leaf. A leaf with a flaw, a spot or a gnawed hole. We want to do a quick demo of TouchRetouch on Day 2. Jump ahead and try using the TouchRetouch app. The flaw should not be on an edge of the leaf, but on the body of the leaf. Actually this gives you the idea that any image with a flaw would work with this activity. A flower, cement driveway, knotty pine panelling ... 

As I research for this report, the ads popping up in Safari are bothersome. Do you know about Reading Mode when browsing with Safari? << That was a link to a web article. I try to mark the included links with a green background color. 

A new photo will be close to the top of Recents. Maybe you are already a leaf specialist. So explore the Search options in the Photos app. Try it first on your own, then read the July 2020 iMore article How to search for people, places, animals, and things in the Photos app for iPhone and iPad. Learning anything new? One of our own, Niel Nielson, presented Search Techniques in Photos as a demo in class Fall 2019.

I appreciate that Linda printed the handout to track iPhone and iPad Status - important to keep a reference on current number of images etc, available space and then work to clean h-ios-e. A side benefit of cleaning up is discovering wonderful images to print, or edit, or combine-stylize-print. It is not always the new that motivates us. Many of you heard me complain that my devices have too many albums. True, so when you find wonderful images, you'll need to save them to a new album for easy access. Album cleanup needs to be added to my iOS Status handout. 

Gary mentioned taking photos of buildings. This is a speciality and requires expensive DSLR lenses to maintain perspective and minimize the keystone effect. Some of our apps let us make minor corrections to our photos because we tilt the iphone camera at an odd pitch (forward/backward/lean). When you photograph a building, do not crop too close - use a wide angle lens and even try a short panorama to give you lots of room to correct then crop. Back in February 2020 I posted a silent video showing how Snapseed Corrects Perspective. of a scene in Sutter's Fort. You will also find the Apple Photos > Edit > Crop can make adjustments to horizontal, vertical and skewed photos. Checkout Charlie Sorrel's November 2019 article How to crop, straighten and unscrew photos on iPad and iPhone at Cult of Mac website. Then go find a building and practice taking and editing OUTSIDE and INSIDE photos. 

Night photography is an interest of Mary, Marilyn and Colleen. This is usually in the realm of DSLR or mirrorless cameras and Lightroom and Photoshop type computer applications. (Using Night Mode on an iPhone 11Pro I did capture the Neowise comet!) There is an expensive iOS app called PhotoPills that helps plan night photography, and recently they offered Milky Way Photography Post Processing Masterclass with Nick Page on their YouTube Channel. Your iPhone might help scout locations, give you directions and be a notepad for the starting settings needed. Oh, and it is a flashlight. Remember to keep it fully charged! 

Mike mentioned sports as an iPhone photo subject. Yes! In many ways, the automatic shooting features will capture action at fast shutter speeds, the Slo-Mo video feature is fun to explore for the peak action moments, Live mode for the unanticipated scene. Burst mode needs to be practiced for Apple Camera or use another app like Camera+2. Check out Apple's iPhone X - How to shoot Slo-mo and How-To Geek's How to Record and Edit Slow Motion videos on your iPhone. Whoa! iOS 13 lets you stitch Live photos taken within 1.5 seconds of each other. Need to explore this hint. 

Cheryl, Roe, and other nature lovers mentioned macro, getting close to your subject. Camera+2 has a unique mode that works Artificial Intelligence wonders to give us macro. A tripod is essential in your photography toolkit. Consider the jointed Joby Gorillapod (check REI & your favorite online service) and add a spring clip to your existing tripod with the Dollar Store Selfie Stick. Remove the end clip and attach to your existing tripod. Macro photography requires stabilization of the iPhone camera and the subject. You want to avoid tapping the shutter and suffering unintentional camera movement. One solution is to use the Timer to take the shot or shots as in Burst mode. There is another trick - use your earbuds as a cable release! The volume buttons will trigger the shutter. Practice! One last idea is expensive - use an Apple Watch with Bluetooth to trigger the shutter. The benefit of the Watch is a preview of the scene and single shot or Timer/Burst. 

As the semester goes forward the temperatures will cool and we might find ourselves outdoors during mid-day. As Mary mentioned, she is experimenting with Black and White and enjoying the high contrasts of noon. You can follow her approach and use the filters in the Apple Camera and 9TO5Mac covers How to use camera filters with the iPhone 11 and 11 Pro by Michael Potluck. Lenka is on our list of apps and Tech Crunch covered it in 2014 Lenka Might Be The Black-And-White Photographer's Dream App by Mike Butcher. We barely brushed into the Lightbox features in Camera+2 so read, bookmark and reread iPhone Photography School article by Becki Robins How to Use Camera+ App to Shoot & Edit Amazing iPhone Photos and scroll way down the page to Filters. Now look for them on your iPhone. Ansel is for B&W. You can apply more than one filter to an image. For inspiration, read the Pixpa article Top 10 Tips for Black and White Photography and Portraits by Rohan Arora. My favorite workflow for b&w is ProCamera with the VividHDR in-app purchase. This is a powerful app and fstoppers January 2020 article by Mel Martin ProCamera is Still the iOS Photo App to Beat covers many features (Attention Gary: Automatic Perspective Control if you subscribe annually). 

Anyone not able to enroll in our class should review iOS Gadget Hacks article 31 New Features for Camera & Photos in iOS 13 - a masterclass of camera and photos tips. What more can we expect of iOS 14 this fall? Actually, if you are enrolled in this seminar, read this article. 

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Additional Handouts

 Look at the brief Zoom Guide created for the Cracker Barrel seminar created and shared by Anita. 

I've created a crazily detailed handout to track the status of your iPhone or iPad. Print this PDF two sided and in color for each device. Currently it is tuned to iOS 13 and after learning more about iOS 14 the details will be updated. 

Monday, August 24, 2020

Handout Update Complete

The Fall App Catalog is ready to download from the Apps page. First time members are encouraged to print these 12 pages back to back as a reference. Only two apps are new this semester. The Cheatsheet page has not been updated (You might ask "What have you been doing during this pandemic?" and ... you don't want to know) but as this semester continues new discoveries will be added.  

Also on the Apps page are direct links to the apps for Get or Purchase with suggestions on what apps to have on hand Day 1, 2 and 3. 

Friday, August 21, 2020

Auto App Updates - A Trap?

Time to check your Settings > iTunes & App Store > App Updates ... is this enabled? Or are you in charge of when apps are updated? If you take control of app updates then before updating a critical app plan on reading the reviews and even app developer forums before updating.  

Cynthia just reported that Adobe Lightroom Mobile v 5.4 lost some photos and presets. Oops. The "loss is not recoverable" according to an Adobe engineer's post on the forum. Read the reviews on Adobe Lightroom for iPad v 5.4.1 resolved the bug responsible for losing photos - released 2 days after 5.4.0 with additional language support. 

So this could happen to non-Adobe app users as well. What do you do to protect your cherished images? I often think of our app stacking workflow as: 1) take the shot, 2) take additional shots at other angles, 3) process your best photo using various apps and saving new versions while maintaining image resolution, 4) print or share, 5) save to an archive. 

We have many cloud-based services to store working and final images. Is one service enough? Can you backup to a computer and to a cloud service? 

After all, our iPhones have finite storage space. After processing our best photos and making a backup, take time to remove duplicate or supplemental photos from all devices by deleting them from the Photos app. 

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Getting Ready for Visitors

Here is a behind the scenes view of my recent laptop setup for Zoom meetings. Playing with curtains to let in some light but not too much is a challenge. On a Mac laptop the PhotoBooth app might be helpful to show your webcam picture then make adjustments to curtains, position or background. 

Original image stylized in Painnt app and merged with original using Image Blender. Imported image to Keynote slide to add text details and export as .jpg image. 

My main setup will be using a desktop Mac with iPhone, iPad, earbuds/headphones, The iMac is on a pedestal to raise the webcam up - a cardboard box. :-D 

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Our Work - Our Galleries

Watch for Spring 2020 Gallery link here soon. 

But meanwhile here are quick links from our past efforts. Collages from Spring 2019 Gallery. There is no audio soundtrack. Other recent work was posted at Spring 2018 Sample Gallery and 2017 Gallery iPhone Photography Seminar.  

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Website Revisions Coming Soon

Much of this site improves each semester but the details of each Day are refreshed to reflect current anticipated activities. Now that we live in a Controlled-Environment-Zoom, CEZ, new plans are underway. Expect outlines on August 10th and gradually more details will appear. Stay Tuned!

Thursday, May 14, 2020

iPhone Photography Experimental Studio

The RS Fall Semester officially begins on Friday, September 4th, but our meetings begin Thursday, September 3rd. The proposed seminar description:
Seminar includes participant demonstrations where experienced photographers use iPhone apps to create digital artwork. Online Zoom meetings with shared albums for learning and critique platforms. Using the app stacking process to create unique images. Visit our website for demonstration videos and artwork examples at https://rsiphonephotostudio.blogspot.com. New photo studio artists should be at ease with iOS basics and expect to purchase $25 in apps or prints. Requirements: iPhone 8, X, XR, XS, 11, 11Pro; iOS 12 or 13, AppleID. An iPad is helpful for editing images and a computer is desirable to attend Zoom meetings so you can use your iPhone/iPad. This is NOT a beginner photography seminar. All enrollees go to WAITLIST and will be contacted by instructor to check prerequisites mentioned above. 
Are you wondering about "iOS Basics" and where you can check your skills?
  • Apple Channel on YouTube*
  • View the videos on this site
  • Check social media for any of the Apps listed on this site 
  • Talk with your friends about how they use photo apps
* Can you do this without me providing a direct link? Web surfing and searching are other skills to develop. 

In semesters past we often had in-class photoshoots, like these ... tabletop adventures.


Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Ready, Set ...

Zoom!


Fall 2020 iPhone Photo Studio becomes iPhone Photography Experimental Studio. Six sessions via Zoom on Thursdays, 10-12.

Basic plan anyway. Will be brainstorming and trying out the technology to find activities that will inspire you ...

Miscellaneous Notes

This page will have a few things remembered, discovered or followed. Come back again to see if additional items have been added or reorganized.

From Cynthia - upscaling image resolution with ON1 Resize 2020 - for Mac or Windows.

From Melissa - DxO PhotoLab 3- alternate to Lightroom and the NIK Collection 2.5

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

STOP - class has been postponed

Our last class, scheduled for March 19th, has been postponed at the request of the Ren Soc Board. I've requested April 16th from the Library and will keep you posted.

That date came and went without a whimper. We are still in lock-down mode. Be safe.

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Pixelmator play - new video

Two important features in my toolkit are layers and selections. New video created on


Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Confirm Camera App Settings

A camera is a camera, whether it is a point-and-shoot, a DSLR, mirrorless or smartphone. After exploring your camera for new features ... or in new situations then it is time to review all your settings and return to your preferred workflow. Now you are ready for a quick shot without confusion. [Reminder to self!]

Make your own version of this Camera Apps Settings list:
Apple Camera [HEIF]
Camera+ 2 [Macro Preset | TIFF ] [Other Preset | RAW + TIFF separate images
SlowShutter [TIFF]
ProCamera [TIFF]
Obscura [RAW-DNG]
Moment [RAW-DNG]
Halide [RAW-DNG]
Hydra [HiRes 32MP | TIFF]
645 PRO [TIFF-DNG]

You will notice that most of the cameras are taking TIFF and RAW-DNG images. Two things to keep in mind before you follow my workflow: 1) these are large files and I do not expect to keep them on my iPhone indefinitely; 2) DNG photographs need to be processed to look their best and then a saved copy can remain on the iPhone. If storage space on your device is low, change your camera settings to save in HEIF or high quality JPEG.

This afternoon I'll be taking a set of photos with each app and then looking at the metadata with Metapho to see how the camera app is referenced. This will establish a baseline, and each time an app gets an update or when iOS is updated this test could be repeated.

Monday, February 17, 2020

iOS & Computer - Part 1

This semester we are taking file management in small chunks. We will see challenges presented by peers and how to adapt our workflow for improved efficiency or image quality.

File management is a spectrum of activities and approaches. We are all somewhere on that spectrum based on past experience and where/how we share our photo art. If you just want to share online, then you won't continue on the spectrum to home-based printing. If you will never use a print service bureau, then you won't continue on exploring archival papers and imaging processes.

Along with cloud file storage and ubiquitous USB thumb drives came the demise of CD/DVD optical storage. Charlene reminds me to "future-proof my photographs" and other important documents by moving to the latest storage media - in triplicate!

My computer experience is Macintosh-based since 2012 when I retired from supporting Windows and Macintosh and online learning systems. If you have Windows resources to share, give me URLs and a brief description and I will add them to this website. 

All of file management begins with saving, previewing and moving files. Naming files used to be important but our iPhones have their own scheme of naming files - we just have to get out of the way. 

This is a beginning outline. Help me improve it. 

Moving camera photos to iOS 
  • SD Card adapter
  • WiFi on camera 
Moving Files to/from your computer 
  • iCloud - sync
  • Files app 
  • Dropbox account 
  • PhotoSync app 
  • AirDrop 
  • Lightning/USB-C cable 
Prepare your computer / external hard drive 
  • Clean off Desktop, use Stacks to collect related files
  • Add folders for new edited photos
  • [Subject, Location, Effects, etc? Something meaningful to you!
  • Add folders for original photos 
  • Select folder and drag to add to Finder Sidebar 
  • Use caution when renaming image files 
  • Backup your computer and external hard drives 
Preview & Review your photos
  • Add Comments 
  • Add Keywords
  • Add Tags
  • Delete 
  • Mac Finder Views [icon, list, columns and gallery] 
  • Sort list by name, kind, size, dates, tags 
  • Quick Look - select file then Spacebar and Arrow keys 
  • Select file then File > Get Info (Cmd + I) 
  • Gallery view with metadata details in right pane [Rotate, Markup & More...] Use View > Show Preview Options to customize details
  • Spotlight Search of contents and Internet
  • Finder Search, add multiple criteria 

Resources for learning more and confirming your workflow 
As of 2/17/2020 my Mac computers are still running the Mojave, MacOS 10.14.6 with current security updates. To get Help with your current operating system use the Finder > Help > Mac OS Help or the Help > Search feature. Review the Optimize Storage > Manage > Reduce Clutter > Review Files option. New to me as I review this Help feature and the little details too insignificant to mention in a WWDC rollout presentation. Similar optimization features are available on iOS.

Apple Books also has free MacOS related User Guides for laptops and desktop computers. The MacBook Air with Retina Display Essentials or MacBook Pro Essentials. If you are using a desktop then the iMac Essentials guide is for you. Here is the link to see all the Apple Computer Guides in Books. The trick here is the books reference the newest MacOS, Catalina. 


Notes to add:
Safari Reading View, Save as PDF, Merge PDFs & Save to Books

To be continued, after my bike ride.




Tell a story

Chinese New Year - Daughter is a film by director Theodore Melfi (Hidden Figures) and cinematographer Lawrence Sher (Joker) shot on iPhone 11 Pro using a BeastGrip Pro. Grab a tissue and watch the eight minute film. Then read more about the making of the film in the Made on iPhone genre.

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Day 2 Field Trip

We will use the Apple Camera, Camera+ 2 and ProCamera (with in-app purchases of VividHDR and Low Light+) for activities. The Macro Mode of Camera+2 and manual focus with burst mode will be effective. ProCamera will show details in the shadows while keeping details in the highlights on a bright sunny day. Of course I'll look for opportunities to use Slow Shutter Cam for motion blur (very effective for scenes with water).

Using different camera apps lets us also experience different file formats. Maybe HEIF for Apple Camera and Camera+2 and TIFF for ProCamera and Slow Shutter Cam. Are you interested in post processing? Camera+2 can shoot RAW (just not macro at the same time) and it has a RAW processing editor.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Videos Uploaded

There are now two videos with narration and two silent video demonstrations. Here are the links:

Apps Organization - iPhone XI 2020 Revision

App Stacking - Local Pond Project 

Snapseed Perspective Correction (silent movie)

Cheatsheet Page - View in Reader & Print 2-up (silent movie)


Monday, February 3, 2020

How To - Slow Shutter Cam

Big file - not ready for prime time yet. Still under construction

This is my second attempt to share the story of using Slow Shutter Cam for long exposures of water. The best experience is through a series of shots with screenshots and added text. The first effort was to share 15 images as an iCloud link. But the order of pictures does not tell the chronological story.

Try number two is as a Keynote presentation in iCloud where you can view, see the transitions and experience the West Fork of the Carson River as if we are on a photo walk. Give it a try. Don’t fall in, this is snow melt water after all. Viewing this presentation is not as simple as it could be. There are two option in the top right corner, Open and Download. I need to preview this scenario on a device that is not logged into my iCloud to write accurate instructions. So much work. Not for novices.

Note: on a DSL connection, it will take awhile to load.


Monday, January 27, 2020

A wealth of resources

Ok, I'll admit that I'm barely staying a step ahead of all you studio-ites. If you want to catch up or pass me, check these resources off your list:
  • Books - ebooks and paperbound
  • Podcasts
  • Youtube Channels 
  • Instagram, Flickr, etc 
When reviewing resources, be sure to look at the publish date or the iOS version under review. As I write this update in February 2020, iOS 13 is our current version. There are significant operating system changes since iOS 11 released September 2017. I am especially interested in how the Files app has ground more powerful and other apps interact with it.

A few details will emerge as my journey continues and terminology begins to take hold. Visit the website for PhotoActive Podcast with Jeff Carlson and Kirk McElhearn - many episodes but #52 iPhone 11 and Semantic Rendering also covering "computational photography"is a good place to start. This is not to say you need the latest iPhone for our seminar, but these guys cover the direction Apple is heading with camera technology. For instance:
  • iPhone has multiple cameras with dedicated sensors - Ultra-Wide no optical stabilization and can't shoot RAW or do Night Mode, less pixel density
  • iPhone X and beyond - cameras take multiple frames to blend together - smart HDR and now rapid blending of multiple frames
  • Telephoto and zoom lenses are still DSLR/Mirrorless domain 
  • Night mode using a tripod will length exposures over hand-held still needs some light 
  • Pet Portrait mode now available 
  • Todd Hido has interesting landscapes and suburbia 
Many roads lead to Rome and many photographers read DP Review - Digital Photography Review for details on hardware but also read the member forums where sharing of challenges and possible solutions are offered by real world users. Read the iOS Forum.

Are you still using a Mirrorless or DSLR camera? Are you interesting in upgrading to a new camera body or system? Will an iPad be your out-and-about editing platform? Then take note of the file sizes produced by the new camera. Go to a local camera store for research - take a few pictures in RAW and in just JPG. Then at home, load them into the iPad and your favorite editor. Personally, my question is do I need a full-frame camera with a huge file size to capture and render the subjects? My Nikon 7000 is a APS-C 16MP sensor.

Watch for more soon

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Registration is open and the waitlist is growing.

Enrollment has CLOSED

Expect to be added to the waitlist for this seminar. New participants will get an email from the instructor and a follow-up phone interview. Ohh! Not threatening much! This is not a beginning photography seminar, it is guided activity with participant driven content. This semester will be different than the last six semesters in that we have too much digital content on our devices and will be looking at how to migrate to computer or online archives.

We will still be using our iPhones to take, edit, style and share images. The list of applications will change slightly.



Official description:
iPhone Photography Studio (A/S)
This seminar includes participant-led demonstrations where experienced photographers use iPhone apps to create print-ready artwork. In-class demonstrations and online shared albums are our critique and learning platforms. This semester we research apps for computer migration and reporting exposure metadata. Visit our website for demonstration videos and artwork examples at our website. New photo studio artists should expect to purchase $25 in apps. Requirements: iPhone 7, 8, X, XR, XS, 11, 11Pro; iOS 12 or 13, AppleID. An iPad is helpful for editing. This is NOT a beginner photography seminar. We continue socializing at lunch after session. Rancho Cordova Library is located at 9845 Folsom Blvd. (between Bradshaw and Mather Field Road). Sessions: 4 classroom with 2 local photowalks. All enrollees go to WAITLIST and will be contacted by instructor to check prerequisites mentioned above.

Do take time to view our past online galleries.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

How far we've come

This seminar was first offered during the Spring 2017 semester and our photographers had iPhone 5, 6 and 7 running iOS 9 and 10. As we start our seventh semester our photographers will be using iPhone 8 and later and iOS 12 and 13. One of the key features in our seminar is using a Shared Album to upload our creations, get feedback and be inspired to go further with our apps.