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10 Ways to Know You Made a Good Picture


Copyright Scott Bourne - 2009 All Rights Reserved

Copyright Scott Bourne - 2009 All Rights Reserved

How Do I Know if I Shot a Good Photograph?

My pal Rick Sammon gave his take on this subject a few days ago here at http://bit.ly/JF51S. Now it’s my turn.

Here are 10 things to look for in a good photograph. (NOTE: These are offered in no particular order.)

1. Correct exposure. The image is not too bright or too dark. Unless for artistic reasons, there are no blocked up shadows or blown out highlights.

2. Sharpness. The photo is sharp where it needs to be. Unless for artistic reasons, your subject should be in sharp focus. If you’re photographing a person, the eyes must be in focus.

3. Background. Is there anything in the background that distracts from the photo or competes with your eye’s attention on the subject? Look for uncluttered backgrounds.

4. Composition. Is the photo balanced? You want to avoid horizons that cut through the middle of the photo. Unless for artistic reasons, you want to avoid placing your subject dead center.

5. Intruders. Look out for intruders. These are simply objects that encroach on the edges of your image. Tree branches are a typical offender as our power lines, etc.

6. Color. Are the colors believable? You want to get good color rendition in a color photograph. Unless for artistic reasons, the color should be similar to what you saw with your naked eye.

7. Emotion. The photograph should evoke some emotion. Any emotion will do. But really good photographs cause an emotional reaction.

8. Subject. You want to find an interesting subject. It can be a person, an animal, a mountain, etc., whatever it is, look for something that is special, or interesting or better yet arresting. If you’re not sure what the picture is about, it’s not typically a good photograph.

9. Attention. Is there enough attention on your subject? Look for ways to draw attention to the subject. This can be done by getting closer, filling the frame, eliminating clutter, etc.

10. Light. It’s impossible to have a good photograph without good light. It is possible to have an OK subject, but take the OK subject and put it in good light and all of a sudden, you have a GOOD subject. Look for the light.

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Flickr Adds People Tagging. And It’s Better Than Facebook’s.

flickrpepMy mother always yells at me when she looks at my pictures on Flickr, saying that I don’t take enough pictures of people. The truth is, I do, I just put most of those on Facebook because it’s a billion times better for pictures of your friends because you can easily tag them. Now Flickr is gaining the same functionality — but better.

Its new “People In Photos” feature is long overdue. With it, you’ll be able to select a picture and start typing a person’s name, which will then scan your Flickr contacts to see who it should add as a tag to the picture. And like Facebook, you’ll be able to draw an outline around someone’s face to show exactly who they are in the picture.

But the reason this feature is even better than Facebook’s functionality is the opt-out and opt-in options. While most users love the people tagging for photos in Facebook, just about everyone wishes there were more options that allow you to opt-out of being tagged in certain photos. You can untag yourself, or block people from tagging you, but there isn’t a good case-by-case method of doing this.

Flickr is offering that by allowing you to opt-out of being tagged in individual photos. And once you opt-out, unlike Facebook, no one can put you back into that photo. You can also set who is able to tag you in photos. And you can set who is able to tag people in photos that you shared.

The stength Facebook has over Flickr is that you probably have many more contacts, or at the very least, actual friends on Facebook. Because Flickr relies on your Flickr contact list, it probably won’t be as useful as Facebook’s, at least at first. But this is a great incentive to get you adding more contacts on Flickr, and encouraging your friends to sign up.

Users have long been working around Flickr’s lag of people photo tagging by doing it manually in the tag section of pictures. Now it’s getting a whole lot better. Undoubtedly, some users will hate this feature, but they can opt-out entirely from being tagged.

When you’re tagged in a photo, it will show up in your recent activity stream. And Flickr has revamped users’ profiles to show pictures you’re tagged in.

[photo: flickr/spuz]

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Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

10 Simple Freezer Tricks to Save You Time and Money [Clever Uses]

It's that time of year again, when our freezers are filled with the summer's bounty in preparation for the long winter months ahead. Get the most out of your freezer, and learn a few of its other uses, with these great tricks.

Photo by: Stevedepolo

Freezers are hard working appliances that can do more than just keep your bagged veggies chilled. Try on one of these 10 ideas below and see if you can make it pull double duty, or at least keep it running a little more efficiently:

Can I freeze that? A Guide to Freezer Do's and Don'ts

More often than not things can be saved from expiration date, mold or for a later use, by freezing them. But how do you know what can be frozen and how long it keeps? The National Center for Home Food Preservation has done the dirty work for you and made a list! (Original Post) Photo by gregoryjameswalsh

Unstick Plastic Wrap in the Freezer

Plastic Wrap loses it's static cling when placed in the freezer. It will attach to any bowl or plate that needs covering, but eliminates it sticking back on itself. (Original Post) Photo by Mike Wade

Freeze Ground Meat in Small Portions with a Chopstick

The extra 10 minutes it takes to thaw ground meat in the microwave is time you could have spent doing something else. Eliminate it by pressing a chopstick into the meat on the outside of a zip top bag. It will allow you to break off as much as you need without thawing the entire amount. (Original Post)

Preserve Surplus Summer Herbs for Winter Use

Fresh herbs bought from your local grocer can cost more than buying an entire plant. Try chopping and covering them with water, stock or oil before freezing. They'll be ready for any dish, all winter long. (Original Post) Photo by suavehouse113

Make Your Freezer More Efficient

Freezing used plastic bottles or jugs (milk and orange juice work great) full of water will help keep your freezer at a level temperature and use less energy to maintain it. (Original Post) Photo by Sarah Rae Trover

Save Your Hard Drive in the Freezer

A hard drive that is left in the freezer for 24 hours and then quickly inserted back into your machine can make a recovery. Or at least long enough to back things up before it says adios forever. (Original Post)

Tame Freezer Burn to Keep Food Tasty

Freezer burn can get the best of everything in your freezer. To make sure it doesn't happen as frequently, try keeping your freezer at a more steady temperature and keeping out as much air as possible. (Original Post)

Make Freezer Jam as an Easy Alternative to Canning

Freezer Jam is an easy way to use up remaindered fruits and doesn't even require a waterbath or any other canning know-how. Just a little pectin. (Original Post) Photo by Jennie Faber

Convert a Chest Freezer into a Super-Efficient Refrigerator

Chest freezers use 1/10th of the energy that an upright refrigerator does. With the addition of a thermostat, a chest freezer can end up being the ideal place to keep things cool, without freezing them. (Original Post)

Frost-Proof Meat with "Drugstore Wrap"

Zip top bags and Seal-a-Meal systems can be time consuming and inefficient. Try kicking it old school and wrap your meats in freezer paper for a frost free freezer experience. (Original Post) Photo by Rio Designs

How do you put your freezer to good use—apart from the obvious? Have something to add to the list above? Sound off in the comments.



Stanford’s open-source camera could revolutionize photography, you’ll still use ‘Auto’ mode

Here's the moment where you pretend that a breakthrough in a given industry would just revolutionize the way you do work, yet you know -- deep down in your heart -- that you'd never take advantage. Okay, so maybe you would, but your friend wouldn't. At any rate, a gaggle of boffins at Stanford have set out to "reinvent digital photography" with the advent of the open-source digital camera. The idea here is to give programmers the power to conjure up new software to teach old cameras new tricks, with the hope being to eliminate software limits that currently exist. In fact, a prototype shooter has already been developed, with the Frankencamera hinting at a future where owners can download apps to their devices and continuously improve its performance and add to its abilities. The actual science behind the concept is stupendously in-depth, so if you're thinking of holding off on that new Nikon or Canon in 2034, you might want to give the read link a look for a little more encouragement.

[Via HotHardware]

Continue reading Stanford's open-source camera could revolutionize photography, you'll still use 'Auto' mode

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Stanford's open-source camera could revolutionize photography, you'll still use 'Auto' mode originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 Sep 2009 13:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why the Space Shuttle should always lift off at night

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...so we earthlings can gaze at photographs like this. "Billows of smoke and steam rise above Launch Pad 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida alongside space shuttle Discovery as it races toward space on the STS-128 mission."