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This flowchart is based on David Allen´s GTD and a flowchart which I found on the web made by the company "FreeAssociates". You can find the original chart here: freeassociates.files.wordpress.com/2009/07/gtd-processing...

This is Jessica who modeled for our group yesterday in a Garage. I set out working on the image and started with a a basic Denoise using Topaz and a defogging via the unsharp mask in CS5. From their I tried some new processing techniques. The core technique I used is the Joel Grimes Skin Retouching workflow:

 

web.me.com/joelgrimes/Joel_Grimes_Photography/Skin_Smooth...

 

I also did do the Amy Dresser technique which he referes to in this workflow.

 

I could have stopped there but I wondered what would happen if I applied the glamour glow effect on the image. I used this process (http://visual.whatapic.com/glamour-skin-glow-updated-photoshop.picture). That instantly reminded me of the calendars I remembered seeing in auto shops as a kid.

 

I felt that I need to do somehting extra cool with the eyes and found this awesome tutorial:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEpzO9d3i3o

 

After that I went in for selective layering and used:

vibrance and sat to adjust the glamour effect

played saturated and desaturated layers on the background and settled on desaturated effect to make the model pop more. Added in a topaz adjust layer to accentuate leather details being careful not to touch any skin.

 

In hindsight I should have added a vignette.

 

The Hong Kong Cultural Centre (Chinese: 香港文化中心) is a multipurpose performance facility in the Tsim Sha Tsui area of Hong Kong. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hong_Kong_Cultural_Centre

 

中國香港尖沙咀梳士巴利道10號

中国香港尖沙咀梳士巴利道10号

10 Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong SAR, China

 

# SML Workflow

Captured with the iPhone app 360pano, processed in Lightroom 4. Unprocessed original: 360.io/gzrvMq

 

# SML Data

+ Date: 2013-01-19

+ Dimensions: 4096 x 1875

+ Camera: iPhone 5

+ GPS: 22°17'38" N 114°10'16" E

 

# Related SML Universe

+ SML 360pano: sml8.it/sml360pano

 

# Media Licensing

Creative Commons (CCBY) See-ming Lee 李思明 / SML Photography / SML Universe Limited

 

”香港文化中心晚上全景 Hong Kong Cultural Center Panorama at Night ” / SML.20130119.IPH5.360pano.gzrvMq

Infographic that illustrates a comparison between an existing workflow, and a more collaborative and "agile" project workflow.

screen cast of my iOS photography post workflow. For details see fuadkamal.org/2016/03/13/1066/

I recently joined the ranks of the Sharing Machine Spokesmodel team. I had been avoiding it, since those babydoll shirts make me look like a pornstar, but in the interest of simplifying workflow and making my old man happy (for once), I bit the bullet.

 

Check out www.toothpastefordinner.com/merchandise.php to check out the rest of the modeling pics, and Drew's awesome new shirts.

A portrait series with Liana, taken @ Atelier5B, Cologne, Germany.

 

Check my Instagram!

Lissabon

 

Finest photo-location

Not sure whether this will interest any of you or not, but just felt like sharing some of my thoughts through the post-processing stage of photography as have been getting a few emails from people lately about this.

 

The key to any post-processing is a good canvas on which to start from - this means you need to get it as "right" as you can in camera. Of course, using RAW formats make this a lot more forgiving, but I still believe it's a good thing to aim for! The less post-processing you do, the better quality your photo is also. Of course, that also depends on how creative you want to get. I'm not saying my images are anywhere near "right" in camera - actually I think there's still a long way for me to go there and I do get lazy quite often! It's still something I try to aim for anyway. Composition's probably the one thing you can't get away so easily with being lazy on :)

 

Left to Right, the top photograph is the original RAW photo without any adjustments. In my opinion (for what I like) the photo is flat and there's very little contrast between the bamboo and the middle tree, which is something I wanted to highlight, as when I was there, it's what struck me the most about the scene. The photo on the right was my first attempt at post-processing this image and I didn't like it. The colours just didn't do it for me, and the more I did, the worse it got! I also felt it was all too busy as the bamboo is a very strong feature with too much detail. The image just feels a bit uninteresting - there's nothing in particular that intrigues the viewer. I decided to leave the image and come back to it later, starting again from scratch.

 

The bottom two images are the ones I've posted on this photostream. The B&W attempt was born out of having been so disappointed with my first colour attempt. I felt I needed to just try something completely different as wasn't sure how to make the most of the bamboo without it being totally overpowering. I think this B&W stage helped me reorganise and refresh my outlook on processing a colour version (I find B&W tends to do that, for me at least). The final colour image is what I've finished with - it's not as "realistic" as it could maybe have been, but I've decided that this interpretation gives the effect I wanted. For me, it's intriguing and enchanting, which is honestly what I felt, being there (even though it didn't exactly look like that!). This image ended up being a lot more complex to process than I first thought - probably a lot to do with the weird lighting the bamboo gives, and the texture of it.

 

View large on B l a c k M a g i c

A slightly new workflow for this one. This is a 5-exposure HDR that has not been tone mapped.

 

5 exposures merged to 32-bit HDR in Photomatix

Saved as a 32-bit TIFF

Opened in Photoshop and HDR conversion used to change to a 16-bit TIFF

Topaz adjust

Levels, curves and hue/sat layers added

In Lightroom, clarity, vibrance and contrast increased

Back in Photoshop, vignette added, noise reduced and sharpened

Border added. Job done.

Mamiya M645 Pro with Kodak Portra 400 negative film.

 

This is a very architecturally intriguing building.

A sailor in “crackerjack” white uniform salutes to crew members boarding the ship while another enlisted sailor chats with another sailor named Callen in “Navy Working Uniform”—a camouflage which is digitally printed in multiple colors. According to Wikipedia, this should be the Navy Type III MARPAT [1].

 

The Crackerjacks—so nicknamed because of the Navy-uniformed figure that adorns the Cracker Jack snack box—are my all-time favorite uniforms worn by military units. Most probably because they feature bell-bottom cuts—a cut of pants which is closed to impossible for me to buy anywhere and I used to custom tailor them for myself—as many of my friends in New York knows.

 

It is for this same reason why I love the clothes designed by Jean-Paul Gaultier [2], a fashion designer based in France who has had a long history of designing outfits which bears many naval uniform influences.

 

# Notes

1. Wikipedia: EN: Uniforms of the United States Navy: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniforms_of_the_United_States_Navy

2. Wikipedia: EN: Jean-Paul Gaultier: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Paul_Gaultier

 

# SML Data

+ Date: 2013-04-18T17:41:37+0800

+ Dimensions: 3364 x 5046

+ Exposure: 1/100 sec at f/7.1

+ Focal Length: 400 mm

+ ISO: 12800

+ Flash: Did not fire

+ Camera: Canon EOS 6D

+ Lens: Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM

+ GPS: 22°17'41" N 114°10'0" E

+ Location: 中國香港九龍尖沙咀海港城 Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China

+ Subject: US Navy personnels, USS Peleliu (LHA-5), United States Navy

+ Workflow: Lightroom 4

+ Serial: SML.20130418.6D.01639

+ Series: Photojournalism, 男 Men

 

# Media Licensing

Creative Commons (CCBY) See-ming Lee 李思明 / SML Photography / SML Universe Limited

 

“美國海軍制服 US Navy Uniforms” / USS Peleliu (LHA-5) in Hong Kong / SML.20130418.6D.01639

/ #Photojournalism #男 #Men #SMLMen #CreativeCommons #CCBY #SMLPhotography #SMLUniverse #SMLProjects

/ #中國 #中国 #China #香港 #HongKong #攝影 #摄影 #photography #USS #Peleliu #LHA5 #military #US #Navy #people #salute #camouflage

The fact an SVG image is an xml document comes handy. In the past our workflow has been defined by the icon theme spec. We worked on individual files for every icon size. That becomes problematic when you tweak an aspect of an icon and you have to keep the change in sync with the other versions (It shows itself in the tango-icon-theme emoticons, where you have clearly different colors between the various sizes).

 

During the suse hackweek I've cooked up a php script that would take a two-layer SVG, where in one layer there would be rectangles defining the size and the other the actual artwork and call inkscape to render the objects into PNGs.

 

And since I'm now working in a team that deals with ROR a lot, I've found a scripting language that I very much like, ruby. I'm no hacker, but man do I love the simplicity of it.

My parents' Sony RX100 next to my Microsoft Surface Pro. The perfect "Portable yet Powerful" combination for a photographer!

 

Photograph as seen on The Hugehog Blog.

Pentacon 3.5/30.

Pic from the inside of my truck. Yes, I'm actually a real Trucker! 😃😁

a workflow chart describing general content creation process as shared by professional media and hobbyist bloggers alike.

IOGraphica overlaid on my photoshop document for 31.5 minutes. I've been working on this for a few hours, so this is an incomplete mouse track.

My new photo project about workflow of my friend and fashion designer Alena.

 

Best viewed on black

 

© All Rights Reserved

Happy Holidays!

 

To use this workflow, just clone it and start sending messages to the generated e-mail address.

 

Uploaded via tarpipe.

A portrait series with Liana, taken @ Atelier5B, Cologne, Germany.

 

Check my Instagram!

Workflow-Test in Lightroom 6

You can download this workflow from David Allens website: www.davidco.com/pdfs/gtd_workflow_advanced.pdf

or you may try the D*I*Y Planner Templates, which is a collection of very good templates, includying the one you liked: www.diyplanner.com/templates/official/classic

 

There are also other great gtd workflows that are similar to this one:

smerino.bol.ucla.edu/gtd/gtd-1.html - Collection

smerino.bol.ucla.edu/gtd/gtd-2.html - Daily Reviews

smerino.bol.ucla.edu/gtd/gtd-3.html- Weekly Reviews

elementkstaff.com/Student_Course_Materials/bnu/images/gtd...

blogs.salon.com/0002007/images/workflow_diagram3.gif

Cannes is a city located on the French Riviera. It is a commune located in the Alpes-Maritimes department, and host city of the annual Cannes Film Festival, Midem, and Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. The city is known for its association with the rich and famous, its luxury hotels and restaurants, and for several conferences. On 3 November 2011 it hosted the 2011 G20 summit [Wikipedia.org]

Coffee and photography, a good way to start the day. I'm thankful to the Lord for both. :~)

We kept the primary workflow extremly simple.

 

Verify is the fastest way to collect and analyze user feedback on screens or mockups. We talk more about Verify and our other products on the ZURBapps blog.

 

ZURB is a close-knit team of interaction designers and strategists that help companies design better (www.zurb.com).

I just constructed the cheapest standing desk ever, inspired by my coworker Jordan's setup.

Edited with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.

Not sure how to proceed with a task? Use this handy flowchart.

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