View allAll Photos Tagged workflow
Located in the heart of the glamorous city of Cannes —close to the Palais du Festival and famous Croisette walk— the Vieux Port de Cannes has been a long time favourite port of call for boats of all sizes. A wooden quay in front of the Capitainerie can accommodate yachts up to 40m there (50m upon request)
[yachtinsidersguide.com]
Teamcenter Express delivers a comprehensive cPDM environment including preconfigured workflows for efficient completion of engineering change and release to manufacturing processes
#workflow #womeninuniform #woman #girly #gorgeous #georgiapeach #law #newlook #boss #bossy #chick #cool #classy #captain #crystal #swarovski #sexy #security #elcaptain #securityofficer #sophisticated #topnotchy #butterfly #jewelry #brown #caramelskin #soft #glamorous #GApeach #ATL
I do most of my post-processing (organization and editing) in Aperture, occasionally using a plugin or Photoshop when more complex edits are desired. So that's the source of the HUD along the bottom left corner
This is a hipstamatic iPhone photo of me editing a hipstamatic iPhone photo in Aperture 3. I can be all meta and self-referential! Look at me, hipster photographer!
Once upon a time, I shot all my photos in JPEG, and occasionally managed to find time to post them. Then, I was convinced to start shooting in RAW to have more control over the outcome. Once I did that, I was on a slippery slope, of course. A few months later, someone introduced me to photo processing plugins, particularly Topaz Adjust and DeNoise. Happy with the visuals, I added those into my already-overburdened workflow. And then, recently, for reasons I can't determine, the Topaz plugins started completely obliterating the EXIF data from the photos I use them to process. EXIF data, like GPS coordinates and timestamps in particular, are really important to me. After a few hours of banging my head against the wall of unhelpful internet discussion forums, I arrived at the solution pictured here. I now have to run a command-line utility called 'exiftool' and manually copy the EXIF data from the originals to the edited copies once I'm done tweaking.
Maybe I should just go back to JPEGs...
The Promenade de la Croisette, or Boulevard de la Croisette, is a prominent road in Cannes, France. It stretches along the shore of the Mediterranean Sea and is about 2 km long. The Croisette is known for the Palais des Festivals et des Congrès, where the Cannes Film Festival is held. Many expensive shops, restaurants, and hotels (such as the Carlton, Majestic, JW Marriott Cannes, and Martinez) line the road. It goes completely along the coastline of Cannes [Wikipedia.org]
Content Workflow 2010 is an exciting one day event detailing strategies for professionals -- in information management, knowledge management and IT, R&D, medical affairs, and publishing -- to inject high-value STM content into the workflow of knowledge workers when and where they need it, and exploring critical information about global copyright compliance.
Copyright © Dave DiCello 2012 All Rights Reserved.
Neil Walker of the Pittsburgh Pirates takes a swing against the New York Mets.
As always, you can read about the processing I've done on this shot and all my images on on my website.
New blog post today, I love a rainy night! Check it out if you have a chance!
My website: HDR Exposed Photography
My zenfolio: HDR Exposed - Zenfolio
Find me on Google+!
A snapshot of one nights shooting.
Very little to tweak or dick about with. I shoot RAW and downsave to jpg for the web, left the white balance alone. Tone curved and set the dynamic range a little... so not far from vanilla and straight out of the camera. The shot above was ISO 160, f8/22mm/ and a 30th of a second. Shot on a tripod.
1 - From camera
2 - Lightroom 3
+Exposure (if needed)
+White balance shift
+Healing tool for easy blemishes
+Color correction (Vibrance/HSL)
+Brush tool (exposure)
3. Photoshop CS4
+Surface blur, vary opacity
+Levels adjustment & Mask for toning, eyes, background
+Greater healing brush tools
+Liquefy (if needed)
4. Lightroom 3
+Final curves adjustment
+Vignette
+Sharpening
+Export
please note: simple invites to post an image to a particular group are always welcome but no pictures, awards, or badges in comments. i call it dumping on the lawn. thanks very much for understanding, and I sincerely appreciate your visits.
for those interested in iphonography, the itemization of the workflow used for the images in this series might prove helpful.
oh, and i've created a group for black and white images. you might wanna join.
Take your HDSLR skills to the next level. Create and record video/audio that is rich in quality and unique in aesthetics. Attend this class and experience hands-on training in shooting video, lighting a scene, video editing and much more.
- Importing, managing, and exporting footage
- Syncing audio
- First steps in editing like a pro
- Next steps toward your technical and creative growth.
This is a comparison of my old and new Photoshop workflows. See full-size for best comparison. The original photo-which sucks--is on top. The middle one was accomplished with my normal photoshop workflow, which is an improvement, but the colors are horrible. The bottom one was created using Dan Margulis's "Picture Postcard" workflow, which is dramatically better than either of the others.
The new workflow involves 3 stages. Simplified, they are:
1. removing minor color casts in RGB mode without regard for contrast
2. boosting the contrast without regard for color
3. combining the color from step 1 and the contrast from step 2 in Lab mode while also boosting overall color.
Today is the first day I've been trying this new workflow, and I did this one rather quickly, so I don't contend that I've created a perfect image. But it's so much better than the way it would have otherwise ended up that clearly, I will be changing the way I fix pictures in Photoshop from now on.
Was working on updating our JIRA workflow for projects using Feature Cards. Tinderbox maps work well for this - along with pretty much everything else.
Reprocessing the files using Pixinsight SolarToolbox. Still learning it and comparing the results to my previous workflow.
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]
The kitchen sans its plaster. You can still see the lath and plaster keys for rooms on the opposite side of the walls.
Technical details:
• Olympus E-510
• Zuiko 14-54mm f2.8/3.5 lens.
• Final image stitched from four images using hugin.
Workflow
• rawtherapee v2.4 ß4 to "develop" four RAW images. Each image received Color Boost, Shadow and Highlight recovery, contrast adjustment, Luminance and Chrominance noise reduction, and an additional +0.5ev to its exposure. Save to a 16-bit TIFF.
• hugin v0.7.0 w/autopano-SIFT (to automatically find stitching control points) to stitch four 16-bit TIFF images into one TIFF image.
• Photoshop CS2 (running through WINE v1.1.13) to adjust contrast, shadow recovery, smart sharpen, and crop.
• exiftool to copy the .ORF EXIF tags back into the final JPEG.
• kflickr to upload the JPEG to flickr.com.
• Linux Kubuntu 8.10 Intrepid Ibex.
• Dell e1405 laptop with the 1.6Ghz Intel CoreDuo and 2.5GB RAM.
Ultimate workshop weekend, November 21-22 Emmeloord the Netherlands
On November 21-22 I will teach an ultimate workshop weekend in our studio in the Netherlands, this is the most intense workshop you will find on model photography. During the weekend I will cover every single topic that is important for a successful modelshoot ranging from studio to inside and outside locations, using flash, reflectors, fill in flash, day to night, natural light, artificial light and much much more.
Small collection of topics :
Lighting, metering, coaching the model, killer poses, using props, adding motion, working with gels, smoke, gear etc. etc.
And that's just the technical part for the shoot, there is also a whole retouching part.
In the retouching you can expect topics like:
Speeding up your workflow, using Capture One/DxO/Lr, skin retouching in different ways (from frequency separation to plugins), choosing the right toning, working with channels, setting up your workflow from tethering to social media and much much more.
And we're not done yet :D
During the weekend you will get business tips, social media tips and of course tips on how to build your brand.
And when you think that's it..... there is more.
What about a nice diner with me and our team, a signed print for all participants, some cool software and of course a portfolio review.
The costs ?
Normally the weekend is priced at 999.00 euro but thanks to a very kind sponsor we can offer it for 699.00 euro.
Times :
Day 1 : 10:00AM - 9:00PM
Day 2 : 10:00AM - 5:00PM
Language English
Photograph from Red Hat's JUDCon 2012: India held January 24-25 in Bangalore, homespun by Saltmarch Media. Only non-commercial use permitted with attribution and linkback to this page on Saltmarch's Flickr photostream. All other rights reserved.
Here is a shot of a Verify workflow on the whiteboard. This was an early concept sketch that held together.
ZURB is a close-knit team of interaction designers and strategists that help companies design better (www.zurb.com).