January 18, 2011

by Gavin Seim: I’m not a web designer by trade and I don’t plan to be. I’m a photographer who happens to be a WordPress nut. I think WP is the best way to build and manage a great website, blog or both. Flash is on the way out, traditional HTML less manageable. A content system like WP gives us control and can have any look we want it to. It allows us users to stay on control of our sites and mange them easily, from anywhere.

I designed this site and all my others on WP. I’ve been working with it for years now, but I know  that it can be daunting when your starting out. So along with my photography consultations I decided to officially offer… WP consultations, for people who want to save the headaches and get their site on track fast… Customization, for people that need a few tweaks to their design, but don’t want to hassle with it themselves.

I’ll also be offering a limited number of full WP site designs. You can hire me to build you one of those notorious, clean, Seim designs just for you. I only plan to do a handful of those a year however.

You can get WordPress help and consultations right here, as well as info on site design… Gav

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January 11, 2011

This has been a long time in coming. With Apple’s Aperture finally getting presets in v3, Aperture users can now use develop presets and harness that power in their workflow. LightFlow has been in the works for awhile, but it’s nearly ready to release.

I’ve been making Lightroom presets for years and that knowledge crosses over. But it’s still different software and all new presets have to be designed. While I’m eager to release a defining collection of Aperture presets, I did not want to rush. I started by making a freebie pack called Light Study, to test the waters and see what Aperture users like. The feedback was positive and I went to work developing a complete set.

LightFlow is a collection of Aperture presets for every photographic situation. Essentially this set is to Aperture what Power Workflow has been to Lightroom.

It will feature more than 40 presets for batch corrections, subtle tweaks, silver conversions and color tones. It’s going to start as a simple well organized set that gives Aperture users quick control over a broad variety of refinements and processes that they can use as applied, or tweak for any specific need.

LightFlow is scheduled for release in Feb-Mar 2011. You can subscribe to the SE newsletter on the right to be updated when it launches, or watch the FB page.

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January 5, 2011

by Gavin Seim: Memory cards. Their just a tool. They just need to be fast, reliable and preferably cheap. Well I just ran across this video on Scott Kelby’s blog and had to share. I was mesmerized by the complexity of steps and sheer awesomeness of the machines used to make these chips. I only wish they gave a little more detail on what they were doing to the wafers (super secret maybe). In any case, I now have a bit more respect for “the card”. Take a peek and be glad you’re not having to make these at home… Gav

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December 23, 2010

by Gavin Seim (updated 07/11): HDR simply means High Dynamic Range. But lets face it. A lot of this HDR looks a lot like clippings from a spoof horror movie. It’s the Flickr HDR. I think this happens because many don’t really grasp what HDR is all about and how to use it well. This includes many HDR software developers. They fall for the fad instead of thinking of it as a serious photographic tool. It’s can be so powerful if used with balance.

Tufa Sunrise. Single bracket HDR pano. More details here.

Back in the day there was film. Then came digital. Then came HDR. First we merged light and dark images in special ways to get a wider range of light. HDR merging was not perfect and was often overdone, but it could produce beautiful results. Often results that looked edgy and bold. Young guys like me thought we were so cool. Capturing detail that was never seen before.

Then I started looking closer. Studying what the film forefathers had been making for years. Looking at the dynamic range and detail. I realized that HDR was really not so new. Film photography had high dynamic range also and I saw images that astounded me. Images, that had I not been told they were on traditional film, I would have assumed were digital HDR. It helped me realize something.

HDR is not a trend of over-processed, super amped, ultra edgy photos. I think many architectural photographers got this memo, but most others didn’t. I’ve talked about balance in HDR processing for some time, but what I’ve come to further realize and started teaching in Lights & Shadows Workshop is that HDR is about controlling tone. It’s about understand and managing light. Digital in itself does not yet have the dynamic range that film did, so we compensate. Just as a film photographer might have used filters, various film types and chemical process to get dynamic range in their images, we use digital manipulation. HDR photography is little more than the new film.

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December 20, 2010

The folks Nik Software always give PPS readers a discount, but 12/20/10 thru 1/03/11, their having a bonus Christmas special on nearly all their products. Just use promo code: PPS and get the discounts listed below. If you’re finding this post after the sale ends, you can still use the PPS code for the regular 15% discount. Enjoy… Gav

  • Complete Collection Ultimate Edition $439.95 ($160 savings)
  • Complete Collection Lightroom/Aperture Edition $239.95 ($60 savings)
  • Color Efex Pro 3 Complete $224.95 ($70 savings)
  • Dfine 2 $74.95 ($25 savings)
  • Silver Efex Pro $149.95 ($50 savings)
  • Sharpener Pro 3 $149.95 ($50 savings)
  • Viveza 2 $149.95 ($50 savings)
  • HDR Efex Pro and Dfine 2.0 together for just $199.95 (a savings of $60).

Visit Nik’s website. Use code PPS for discounts.
Check out the Deals Page for other vendor discounts.

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