Jan 29 2010

Photographic Technology is a Sack of Potential

Category: Creative Process, Technology Insights, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 9:40 am

AC_Blog_100129_Potential_1Yesterday, in his “New York Times” article, “The Apple iPad: First Impressions,” tech writer David Pogue gave us some food for thought about how Apple’s iPad might indeed find a useful place between laptops and smart phones. However, more than anything, Pogue took the opportunity to warn us about snapping to judgement about new technology — whether we are celebrating it or castigating it.

Pogue softly rebukes iPad “bashing by the bloggers who’ve never even tried it,” writing:

“My main message to fanboys is this: it’s too early to draw any conclusions. Apple hasn’t given the thing to any reviewers yet, there are no iPad-only apps yet (there will be), the e-bookstore hasn’t gone online yet, and so on. So hyperventilating is not yet the appropriate reaction.”

Pogue wraps up his thoughts on the iPad with a message that seems important to those of us wrapped up in the world of constant advances in photographic technology:

“Like the iPhone, the iPad is really a vessel, a tool, a 1.5-pound sack of potential. It may become many things. It may change an industry or two, or it may not. It may introduce a new category — something between phone and laptop — or it may not. And anyone who claims to know what will happen will wind up looking like a fool.”

“A vessel.” A “sack of potential.” I love these phrases — especially the “sack of potential.” It relates to every new photographic imaging purchase I have made since I started doing so with gusto in high school. (The Nikon F3 was my drooling dream for years.) Continue reading “Photographic Technology is a Sack of Potential”

Tags: , , , , , , ,


Jan 27 2010

“The Selby”: A Great Way To Approach Web Galleries

Category: Creative Process, PhotographersEthan G. Salwen @ 5:02 pm

AC_Blog_100127_The Selby_1Would you like to take an intimate peep through the fabulously offbeat homes of dozens of creative professionals around the world? Could you use some inspiration for new ways to share hundreds of your images that might not be “portfolio worthy,” but which deserve to be seen, nonetheless? If you’ve answered “yes” to either of these questions (how could you not?), definitely check out “The Selby.”

Yesterday, Jain Lemos asked if I was in on “The Selby.” Having no clue what she was talking about, I headed to the site. What I found was a Web presence  oozing with creative energy, displaying wonderful, intimate images of creatively-inspired homes.

At first glance I found the site be seem haphazard, a bit confusing, hard to navigate. But after five minutes with with “The Selby,” I understood its crystal clear focus and and the intelligence of its structure, and boy was I hooked. Continue reading ““The Selby”: A Great Way To Approach Web Galleries”

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Jan 23 2010

What Are Our Visual Expectations?

Category: Creative Process, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 9:33 pm

YouTubing around in the background while doing some photo work, I stumble upon this beauty featuring Bobby McFerrin. I watch, I smile, watch again, smile again. The third time I am participating along with the audience. Now I’m really smiling, and I’m wondering. . .

What are our visual expectations?

If McFerrin gets you smiling, too, consider my question and share what comes to mind regarding our visual expectations — across cultures or simply in relation to your own visual life.

Tags: , , , , , ,


Jan 20 2010

The Power of Classic Photojournalism: “In Haiti, a Stuggle Barely Begun”

Category: ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 11:32 am

In my post last Thursday I touched on this question: Can the distribution of too many, unfiltered images of catastrophic event reduce our sensitivity to that event? If so, this would suggest that the potential power of photography is being greatly influenced by new technologies.

People climb in through a hole in a wall to remove goods from a home supplies store in downtown Port-au-Prince.

People climb in through a hole in a wall to remove goods from a home supplies store in downtown Port-au-Prince.

In response to my post, I encourage you to view a photo slide show that “The New York Times” posted on Monday. “In Haiti, a Struggle Barely Begun” presents classic photojournalism of the highest caliber. It is brought to us via edge technology employed thoughtfully. The “Times” slide show interface is excellent, clean and uncluttered, featuring only images, captions and three links to related “Times” stories.

All 17 images in this picture story are stunning photographically. They employ color, design, lighting, focus, depth of field and strong angles a to draw us in.

The intelligence of the image maker behind the lens ensures Continue reading “The Power of Classic Photojournalism: “In Haiti, a Stuggle Barely Begun””

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Jan 18 2010

Making Brilliant Pet Pics in Five Minutes

Category: Viewpoint, Workflow & DAMEthan G. Salwen @ 5:37 pm

OK, clearly “brilliant” is overstating the pictures I came up with, but they are certainly “acceptable” and I made them in less than five minutes. So I thought it would be valuable to share my “pet picture taking workflow.”

My favorite, basically combining all three types of pet images.

My favorite, basically combining all three types of pet images. (See below.)

Of course, taking pictures of pets should be fun, easy and natural. However, I haven’t had a pet since the advent of digital, and as I was playing with my new kitten this weekend, three factors were weighing down on me:

1. A few friends were demanding to see kitten pics on FaceBook.

2. The quality of pet images on FaceBook is really, truly outstanding.

3. I’ve simply never been good at making images of animals — in nature, in zoos or in my house.

What to do? Continue reading “Making Brilliant Pet Pics in Five Minutes”

Tags: , ,


Jan 14 2010

Enable Specific Customer Feedback Mechanisms To Improve Marketing Efforts

Category: Business & MarketingEthan G. Salwen @ 2:51 pm

ACBlog_100115_1_Skitch PromotionsWhen my Mac automatically launched Skitch today, Skitch automatically launched a software upgrade dialog box. Here I saw a friendly little, pink box that linked to multiple options to provide feedback to Skitch and, more importantly, to help me get me more involved with the Skitch tribe.

“Send us an email,” “Follow Skitch on Twitter,” “Read the Blog” and “Wallpapers and badges” were half of the eight links that got me clicking. And getting me clicking got me to not only following Skitch on Twitter and signing up for Skitch’s blog RSS feed, but it also found me telling friends about Skitch — using an simple, automated Web feature provided by Skitch.

I was telling my friends Skitch simply because I think it is a must-have app for all creative pros. However, this also led me to also writing some colleagues that were already on board with Skitch (as I learned from an instant notification from Skitch.) This, I realized realized, was actually giving me a chance to help my own tribe-building efforts, and I felt grateful to Skitch for this.

Skitch’s friendly, little pink box was working some big time magic.

I have never seen such a simple, friendly, user-enticing form of grabbing my attention and increasing my involvement in a product. This is customer feedback done right.

Photographers can use this example from Skitch to consider ways for easily improving marketing efforts by creating specific, varied feedback mechanisms. Consider adding such links (in a box or not) to:

• Regular email mails.

• Promotional emails.

• Newsletters.

• Web site pages.

• You tell me!

I have not investigated the mechanism that Skitch is using to produce their feedback dialog box, but it this marketing strategy is clearly not about technology. It is about reconsidering the possibilities in gaining quality feedback and involvement.

I need to start by asking myself, how can I improve on the standard “Website: X” line in my email signature. Then, how can I go beyond the passive “Contact” page on my Web site? (Specific feedback and involvement options added to different pages?)

ACBlog_100115_2_Skitch Promotions_

Offering killer creative services is only a tiny fraction of the what it takes to achieve business success. Getting people interested and involved in following your services at is critical. Skitch’s friendly, little pink box is food for thought. How can you can put such specific response mechanisms to use?

If you are doing something similar (or better) or have seen excellent samples of this in the photo industry, let me know. I’d love to share ideas!

Tags: , , , , , ,


Jan 14 2010

Does Looking Too Close Make Us Feel More Distant?

Category: ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 10:19 am

I’m sitting here reading reports from the earthquake in Haiti. First I was reading some coverage from BBC News, then I was taking in some of what “The New York Times” is offering. In both cases, I feel a hot sting in my eyes. Sadness that does not produce tears. I find my mind trying to make comparisons to the Tsunami in Malaysia and Thailand in 2004 . Are we, as a global community, less shocked and saddened because there are no tourists on pristine beaches in Haiti? Can we really care that much for the people of this country, the poorest in the western hemisphere, when we have already seemed to write off its existence? Then I stop myself from this line of thought, thinking of the neatly painted toenails. I saw them in one of the images, when I looked close. The feed jut from a blanket that covers a mangled body that belongs to a woman, who like tens of thousands of other Haitians, died on Tuesday morning, killed by a geological event that was nothing more than a slight shiver for planet Earth — a slight shiver that in human terms equals a destructive power that I can not begin to imagine. But I do try to imagine how she died, and whether it her last moments were quick and painless or hours of anguish. And then I read a line in which a reporter shares that he can hear the muffled sounds of victims still trapped within collapsed buildings. They are there right now, as I type this line in complete comfort. And as I sit here in my comfort, I read how a doctor explains that, without water, many will die from thirst. The situation in Haiti is going to get a lot worse, the coverage suggests, and the millions affected will still be suffering many months from now, when there tragedy will likely be a distant thought for me.

This personal reaction of mine is not that particularly interesting to you as readers, I image. You are having a similar experience of your own, or you are  more deeply or less deeply engaged in the news from Haiti. It’s a big planet. There is a lot of sadness. We here about it every day. We all cope with it in our own ways.

The reason I write my emotional reaction in this photography blog is because I just stumbled upon “A Closer Look at the Destruction in Haiti,” an interactive Web feature produced by “The New York Times.” Text below the title invited me to “Zoom in on the images below and examine up close some of the damage caused by the earthquake in Haiti.”

The fist image — “Canapé Vert area, Port-au-Prince” — is very hard to read. Thus the zoom slider. I can zoom in and Continue reading “Does Looking Too Close Make Us Feel More Distant?”

Tags: , , , , , , ,


Jan 12 2010

Learn Stock Photography Strategies from Jack Hollingsworth

Category: Business & Marketing, Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 1:33 pm

Today, Jack Hollingsworth posted a Twitter poll asking, How many of you Photographers have a physical portfolio (besides your website/blogsite)?” It’s a good question, and it motivated me to check out Hollingsworth’s Web site. There I found a work-in-progress featuring just two videos:

“See The World” is a snappy portfolio piece featuring gobs of Hollingsworth’s images that zip by with quick pans and lively music. You won’t really see “the world,” but you will certainly a great example of how a large body of work (a photographer’s overall style) can be presented quickly.

See The World from jackhollingsworth on Vimeo.

• In “Coming Soon” Hollingsworth speaks directly to us to explain what’s going on with his site. He shares that he is currently building a totally new site that will be part-free and part-subscription based. The four topics he will focus on are stock photography, lifestyle photography, Continue reading “Learn Stock Photography Strategies from Jack Hollingsworth”

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,



Jan 08 2010

Get The Big Picture (and Major Inspiration) from “The Big Picture”

Category: ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 4:33 am

To receive a regular selection of great, topical photojournalism images, be sure to sign up for  “The Big Picture: News stories in photographs,” put together by the passionate and intelligent photo editor Alan Taylor and hosted by “boston.com” (the online edition of “The Boston Globe.”)

Today Taylor brings us 18 stunning images from the moon in “Images from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.” Wednesday Taylor delivered us 31 images from the “Harbine Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival.” On Monday Taylor served up 33 images in “Three Days in Iran.”

Image acquired July 11th, 2009. More (NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University)

Image acquired July 11th, 2009. More (NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University)

This is how Taylor works, editing images from diverse sources on specific topics and then presenting them with a thoughtful introduction every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. He’s been doing this since February 2009.

Scores of dedicated followers add comments, noting favorite images and adding interesting observations on the topic at hand. All in all, it’s a positive experience, full of photo inspiration.

People visit an ice Colosseum at the Harbin Ice Festival on January 3, 2010. (REUTERS/Aly Song)

People visit an ice Colosseum at the Harbin Ice Festival on January 3, 2010. (REUTERS/Aly Song)

Although I call Taylor a “photo editor” (how can I not, giving his work on “The Big Picture”?), he is actually employed as a developer for boston.com, running “The Big Picture” out of his passion for photojournalism, showing us Continue reading “Get The Big Picture (and Major Inspiration) from “The Big Picture””

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,


Next Page »