Mar 18 2011

Don’t Chimp, Do “Overexpose”: David Pogue’s Latest Lessons Covered for Pros

Yesterday David Pogue reported that he recently had a private photography lesson with Tom Bear. Pogue, who pens a witty, brilliant technology blog for “The New York Times,” learned two critical lessons from Bear that I have addressed in AfterCapture articles. For pro-level learning, check them out.

• Pogue’s “Always Overexpose” Lesson: “Tom almost always shoots slightly overexposed. You can always tone down the brights in Photoshop later. But if the shot was underexposed, it’s much harder to recover the details that are lost in shadow. ‘And always overexpose women,’ he said. ‘Overexposing kills wrinkles.’”

AfterCapture Blog_110318_ac4_Raw_ProcessingPro Insights on the Topic: In “Getting RAW Exposure Right: Making an Excellent In-Camera Exposure is a Critical Step in RAW Processing” I call on the expertise of photographers Richard Anderson, Dan Stack and Michael Stewart to explain that, with RAW files, it is better to err on the side of overexposure. However, if this “overexposure” is not detrimental to the image than it is not really over-exposing but proper-exposing.

The article goes it to techie specifics, suggestions for how to handle exposure in different situations, and discusses how to consider the “subjective factor” of exposure.

• Pogue’s “Don’t Chimp!” Lesson: “Tom suggests being careful to avoid ‘chimping,’ a term I’d never heard before. That’s where you get so excited about looking at the playback of your photos on the camera’s screen that you miss the great shots still available around you. (Why is that ‘chimping?’ Because you’re standing there, looking at your playback like an idiot, going, ‘Ooh! Ooh! Ooh!’)

AfterCapture Blog_110318_ac6_Beyond_ChimpingPro Insights on the Topic: In “Beyond Chimping: How To Enhance (or Reclaim) Your Strong Sense of Vision While Shooting Digital” I transmit the expert insights of commercial photographers Andy Batt, Clem Spalding and Stewart Cohen, who all suggest that chimping is a form of insecurity that can be deadly to professional photographers. However, they  point out that chimping isn’t always chimping — when used in an intelligent manner to improve vision and to know that you’ve truly bagged the shot.

The importance is to know the difference “reflexive chimping” (the bad kind) and intelligent review of images. To help pros do less of the first and more of the second, I offer a practical exercise.

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


Oct 28 2010

David Pogue Adores the Canon S95

Category: Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 5:22 pm

AfterCapture Blog_101028_Canon S95Itching to upgrade your point-and-shoot? According to the witty and savvy David Pogue, the best camera out there is the Canon PowerShot S95. Personally, I believe him. He’s that good.

Pogue sings his praise for the S95 in a great blog post today that takes the form of a love letter to the camera itself. He brilliantly rounds out his review of the S95 with 20 excellent sample shots — with titles like, “Whoa. Handheld, Night, Moving Plane. Nice.” Nice indeed.

What Pogue loves most about the S95 is it’s big sensor and a megapixel count that is not unnecessarily over the top. As Pague swoons to the S95:

But above all, I love your enormous sensor. It’s 0.59 inches diagonally—88 percent more area than most pocket cameras’ sensors. And I love that you have an f/2.0 lens, a rarity among pocket cameras, meaning that you let in a lot more light.

And all of this means that you, little S95, can take amazing, sharp pictures in low light without the flash. Your designers have shrewdly dropped the ludicrous quest for more megapixels—you have 10 megapixels, just right—in favor of something that really matters, like better photos.

The Ludicrous Quest

Pogue first came to my attention at PhotoPlus in New York in 2007. He gave the keynote speech in which he shared his ideas about what he calls the “megapixel myth.” The gist of his informative talk was that no consumer needs a camera that captures more than 6 megapixels of data. Pogue explains why in a New York Times article and then a follow-up blog post on the megapixel myth.

Given Pogue’s history of trying to calm people down about over-rated megapixels, it’s easy to see why his particularly in love with the S95.

Tags: , , ,


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: , , , , , , ,


Dec 09 2009

Got a Burning Photo Question? Ask the Net

Category: Online ResourcesEthan G. Salwen @ 7:13 am

ACOF_091209_1_varkcomAccording to tech guru David Pogue — and this is one tech guru I really trust — Vark.com just might offer professional photographers the single best way to answer any niggling image making question, fast and with authority. Topic questions answered include anything related to on location issues, in camera issues, during postproduction issues, with client issues, in your kitchen curiosities, with your car problems. . .

Okay, I know. Kitchen curiosities and car problems are not necessarily related to “image making,” but Vark.com is a service that hooks you up directly with an expert in any field imaginable. That expert then answers your query with an answer just for you — not as with the blanket ask/response services provided by answers.yahoo.com or answerbag.com.

As Pogue explains:

Last week, I stumbled upon a new, better way to harness the Net for answers: Vark.com. You send your question to Aardvark (the full name of the service) using a chat program like Continue reading “Got a Burning Photo Question? Ask the Net”

Tags: , , , , , , , ,


Aug 14 2008

David Pogue Updates Gadget List!

Category: Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 1:49 am

ACMF_080814_PogueList_1_pogue_headshot“The New York Times” technology columnist and blogger David Pogue has updated his Gadget List for 2008! If you’re not aware of the insightful, prolific and seriously witty Pogue, you probably should be. And his Gadget List 2008 is a good place to start.

Pogue shares with readers exactly which technology devices he uses in his own life—cameras, phone, computer, car and other goodies—and explains why these items are his tools of choice for work and play. Just because Pogue’s hi-end camera is a Nikon D80 don’t assume he doesn’t have much wisdom to offer professional photographers.

Continue reading “David Pogue Updates Gadget List!”

Tags: , , , , , ,