Aug 27 2010

Buying Audio Equipment with a Little Help from My (YouTube) Friends

Category: Multimedia & Video, Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 8:52 am

If you are already using YouTube to research equipment, make buying decisions and to learn tech tips, you can skip this post. If you are not, I want to invite you to the YouTube audio/video technical learning fest of which I have been ignorant. For example, recently this simple, nerdy audio test by onelonedork helped me immensely.

You see, Gail Mooney had suggested that I make the Zoom H4n my tool of choice for recording audio for multimedia projects. Instead of just taking her word for it, I spent a lot of time reading reviews on traditional sites and blogs to see if I couldn’t get something just as good for less than $300. Finally convinced to go with the Zoom, I hit a major stumbling block. What accessories to buy?

From Mooney and others I knew that multiple external microphones are critical for best sound recording. But as I looked for a cheap mic or two, I quickly learned there is no such thing as a cheap mic. Most are more expensive than the recorder itself, and that was already straining my budget. Most frustrating, I had no way of knowing if I would really need one, at least at this point in the game.

I simply had no way of knowing how the Zoom recorded in the real world — at least not until I stumbled upon the test by onelonedork. His great, dorky test test shows the position of the Zoom, and helped me realize that, for now, I would be fine with the recorder alone. No accessories needed. I could simply buy the Zoom, begin recording interviews and ambient sound with the on-board mics, then consider further purchases after I’ve created some content.

Wait! I stumbled upon one more nerdy, wonderful audio test (by KalaniPrince) that made me decide that I just had to shell out $50 bucks for a little fuzzy hat for the zoom. It seems ridiculous to pay 1/6th of the price of the recorder for a bit of fuzz, but this video made it clear to me that it’s a must

The Wonderful YouTube Community of Multimedia Nerds

There are tons of YouTube videos featuring Zoom audio tests with all kinds of mic configurations. Besides helping me Continue reading “Buying Audio Equipment with a Little Help from My (YouTube) Friends”

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Aug 23 2010

Final Cut Express Newbie – Take One – Video Compression for YouTube

Category: Multimedia & Video, Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 11:39 am

After all my worrying, I finally buy Final Cut Express and to my virgin eyes the program looks just like Final Cut Pro — totally intimidating! To get beyond this I force myself to avoid all the possibilities and think about the most basic task I want to accomplish. Answer: Upload video footage from my Canon G9 to YouTube.

This past weekend I grabbed my G9 and pretty quickly had this:

Clearly this sucks. Horrible compression from hell. Worse than “dumb” iMovie would help me produce. However, I have succeeded in getting the footage in and out of FCE and on YouTube fast, and that was the point.

For “Take II” (below) I referred to a FCE tutorial on Lynda.com, and found some help on how/where to compress for broadband, getting this:

Not bad at all, but I wanted to see if I could find better, “ideal” settings I could use.

I found clear, awesome instructions on best HD compression for YouTube in Final Cut Express/iMovie from BIGlittleBROTHER in his awesome YouTube tutorial. I wasn’t shooting HD, but I thought I’d give it a try, and got “Take III”: Continue reading “Final Cut Express Newbie – Take One – Video Compression for YouTube”

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Jun 30 2010

Critical Multimedia and Video Learning Resources

AfterCapture Blog_100630_Video_Resources_1-1I’ve been writing a lot about multimedia these days, focusing mainly on providing inspiration. That’s because I think being inspired about what we can do will lead to us figuring out how we can do it. Still, excellent how-to learning resources are critical, so. . .

Two Great Books

From Still to Motion: A photographer’s guide to creating video with your DSLR (New Riders, 2010) is an absolute must have. Written by James Ball, Robbie Carman, Matt Gottshalk and Richard Harrington, From Still to Motion is an engaging, comprehensive techniques manual geared specifically for knowledgeable photographers. Very, very, very cool.

The Lean Forward Moment: Create Compelling Stories for Film, TV and the Web (New Riders, 2009) by Norman Hollyn is a lucid, eye-opening book focused on storytelling and production concepts critical to multimedia success. Drawing from famous movies to teach essential ideas, this book will have a long shelf life.

Three Super Web Sites

DSLRHD.com — “Get into the DSLR Video Game!”

DVInfo.net — “The Digital Video Information Network”

PhotoCineNews.com — “The first blog dedicated to the convergence of photography and video.”

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May 14 2010

Underwater Photography Resources and The World’s Greatest Juggler

Category: Online Resources, Photographers, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 6:55 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100514_Underwater_aI had a great talk today with Eric Cheng, a fantastic underwater photographer, the driving force behind WetPixel.com, and the publisher of “Wetpixel Quarterly” magazine. I am researching an article on how photographers can best embrace the possibilities of video, and the tech-savvy, video-embracing Cheng offered great insights on the topic.

If you are at all interested in underwater photography, definitely check out Cheng’s stunning images.

WetPixel.com is the a fantastic online community of underwater photographers — articles and forums galore — and a must-visit resource if you are dedicated to (or just thinking about) making images underwater. Very, very cool.

AfterCapture Blog_100514_Underwater_1

What’s all this have to do with juggling?

“I would say that the YouTube community is extremely toxic,” Cheng emphasized to me when he was weighing in on whether photographers should host videos on YouTube.com or Vimeo.com. “People are really nasty on YouTube. Someone is always going to come and write something nasty.” Cheng explained that, inevitably, more negative responses follow, and “big wars” get started.

Continue reading “Underwater Photography Resources and The World’s Greatest Juggler”

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May 04 2010

Fantastic Twitter Basics from Jessica Hische

Category: Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 3:50 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100504_Twitter Basics_1“If you’re not using Twitter yet, you may feel as if you’ve missed out,” writes Rafe Needleman at the beginning of his helpful and encouraging Webware post, “Newbie’s guide to Twitter.” Personally, I’m still struggling to get a handle on Twitter, and I’d probably find Needleman’s encouraging words more encouraging if he had not posted them on March 15, 2007 –  a million years ago in SMT (Social Media Time). Still, there’s no time like the present and luckily. . .

Yesterday, in response to my TCC (Twitter Confusion Confession), my friend @janelerner recommended that I check out Jessica Hische’s “Mom, this is how twitter works.”

@jessicahische’s insights into the very basics of Twitter protocol is a masterful must-read for all TCT (Totally Confused Twitterers) like me. You’ll also find it useful if you tweet regularly but are not entirely clear on some of the SNI (Surprisingly Not Intuitive) aspects of who receives which tweets and why.

With incredibly clarity in the “who sees what” section of her document, Hische makes it clear that there’s a big difference between whether I put “@jessicahische” at the beginning of a tweet or anywhere else in my tweet. Whether or not @jessicahische is following me (@ethansalwen) will also impact my tweeting, and my tweeting will be affected if others are following the both of us. (Unlikely. @jessicahische has 5,005 followers; I have 12.)

Hische explains the critical fundamentals with no fuss about reasons for tweeting or strategies for doing so. This is refreshing. For all the gobs of Twitter advice I encountered today on the Web, I have found none with the the basic TDI (Twitter Driving Instructions) as clearly presented as those of Hische.

(If your Titter IQ is equal to or — gasp! — lower than mine, check out the “Twitter in Plain English” video at the end of this post.)

Even if this basic information is as old to you as Needleman’s post, like @janelerner, you’ll appreciate the ability to forward this Hische’s “mom resource” to any TCT friends coming to you with a TCC.

By the by. . . Continue reading “Fantastic Twitter Basics from Jessica Hische”

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Apr 26 2010

Why and How to Register All Images with the Copyright Office

Category: Business & Marketing, Workflow & DAMEthan G. Salwen @ 3:23 pm

AfterCapture Blog_100426_Copyright_1“If you are not registering your work with the Copyright Office, you are not respecting your work either. Registering your copyrights is the professional thing to do.”

This important observation comes from Susan Carr in her great ADBASE “Insight” article, “Protect & Respect: Why It’s important to Register Images.” Carr not only goes over the Whys, but leads us to practical Hows.

As Carr, a photographer dedicated to photographer rights, a past president of the Amiercan Society of Media Photographers and a regular contributor to ASMP’s “Strictly Business Blog,” explains:

“When I first started registering my photographs with the Copyright Office, I cherry picked images or projects based on my own assessment of their value.

“It turns out that I am not the best judge of what the market will like or use. For example, I photographed a project 10 years ago for an architect. The license clearly states no third-party use. Fast-forward: I recently discovered these same images on various sub-contractors’ websites.”

Carr goes on to explain that:

“Without registering the work prior to the infringement, I simply do not have the big stick to bring to the table.”

The Reality

As Carr points out, there are some many factors working against photographers when in comes to copyright infringement in the digital era, especially:

Continue reading “Why and How to Register All Images with the Copyright Office”

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Mar 24 2010

Introducing the dpBestflow.org Blog

Category: Online Resources, Technology InsightsEthan G. Salwen @ 1:49 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100324_dpBestflow_blog_1In December I told you about the launch of dpBestflow.org, an amazing online learning resource for best practices covering all aspects of digital imaging for professional photographers. This week dpBestflow.org launched a blog, and you’ll very likely want to add it to your RSS feeds.

As project director Richard Anderson explains in the blog’s first post, the dpBestflow.org blog will “answer frequently asked questions we hear at the dpBestflow seminars,” “share interesting articles, websites, forum discussions and events,” and help us “discover what is on the site.”

This last point is particularly important.

The content of dpBestflow.org is extremely well organized. However, the scope of topics is so massive that it is hard to appreciate just how amazing this learning resource is.

The dpBestflow.org blog offers a new “front door” to dpBestflow.org content for busy photographers, directing us to the areas within the site of greatest interest to our specific needs.

Anderson told me that a number of contributors will be writing for the blog, making frequent posts. Sweet!

Welcome to the blogosphere, dpBestflow.org!

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Mar 08 2010

Black Star Rising: An Amazing (Not-Just-PJ) Photo Resource

Category: Online Resources, The IndustryEthan G. Salwen @ 1:30 pm

AfterCapture_Blog_100308_BlackStarRising_1Sure, you know that “Black Star” equates to photojournalism, but did you know that Black Star hosts a Web Site stuffed full of truly valuable information for working photographers of all manner?

Well, I didn’t, and it’s my job to know. But (not that I should look for excuses!), perhaps my oversight of “Back Star Rising” (the Web site resource in question) came from the fact that photojournalists often seem so “out there” from what the rest of photographers are doing.

In any case, you don’t need this post to find the value in “Black Star Rising.” Just head on over there and take a gander.

If I’m assuming to much about your knowledge of Black Star, let me share a bit of the agency’s history, as explained by the site:

“The list of those who in the early years signed a contract with Black Star reads like a Who’s Who of photojournalism in the following decades: Walter Bosshard, Robert Capa, Ralph Crane, Herbert Gehr, Fritz Goro, Andreas Feininger, Ernst Haas and Philippe Halsmann, to name but a few.”

“According to photo historian Marianne Fulton, Life brought Black Star 30 to 40 per cent of its business. Black Star, in turn, contributed to Life becoming the most popular magazine in America for nearly three decades, with tens of millions of readers.”

You can see why I equated Black Star to photojournalism. And you will certainly see why Black Star Rising rises far beyond the needs of photojournalists alone. Here are a few recent blog posts:

“Writing Your Photography Marketing Plan: Setting Goals.” By Matthew Kauffmann.

“Get Trippy with Black-Light Photography.” By Jeff Wignall.

“Eye on Image-Making: Sales Is Not a Four-Letter Word.” By David Weintraub.

This is good stuff!

AfterCapture_Blog_100308_BlackStarRising_2Regular categories include: Advice for Clients, Art of Photography, Business of Photography, Photography Law, Photojournalism, Stock Photography, Teaching Photography, Video and Multimedia, Video Blog Posts.

This is good stuff!

Did Black Star Get a Rise Out of You?

Presuming your not a photojournalist and also presuming that you ran to check out “Black Star Rising,” let me know what you think. Do you like the site? How does it relate to your specialty?

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Nov 24 2009

Photoshop Border Drawing, But Not Much Else at “eHow”

Category: Online Resources, ViewpointEthan G. Salwen @ 6:42 pm
Sounds promissing. Not worth the visit.

Sounds promissing. Not worth the visit.

Thanks to Virginia DeBolt I’m a little less retarded than I was yesterday, but unfortunately, “eHow” is not going to help me get much brighter.

Kudos to DeBolt for helping me (once again, damnit!) figure out the incredibly simple Photoshop task that I don’t do often, and that I just can’t get stuck my dense head: how to draw a simple rule around an image. I needed to do so for my post yesterday, and (damnit!) I couldn’t.

I know, I know. I’m dense. But being dense, I got all excited when a Google search lead me to the community-driven website, eHow, that promises answers — in text and video tutorials — to “How To Do Just About Everything.” I was excited because Continue reading “Photoshop Border Drawing, But Not Much Else at “eHow””

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Nov 03 2009

Learning All About The Amazing DNG

AC_Blog_091103_1In my last post I featured the nifty “DNG Recover Edges” and made the point that it only works on DNGs. I discovered this nifty, free application while researching my column for the latest October/November 2009 issue of AfterCapture. In “Catching Up with the Amazing DNG” I celebrate how far the DNG has come in five years, since it was publicly announced by Adobe on September 27, 2004.

If you would appreciate a little background information on the DNG or to better understand how this amazing file format continues to pick up steam in its march towards a universal standard, give my piece a read. It’s based in large part by conversations with Adobe’s Tom Hogarty and digital workflow guru Peter Krogh.

Both touched on some pretty heady technical developments about the DNG, which were both hard to understand and even harder to communicate. However, both Hogarty and Krogh insisted that what really matters Continue reading “Learning All About The Amazing DNG”

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