Thursday, 3 February 2011

Top 10 Latest Photography Apps To Hit The iOS Store

There are some great new photography apps available for your iOS device(s). From PDN's new PhotoServe app that includes a visual database with information such as portfolios to client and award lists. The app is free and is definitely worth downloading. PhotoStudio also looks good and allows you to capture some great images on your iPhone. Take a look at this list and download a few of these apps, we're sure you will be pleased you did.

PhotoServe

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PDN's PhotoServe is one of the most respected resources for finding great photography talent, industry information and the newest photo trends from around the world. This visual, searchable database includes over 1,100 updated portfolios, contact information, bios, client and award lists and social networking features. PhotoServe is designed for efficiency, with easy contact between creatives and photographers directly. Visitors build collections of favorite images
that can be e-mailed to prospective clients for fast decision making. It is a visual database of the world's best photography that continues to grow and provides free access to the latest news, trends, advertising campaigns and topical features in the industry. Art Buyers, photo editors and creatives can find the newest imagery and talent on a daily or even hourly basis.

Free/Download

PhotoStudio

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PhotoStudio allows you to quickly edit images right on your phone. Adjust brightness, contrast, and color balance using an intuitive interface. You can also change the style of the image to black & white, softened, cartooned or sepia toned. Images can be quickly edited and then immediately saved to the camera roll for uploading or emailing.

$0.99/Download

PhotoLinks

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PhotoLinks is a new kind of photograph organizer, by linking one picture to another. Prepare (or take) one picture, and put a marker on wherever you like. Then take a next picture. That's all you need to link pictures. It will help the problems like "I took so many photos, but I can't recognize where I took these. I wonder from which way I took them either".

$1.99/Download

muggum

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How symmetrical is your face? Muggum can show you! Need a creative profile pic? Muggum can help you! This easy-to-use photography app takes images directly from the camera in your iPhone or iPod Touch and instantly creates two side-by-side symmetrical portraits, which you can fine tune using a bi-directional guide. Instantly upload to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and Flickr – or, save to Photo Album or Email. Take fun and hilarious pictures of yourself, your friends, your kids, your pets, or even celebrities in magazines! Great for profile pics and online avatars!

$0.99/Download

Photo Backup App

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Photo Backup App will safely, simply, and securely backup your camera roll photos.

Most people don't realize that the photos they take with their iPhone camera (or iPod Touch 4g) are NOT synced or automatically backed up. We are used to our contacts, appointments, emails, and bookmarks being synced and/or backed up via MobileMe (or some other service), and many apps backup or sync their own data, but not your device's Camera Roll

$1.99/download

ePhotoPanel

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Make some photos to one panel ePhotoPanel
ePhotoPanel makes some photos to one panel.
Just choose favorite photos from camera roll, you will make great work.
ePhotoPanel arranges photos automatically.
It’s very useful to make one panel from some snap shots of your vacation when send emails or share it.
Easy to make photo catalogs.
Check your pitching style with line sequence photos up.
Easy to record a plant observations.
Before and after the diet or go around the hair salon.
ePhotoPanel arranges so beautifully, you can easily compare photos.
The usage is various, depends on you.

$0.99/download

Feather retouch

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Seamless cloning tool allows you to retouch skin defects, patch unwanted reflected light spots and duplicate image parts preserving their texture and make them looks naturally inside of paste context. You can make free shape selection just using your finger then drag and drop the selected part of the image wherever you want inside your image with both presented clone tools. You can also change the drag and drop direction to replace selected area with the content of other part of your image. Application also supports undo action. Edited images can be saved directly into your photo library so you can manage them and share with your friends as usual.

$0.99/download

Geo Album

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Browse your photos on standard map or satellite map without drift issue!

★ Browser photos on maps. (support standard map and satellite map).
★ Photos taken in China can be displayed correctly on China map.
★ View GPS EXIF information.
★ Locate photo in the map.
★ Common current location drift issue in China region also can be fixed using Geo Album.

Free/Download

Photography Templates & Inspiration

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This app gives you a lot of photograph templates that you can try to reproduce with your camera, allowing you understand the role of form and light in your photographs.

$0.99/Download

Crop Photo

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Crop photos with no loss in image quality!

Rotate or flip your photos!

Handles extra large photos other crop apps can't!

Free/Download

Tuesday, 1 February 2011

National Georgraphic Expeditions Introduces New Adventure Travel Program

Grab your hiking boots and head into the wilderness with National Geographic! With their new line of active Adventures, you’ll trek through some of the world’s most legendary mountain ranges; go kayaking amid icebergs and calving glaciers; and veer far off the beaten path, discovering wild landscapes on foot or by horseback. Get to know fascinating cultures firsthand, from the Hadza bushmen of Tanzania who will welcome you into their lives, to the Bhutanese villagers you’ll visit on your hikes.

We have listed a few examples of the adventures below but there are tons more. To reserve a place or find out more, head here

Alaska by Sea Kayak: Whales, Bears and Ice

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Take to the sea in a kayak in one of the wildest places on Earth. Along Alaska’s southeastern coast, little is accessible by road. Glaciers tumble down from high mountain slopes, scattering icebergs across inlets and bays. Ferns and moss carpet the floor of the ancient Tongass Forest, and waters rich with salmon and nutrients lure wildlife of every sort, from humpback whales and sea otters to brown bears. Exploring from the intimate perspective of your kayak, encounter the forests and shores of beautiful Chichagof Island close up. Venture far into Glacier Bay and spend two days paddling through this otherworldly wilderness of ice and mountains. Then head to Admiralty Island to observe brown bears and bald eagles angling for salmon at Pack Creek

Bhutan: Chomo Lhari Trek

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Long isolated from the modern world, the tiny Buddhist nation of Bhutan is a mountain oasis where spirituality is a way of life and a vibrant culture remains virtually untouched by outside influences. Take to the Himalaya on an exhilarating ten-day trek that brings you through remote valleys where yaks and their herders roam, beneath snow-clad peaks that scrape the sky, and into nomadic settlements and local villages to get to know Bhutan’s gentle and gracious people. Hike in the shadow of spectacular Chomo Lhari (23,997'), Bhutan’s most sacred mountain; explore extraordinary dzongs, or fortress-monasteries; venture into age-old monasteries perched high above lush valleys populated by red-robed monks; and delve into Bhutan’s history and arts in the cultural centers of Thimphu and Paro.

Chile and Argentina: Hiking Patagonia

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Patagonia’s pristine beauty is preserved in two exceptionally scenic national parks: the Torres del Paine in Chile and Argentina’s Los Glaciares. Set out to explore both on foot—from the black-tipped “horns” of Cuernos del Paine to the ice-clad pinnacles of Monte Fitz Roy. Hike along sapphire-colored lakes strewn with incandescent icebergs in Torres del Paine. In Los Glaciares, part of the third-largest ice cap in the world, walk among active glaciers and watch as they calve ice into alpine lakes. Spot wildlife from Andean condors to guanacos and eagles, and travel across the sweeping Patagonian steppe. Cap off your hiking adventure with a day in beautiful Buenos Aires.

Vice President Of Design Leaves Apple

That's the latest news from Razorainfly, apparently, Sarah Brody, Apple’s Vice President of Design (up until this week), has reportedly left the company after being hired by online mirco-payments giant PayPal. Brody had many duties at Apple, actively working on both the iPhone, original iPod nano and even MobileMe.

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Perhaps the most iconic job of them all though was that Brody was also responsible for the product packaging design of software packages such as Logic Studio, Final Cut Studio, Final Cut Server and Aperture 3.

While we highly doubt this will be the end of iconic product packaging for Apple, you do have to ask yourself why someone like Brody, who has worked on products as the iPhone and iPod, would leave to work for someone like Paypal.

That said, maybe Brody will be assigned the task of making Paypal’s homepage look half decent … and that we definitely cannot argue with.

Sony unwrap new Cyber-shot HX100V, HX9V and W520

As expected, Sony has announced three new additions to the Cyber-shot range, the 16.2 MP HX100V with 30x optical zoom, HX9V with 16x high-quality G-series zoom and the 14.1 MP W520 with a wide-angle (25mm) 5x optical zoom. Prices have not confirmed at the time of posting however, the W520 will be available from March 2011. The HX100V and HX9V will be available from April 2011.
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HX9V with 16x high-quality G-series zoom

Monday, 31 January 2011

Arca-Swiss announce price of D4 and D4m heads

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Arca-Swiss has announced the price of the d4 and d4m geared heads. The d4 will be priced from 790 Euros (ex VAT) or around $1,100, depending on the locking system, while the d4m will start from 490 Euros (ex VAT) roughly $670. There's still no definitive date for availability, but I'm assuming now we have a price, shipping will start soon.

Press release:

To get to the point ARCA-SWISS d4 & d4m
With the invention of the d4 pan tilt head ARCA-SWISS has put an end to setting levers of 3d heads that extend in all directions and always get in the way. No more uneven swiveling out of the camera. No more oversized dimensions, heavy loads and other all too well-known drawbacks to get in your way. We get straight to the point! The d4 and d4m are especially suitable for efficient and precise work in digital studio photography and outdoors for architectural photography. The d4 is the world’s smallest, most functional and lightest gear-head.

Technical specifications
The innovative design of the ARCA-SWISS d4 and d4m gear heads unites the pivot points of the X and Y movements at the same point. The result of this new concept: identical and the smallest possible rotational radii. That ensures small camera movements and, as a consequence, almost no deviations in scale, which, until now, led to reduced depth of field in digital photography and all too often made tedious corrections necessary.

The self-locking, micro-metric movements in X and Y result from separate gear mechanisms, manufactured with a high-strength special alloy. Every tilt movement has its own fine tuning knob and a lockable free wheel button. When both knobs are unlocked, the tilts can optionally be carried out in freewheeling modus. The possibility of free movement in both axes using the freewheeling modus then ensures free movements similar to those of a spherical head!

The ARCA-SWISS d4 and d4m have, like the cube C1 from ARCA-SWISS, a turning device on its base to align the camera as well as a panning device under the camera mount for panorama pans which maintains the swivel axis. Underneath the panorama feature are 2 bubble levels at a 90° angle to align the camera. In addition to the tilts in X and Y and the panorama rotation, the ARCA-SWISS camera mount enables the camera back and forth movement in the exposure axis, the 4th dimension, so to speak, as the model number d4 symbolizes. The outstanding specifications include the record-breaking weight of just 800g for the d4 and only 640 g for the d4m. There is no smaller gear-head on the market.

d4m
The ARCA-SWISS d4m has no gears, its adjustments are made manually in all directions. Its other features are the same as the d4‘s.

ARCA-SWISS d4: 110x90xH100 - weight: 800 gr. - price: 790 euros (excl VAT)
(price may vary according to the fastening system chosen)
ARCA-SWISS d4m: 90x70xH100 - weight: 640 gr. price: 490 euros (excl VAT)
(price may vary according to the fastening system chosen)

Read our original coverage here

Read how to select a Gitzo tripod here.

Please help support the DJP by visiting our affiliates; Jessops, Warehouse Express, Adorama Camera and Amazon. Note; sales through these links may benefit this site.

Sunday, 30 January 2011

Anthropics announce Portrait Professional Studio version 10

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Anthropics the developer behind the outstanding retouching utility, Portrait Professional, announced the expected upgrade to version 10. Along with a new interface, more presets, improved facial sculpting algorithms, child mode and improved brushes (they're much improved over LR and Aperture's healing brushes) version 10 is claimed to be a major upgrade. That maybe a bit of a stretch, although there is a lot going on in the background, still it's a welcome improvement nonetheless. Standard, Studio and Studio 64 (Windows 64-bit) editions are available now at a special time limited discounted price of £29.95, £49.95 and £79.95. If you purchased version 9 during the recent promotional period, you're entitled to a free upgrade.

I f you buy or upgrade to any edition of Portrait Professional by 31st of January (that's tomorrow), and you will automatically be entered into a $500 Prize Draw! Fore more details about that see here.

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Extract taken from the press release :

Anthropics are pleased to announce the release of the latest major upgrade for Portrait Professional, Version 10.
New for Version 10:
    •    Greatly improved face enhancing function
    •    New ClearSkin®2 defect elimination and skin regeneration technology
    •    More and better face shaping and slimming controls
    •    Improved brushes
    •    Child Mode
    •    Enhance Skin Only Mode
    •    Better presets
    •    New User Interface

More information can be found here.

To buy directly see here or here

To download a free trial see here (name and email required).

US readers can buy from Amazon (although they're still showing version 9 - it will be free to upgrade to version 10).

Read our review of Portrait Professional (v 8.0) here.

Friday, 28 January 2011

Adobe Photoshop and Premiere Elements 9 deal of the day

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Amazon US are enticing camera users with an $80 saving on Adobe Photoshop and Premiere Elements 9 - $50 instant saving and a $30 extra with a mail in rebate but it's just for today. If Photoshop Elements is all you're looking for see here instead.

Top 10 Photography iPad Apps Of January 2011

There have been some incredible photography apps launched this month and with February 2011 also upon us we have completed our roundup of the best photography iPad apps launched this month. Take a look at these, they are fantastic.

Folio HD

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Personally connect through the "Folio" App with Models, Makeup Artists, and Hair Stylists while viewing vivid fine art image examples created in collaboration with photographer Jason Hallmark.  An ever-growing collection of exotic women and abstract art images will capture your discerning eye.  Waiting for you is a visual experience sure to amaze with its clarity, saturation, and talent.  
$4.99/Download

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Panasonic reveals Lumix G market share

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Panasonic UK has issued a press release in which it claims the DMC-G2 is its best selling model and, continuing in a revealing statement, that they now hold an 11.3 per-cent market share of all interchangeable lens cameras, what they call CSCs (Compact System Cameras or mirrorless cameras to the rest of us) and DSLRs. They also claim that mirrorless sales are up 194 per-cent over the previous year (but if you look closely they're comparing Dec '10 to Dec '09) - mirrorless cameras were few and far between in Dec '09. All the same, on the eve of the first deliveries of the GF2 (pictured above) it's encouraging news all round.


Please find the latest press release from Lumix G below:

Phase One updates Capture One

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After the introduction of the new IQ backs the other day, the maker Phase One has updated their Capture One raw conversion utility (now at version 6.1) to include support for them and a raft of other cameras including the following models:

- Phase One IQ189, IQ160 and IQ140
- Leaf Aptus II 12 tethered
- Canon G12
- Nikon D3100 and P7000
- Panasonic DMC-GF2*, DMC-GH2*, DMC-G2*, DMC-G2, DMC-G10, DMC-FZ100 and DMC-FZ45 (*preliminary)
- Pentax K-5 and K-r

New features include:

- Local contrast and brightness adjustments
- Pen pressure and eraser support
- Getty Images metadate and import

To download Capture One follow the link here.

 

Canon PowerShot S95 in stock at B&H

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If the PowerShot G12 is too bulky for you then the svelte S95 should do the trick. Not only is it pocketable but it boasts a 28-105mm f/2.04.9 IS zoom and has a Raw file shooting option too. B&H are saying it's back in stock (it's a hugely popular choice by all accounts) at $399.95.

Wednesday, 26 January 2011

GeoLogTag Apple iPhone App review


We're great fans of GeoLog Tag here at the Digital Journal of Photography and also at our sister site, The App Whisperer , we have reviewed it in the past and always been impressed. This review concentrates on the latest updated version 3.3 that now includes support for geotagging Samsung RAW (SRW) photos, a fix for Mac geotagging when traveling through different timezones and a fix for Mac geotagging on an ad-hoc Wi-Fi network.
We put this app through its paces as the competition is heating up in the Apple app store of this style of app. Read our extensive review here...

Love Is In The Air At The Updated Apple Store

Looks like there's love in the air at the Apple store today, the store has just updated after being down all night and Apple have put together a great collection of Valentines Apple goodies for you and your true love, take a look here

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There has also been a slight redesign with the navigation bar showing cosmetic signs of being a slightly darker grey. There also appears to be a subtle background texture added to the site.

First Image Samples Taken With The FujiFilm X100



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At least that's what the link said, now it seems the website has been asked to remove the test images by Fujifilm Norway. Still, the dialogue is still up, take a look at Akam.no

They Conclude...

"All in all, we are quite impressed with the image quality of the X100, especially considering that we have tested is a very early pre-production model and the image quality almost certainly will be as good or even better in the finished product. In addition, we have seen here on the JPG images, and almost without exception, a carefully processed RAW file could cause a significant increase in image quality.
X100 will be the legendary camera it is planned that it should be? Will it in its final edition to be worth the rather hefty price? It's hard to tell on the basis of the model we have seen, but unless Fujifilm really do not care for tension in one or another is the possibility certainly exists. X100 is clearly a prestige product for Fujifilm, and the enthusiastic reception it has received after the initial announcement at Photokina indicates that the interest is great. Fujifilm has many times shown that they can if they want, and when it comes to x100, they simply can not afford not wanted. If Fuji does not do his utmost to get the X100 as well as possible, shoot themselves in the foot, and we believe they are too smart to do".


Pre-order your FujiFilm X100 from Adorama.  UK readers can pre-order at Digital Depot.



Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Olympus XZ-1 available to pre-order

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B&H Photo are accepting pre-orders on the new high-end XZ-1 (10MP) digital compact from Olympus. Seems like Olympus are trying to challenge the G12 and LX5, and with an optically imagae stabilised 28-112mm f/1.8-2.5 it's looking hopeful. Time will tell. The price is listed at $499.95 and if you order it with Lightroom 3 you'll get $100 off the price.

One feature that flew under my radar was the accessory port for an optional EVF, I'm hoping it's the same one that I'm using currently with the Olympus Pen E-PL2, it would make sense.

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Last chance to buy the GF1

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Panasonic's little GF-1 is being replaced by this, and while still eminently stealthy, the GF-1 has excellent manual controls lacking in the newest iteration. Amazon US are selling the GF1 body only here at $299 (via Samy's Camera), while B&H are still have some stock at $419. But after that it it's all over, so get yours now before it's too late. If you're looking for a lens, this is the one I would go for.

Monday, 24 January 2011

PhaseOne reveals IQ180

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PhaseOne has announced a new range of digital backs, the first of which the IQ180 is the first to be released features a 'full-frame' 53.7x 40.4mm 80MP chip and touch-sensitive 1.15 megapixel (which we assume to mean 1.15 million dot) resolution screen. Although the back can be used tethered with a FireWire 800 cable, the IQ180 is the first to also adopt a USB3 connection - sure to be the more common of the two in the coming years. Two further models, the IQ160 and IQ140 with 60.5 and 40MP resolution sensors, respectively, will join the IQ180 and all three will available from April 2011 with prices starting from 16,990 EUR / 21,990 USD.
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Unlimited creativity at your fingertips
Today, Phase One announced the IQ series of digital camera backs, setting a new standard for image quality.
The IQ series is the answer to the professional photographer’s wildest dreams and exists as the most sophisticated and capable photographic system ever engineered and built!
The first system that will ship is the Phase One IQ180 digital back. Built on the most advanced sensor ever, the IQ180 can capture images at full-frame 80 megapixel resolution with a dynamic range of 12.5 f-stops. The IQ180 also features the sharpest, most vibrant, highest-resolution camera screen ever. The large 3.2” retina type, 1.15 megapixel high resolution display delivers a pixel density so high, that your eye is unable to distinguish between individual pixels which enables you to check even very fine details instantly.
Combining a new multi touch screen and the intuitive 4-button navigation, the IQ180 makes it easier than ever to navigate between different menus and features. The multi touch screen lets you zoom, pan and browse through images or menus fast, and the unique instant zoom function allows you to zoom with the tap of a finger.
The first product of its kind to feature a USB3 connection, the IQ180 facilitates extremely fast image transfers. The IQ180 also features a FireWire 800 connection, ensuring the fastest tethered capture speeds possible today. For untethered shooting, the IQ180 digital back’s new memory card interface is so fast that it eliminates buffering delays, supporting continuous shooting until a card is filled.
More information can be found at the manufacturer's site here.
Spanish architecture photographer, Eugene Pons, shows the IQ180 on location at the Hotel Porta Fira in Barcelona.

Astronomy Photographer Of The Year 2011 Competition Now Open

The Royal Observatory, Greenwich is proud to present Astronomy Photographer of the Year, showcasing some incredible images of the sky, from within our solar system to deep space. Last years competition was a huge success and this years is set to be even greater. It is a free to enter competition, and all the details can be found below.

How To Enter

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Above image - Blazing Bristlecone by Tom Lowe (USA) Competition Winner 2010

Entries to the competition open on Thursday 20 January 2011 and close at midday (BST) on 13 July 2011. To enter the Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition you will first need to add your photos to the Astronomy Photographer of the Year group on the photo-sharing website, Flickr. Once you have done this, fill in the online application form on this website here. Through this form you will be able to nominate your chosen category and consideration for any of the relevant special prizes.

If you are under 16 and would like to enter your photos into the Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year category or Robotic Scope Image of the Year special prize, please complete a special online application form, found here

Submitting images and eligibility

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Above Image - Siberian Totality by Anthony Aylomanmitis (Greece) - Category Winner 2010 - Our Solar System

Entrants may submit up to five photos per month to the Astronomy Photographer of the Year Flickr group and five photos in total to the Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition – this includes entries via this website by Young entrant.
By adding a photo to the group on Flickr or submitting images via this website by Young entrants you confirm to the Royal Observatory Greenwich that it:

        was taken and processed by you 
        is consistent with the Flickr Community Guidelines
        is your original work
        does not infringe the copyright or any other rights of any third party
        does not contain any obscene or defamatory content or material
        was taken within two years immediately prior to the competition closing date

The following images are not eligible for entry to the Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition:

        Photos that have already been previously published or submitted to a print publication or its associated online media brand 
        Photos that have won a prize in a major competition (one receiving more than 500 photos) 
        Photos taken more than two years before the competition closing date (i.e. taken before 13 July 2009)
        Photos that use a substantial amount of data from a previously published image

Using data from before 13 July 2009 is permitted so long as a substantial portion of the image is created using data captured within the dates of the competition. If data used in an image was captured outside the competition dates, please state roughly what percentage of the total data it constitutes.

Main categories

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Above image - Orion Deep Wide Field by Rogello Bernai Andreo (USA) Category Winner 2010 Deep Space

The four main competition categories are:

        Earth and Space: This is for photos that include landscape, people and other 'Earthly' things. Your picture should also include an astronomical subject – for example the stars, the Moon, or near-Earth phenomena such as aurora.

        Our Solar System: This is for photos of our Sun and its family of planets, moons, asteroids and comets.

        Deep Space: This is for photos of anything beyond our Solar System, including stars, nebulae and galaxies.

        Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year: See below for details of this category.

Each of these categories will have one overall winner, a runner up and three highly commended awards.

Special prizes

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Above Image - Photon Worshippers by steven Christenson (USA) - Category Winner 2010 - People and Space

The judges will also be awarding a number of additional prizes. If you would like your photo to be considered for these prizes please indicate as appropriate on the online entry form. These prizes are:

        People and Space: For astronomy photos that include people in a creative and original way. We will also award a runner-up for this category.

        Best Newcomer: This is for photographers who've taken up the hobby in the last year and have not entered an image to the competition before. The judges will give special consideration to those using simple and inexpensive start-out kit so please update your photo’s Flickr description to say what you've used. If you’re shortlisted for this prize, the judges would also like to look at a small portfolio of your other astroimages. This will help them to better assess the overall standard of your imaging and see how you’ve progressed and improved during your first year of astrophotography.

        Robotic Scope Image of the Year: This special prize is awarded by the judges for images that have been taken by robotic/remote telescopes and that have been processed by yourself. Any age entrant may enter, however images captured remotely/robotically are not eligible for the main judging categories.

Young Astronomy Photographer of the Year category

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Above image, Young Astronomy Photographer 2010 - Winner - A Perfect Circle by Dhruv Arvind Paranjpye (India) aged 14

This is the competition category for those under the age of 16 at the competition closing date. If you would like to enter this category, you can do so through the online application form. If your photo is shortlisted, your parent or guardian will need to sign a written consent form. This category will have one overall winner, a runner up and three highly commended awards.

Sunday, 23 January 2011

NEC SpectraView Reference 271 concise review


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Rating 4.5/5

Price $1,882, £1,549 (ex VAT), £1,858 (inc VAT

Contact NEC, 0208 993 8111, www.nec-display-solutions.co.uk

Needs OS X 10.3 or later, Windows 2000 with SP4 or higher

Pros Picture quality, wide-gamut, hardware-calibratable with SpectraView profiler, ergonomics, build, three-year warranty 

Cons Granular text, no bundled Mini DisplayPort cable, calibrator extra (UK version)

Please follow the link to buy from UK retailer Warehouseexpress.com 

Please note this has been replaced by the PA 272W BK SV LED in the US (B&H Photo )



Color management is essential for critical color reproduction and the NEC SpectraView Reference 271 (MultiSync PA271W-BK-SV in the USA) is one of the few wide-gamut monitors available to come close to covering the Adobe RGB color space. Most monitors, even so-called high-end models, are barely able to reproduce the gamut of the much smaller sRGB color space. And, if your monitor doesn’t display the colors available to your output space, such as a photo-inkjet, then making accurate color adjustments to your photos or video is made all the more difficult.

With a 16:9 aspect ratio, the SpectraView Reference 271 is the first 27-inch monitor from NEC in its Professional Color Management series. As well as 2560 x 1440 pixel native resolution, it packs a new 10-bit P-IPS (In-Plane Switching) panel for wide viewing angles and instead of LED backlighting, it adopts the cold cathode tubes of earlier offerings. This sounds a lot like rival 27-inch offerings, including NEC’s Multi-Sync siblings but the SpectraView Reference models are individually selected and certified for zero pixel failure.

Furthermore, they’re supplied with the SpectraView Profiler utility that controls 14-bit hardware LUTs (Look UP Tables). These data instructions are written directly to the chassis electronics during calibration (a screen calibrator, such as the i1Profiler, is required*). This is a more reliable and consistent method of achieving accurate color reproduction than using the same calibrator to re-write the software LUTs on the computer's video-adaptor (known as software calibration), which in turn is corrected by the color profile.

Setting up the NEC is a pretty simple affair, but they’re a couple of points to be aware of. Firstly, unlike the earlier 24-and 30-inch models, the SpectraView Reference 271 has no analogue ports, just two DVI-D ports and a single, full-size DisplayPort. If you’re a Mac user with a spare, full-size DVI port you’ll be fine, if not it gets tricky.





If you intend to run a second monitor from your current MacBook Pro, iMac, or from a single video card on your Mac Pro, that means having to locate either a Mini DisplayPort adaptor or Mini to full-size DisplayPort cable, as neither are supplied. To make matter worse, they aren’t widely available. Luckily, Lindy (www.lindy.com) has just released a reliable adaptor (which was used in this test, see image above) and they now have a 1.0m cable option (not available at the time of testing). Alternatively, you could use a dual-link DVI to Mini DisplayPort adaptor, but at £70 (inc VAT) the price is prohibitive, while the cheaper single-link DVI adaptor doesn’t support the monitor resolution.





Neither is a calibrator supplied with the European version*, but colorimeters such as the i1 (EyeOne) Display and Spyder2 are supported. Thankfully, the previously messy licensing procedure of the SpectraView utility has been abandoned, but it will only run if the monitor is powered on, a niggle only if you intend to use it for a second, third-party monitor.

SpectraView handles the whole calibration and profile creation, and is made simpler by the inclusion of a number of optional presets. These are intended for different color space emulations and workflows; photography, pre-press, web-design, and others. However, SpectraView has a raft of manual options if you wish to modify the process.

With simple adjustment for height, tilt, and rotation (the screen can be rotated 90-degrees from horizontal to vertical format), the SpectraView Reference 271 has excellent ergonomics. And it’s also bundled with an excellent flocked hood that can be left in place during calibration.

As you might expect the picture quality and color reproduction is outstanding. Images are particularly sharp, sharper than most 30-inch monitors at a closer working distance, thanks to the finer pixel pitch. Also noticeable when compared to a calibrated 27-inch iMac are a wider range of blues and greens, greens in particular. Reds were deeper, less orangey and very vibrant. Uniformity of brightness was excellent too. I couldn’t see any hot spots on a black background and there were no signs of the ugly yellow colored mura that affected the late 2009 27-inch iMac.

If there’s a niggle it’s that text in a word-document, for instance, isn’t quite as smooth as the glossy screens, again, in part due to the texture of the matte finish anti-glare coating. When compared with rival Eizo ColorEdge models, it’s a competitively priced offering and an outstanding choice for imaging pros.

* The USA MultiSync PA271W-BK-SV is bundled with a NEC branded EyeOne Display calibrator made especially for the color characteristics of the display.





Related posts:

NEC has announced the 30-inch SpectraView Reference 301, also known as the MultiSync PA301W-BK-SV display in North America. This will replace the SVRef 3090, not the SVRef 275 reviewed above..

Advertisement

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Sales



For more information please visit www.nec-display-solutions.co.uk

Please follow the link to buy from UK retailer Warehouseexpress.com 
Please note this has been replaced by the PA 272W BK SV LED in the US (B&H Photo )

Saturday, 22 January 2011

Hipstamatic iPhone Photography Exhibition - Don't Miss It

The Orange Dot Gallery, London
Exhibition: 14th January 2011– 31st January 2011
Launched in the summer of 2010, Hipstamatics.com is a blog dedicated to iPhone Hipstamatic photography. A beautiful online photo reel, it brings together and showcases some of the very best Hipstamatic shots from around the globe alongside some in-house originals.
People can scroll through the ever-expanding library of Hipstamatic shots and most importantly can share their own photos, submitting them for selection via Tumblr, Facebook, Twitter and e-mail.
From the hundreds of pictures on the blog the Orange Dot Gallery will showcase 157 prints – the same number as the amount of original analog cameras produced. A homage to both the history and future of Hipstamatics the exhibition will showcase some of the best works featured on the site to date, from both submitted snaps from around the globe and their own specially sourced and exclusive work.
A movement has started, opening up an opportunity for people around the globe to produce some outstanding lo fi photography all from their mobile phone. It’s a revolution that looks set to only continue to grow. Don't miss this outstanding exhibition.
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To get directions etc, visit the OrangeDotGallery here

Friday, 21 January 2011

Olympus E-PL2 sample shots with Voigtlander Nokton 25mm f/0.95

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We've been spoiled this week, not only did we get an E-PL2 sample in for testing, we were sent a new Kingston card like this one, and a Voigtlander 25mm (50mm-e) f/0.95 Nokton also for review, so we thought we would share some quick snaps we took this Friday afternoon. We'll be showing more over the weekend, and hopefully with a wider selection of settings and with more photographic merit. Please check back regularly.

DataMind Srl announces Jade Plugin 3.0 for Apple Aperture

DataMind Srl today is proud to announce Jade Plugin 3.0, their digital image processing plugin for Apple Aperture. Jade Plugin includes the same algorithms as DataMind's highly acclaimed digital image processing applications, Jade and Beryl. Implementing state-of-the-art algorithms to enhance color, contrast and dynamic range, remove red-eye effect and remove noise, Jade Plugin is an easy-to-use image enhancement tool that will automatically improve digital images directly in Aperture.

Feature Highlights

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Jade provides manual controls to fine-tune the intensity value, increase the contrast and apply the colour correction for unbalanced images. The red-eye removal can be tuned by setting the threshold level, the intensity of correction and by directly selecting the eye or image area to be corrected.

Feature highlights include:
* One-Button Automatic Image Enhancement
* Automatic red-eye detection and removal
* Denoising
* Side-by-side image comparison
* Batch processing large volumes of images at once
* Enhancement of very large images (tested up to 16000x16000px)
* Fine-tune Intensity Values, Contrast and Colour Correction for unbalanced images
* Preservation of Colour Profiles
* 32/64 bit

Minimum Requirements

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* Mac OS X Version 10.5.6 Snow Leopard
* Apple Aperture 2.1 or later
* 35.0 MB Hard Drive space

Pricing and Availability

Jade Plugin 3.0 is 49.99 Euro and is available as a Free full-featured 30 day demo.

Bibble out 5.2 and Lite versions

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A favorite of Nikon DSLR users, Bibble Labs has released Bibble 5.2 Pro and Lite versions. For more information and to download a trial version please see below.

Bibble 5.2 Pro & Lite Now Available

Major Selective Editing Improvements, Support for 14 New Camera RAW Formats & Much More

Austin, Tx, January 20th, 2011: Bibble Labs, Inc. is pleased to announce the immediate availability of Bibble 5.2 Pro and Bibble 5.2 Lite. This free update for all current Bibble 5 customers adds support for 14 new RAW formats, including Nikon D3100, D7000, P7000 and Panasonic LX5, GF2 and GH2, and includes significant improvements to Bibble 5's already powerful Selective Editing capability, and many other enhancements.

"We've been hard at work since we launched Bibble 5.1 in June," says Jeff Stephens, President of Bibble Labs, Inc., "and we're thrilled to again be able to provide a free update to all our Bibble 5 customers with so many improvements."

Follow the link here to update or download a trial of Bibble 5.2 Pro or Bibble 5.2 Lite

 

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