Photography blog aggregation and free web photo album online for my photos sharing.

SNAPSHOCK IS COMING TO TOWN

Posted by iPhoto.org On Feb 26, 2009

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Sanyo ALBO HNV-M70 Home Network Viewer

On Monday, November 30, 2009


Here is another different kind of photo frame you may find handy. The Sanyo ALBO HNV-M70 Home Network Viewer is a retro-styled digital frame which aims to showcase your photos and allow you to read mails and display photo attachments through its included Wi-Fi feature. You can even download some RSS feeds to read on it. The Sanyo ALBO HNV-M70 Home Network Viewer is a new and different display option you can use, especially if you are tired of those common looking photo frames that don?t carry any spunk behind them. This digital frame retails for about $677.00 and is available in black or green colors.


(Source) Japan Trend Shop



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On Monday, November 30, 2009
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10 Ways Photography Has Changed My Life

On Monday, November 30, 2009

In this post Lisa Newton from Travelin’ Local shares 10 ways that her life has been changed by photography.


Has Photography Changed Your Life?


It has certainly changed mine, for the better.



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Not too long ago, before cameras became digital, I, like many baby boomers, used film based cameras, and mainly used my camera to take pictures of my children as they grew up. You know the standard ones that are in every family album–first day pictures, visiting grandma pictures, first Christmas pictures, vacation pictures, and so on. Looking back, that was all fun, and it certainly will always bring back fond memories.


For me, that?s when it began and ended, because due to life?s intervention, I stopped taking pictures for many years, because I became a full time mother, daughter, sister, wife, and worker.


But after moving to California and after some life changes, low and behold, a 2008 Christmas present of a Nikon D40, allowed me to literally as well as figuratively ?take a new look at photography.?


In the last 10 months, photography has taught me more than I bargained for, and I still can?t get enough:


1. ?Look.?


Now I?m constantly looking at the world, and my surroundings. Now I center on every detail that within my purview. And when I say look, I mean I really look?up, down, and all around. No detail large or small is not within my effort to visualize how it might look in a photograph, even if I?m not currently taking one. Before restarting my passion for photography, I would just walk around and take many sights and sounds for granted. Not anymore, that was then and this is now?and now, I look and pay attention.


2. ?See.?


200911251314.jpgAlthough I talked about looking in the paragraph above, frequently just looking isn?t good enough; you have to see, too. See the different angles, the different sides, the different light, and the different heights, from all venues and vantage points.


3. ?Time.?


Time used to be a measurement of getting from one place to another. For most people, it?s about always being ?on the move.? For me, now, time is spent much differently. I spend my time trying to take in my surroundings with a more discerning consciousness, and attempting to look and see everything that I can at any given moment. Time is more than time passing me by, or a clock ticking from one hour to the next, time is a place and fact that I use to merge into my ability to see and look in advance, in why I would approach my subject matters, and how I would use that time to my advantage to capture the image that I?ve visualized.


4. ?Light.?


200911251315.jpgArt and Photography are borne and spring from the proper understanding, and mastery of the use of light. This one kind of goes without saying, but now I take notice where the light is coming from, its intensity, its frequency, its duration, and its brightness. Before, I barely paid attention and took a nonchalant attitude about it. When you have a camera in your hand, light becomes an integral part of your life.







5. ?Distance.?


How the focal point of your photograph and its subject matter is presented is a function of not only light but distance. How far away should one stand or focus on to get the right shot at the right time? It?s amazing what occurs to me when I?m visualizing the ?perfect? shot, which will be a function of my subject matter, where I?m standing, or what lens I plan to use.


6. ?Learning.?


200911251315.jpgAs the old saying goes, you never stop learning, especially when photography is concerned. Even for professional and seasoned photographers, resources like DPS are invaluable. Through this wonderful resource, everyday new innovations are presented, analyzed, explained, and taught as the name Digital Photography School, belies its ultimate mission. Even when learning about the new, the old is equally important ? matters including, composition, shutter speed, aperture, or the Rule of Thirds. The other area of learning which has become very important to me is studying the masters?for example, Ansel Adams, Henri Cartier-Bresson, or Margaret Bourke-White. It?s invigorating, challenging, and always a journey to learn, and learn some more.


7. ?Travelin?.?


200911251315.jpgYes, and as my website is testimonial, I have discovered travelin?, but not travelin? around the world, or even for a vacation. I travel everyday in my own neck of the woods– in my city?s neighborhoods. And because my neighborhood is in Los Angeles, I admit to having a pretty large and interesting one at that. However, the theory remains the same, regardless of how large your neighborhood is– you can find plenty of relaxation, fascinating places, and unique photos to take in your own backyard. Look, see, and realize that what?s in your own neighborhood is all too frequently an ?Eye into the Soul of the World.? Best of all, it?s exciting, affordable, and I learn as much if not more, right here, right now, and that?s how Travelin? Local came to be.


8. ?Seconds.?


Before owning a camera, seconds didn?t matter. Now, just as taking time to get a great shot is important, seconds are equally as important. They can be the difference between an action and inaction. Seconds are the breakdown of time further into time. Time is a function of space and distance, and that plane is, and will be forever an issue for photographers to master.


9. ?Focus.?


200911251315.jpgFor sure, every photographer worth his or her salt, needs to know about and how to use proper focus; but I?m also talking about focus in relationship to personal focus. Focus on your camera?s battery, focus on your camera settings, focus on your subject, focus on your environment, and even focus on your time management. It?s not always about taking the picture, but as importantly the process of how you?re going to do so–the post processing, marketing, mounting, and all else that keeps us photographers concerned about and why we are passionate about taking pictures. This list is interminable, and goes on and on.


10. ?Appreciation.?


With my camera in my hand, I?ve gained a new found appreciation of a smile, a gesture, a sunset, a building, a child, and the beach– and life itself more. I see things differently, more clearly. These were but only a few examples of my new found appreciation of life, and life?s offerings since I?ve got bit by the camera bug.


How about you? How has photography changed your life and made it better?


Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.



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10 Ways Photography Has Changed My Life







Full story at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DigitalPhotographySchool/~3/ge_HcKvobMw/10-ways-photography-has-changed-my-life

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An Interview with Set Designer Raffy Tesoro

On Monday, November 30, 2009

In this post Dustin Carbonera interviews Set Designer Raffy Tesoro. Raffy has answered a number of questions as well as walking us through some of the shots he’s been involved with creating sets for.


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Everybody seems to be into photography nowadays. Everyone wants to be the person behind the lens and capture a beautiful frame. Everyone wants to be that person who’ll be praised by people because he was able to come up with a perfect shot, of course, with the help of the oh-so-powerful Photoshop.


Sadly, it seems that the name of the game today (for some) is not really how well you do in Photoshop, not how well you know how to get a good shot. For example, we need a surreal set for a model. We shoot a model and render a nice background. Less hassle, and faster processing, and viola! A nice photograph.


Then comes Raffy Tesoro– a man who I can say is the Creator…of set designs. He is a man in between worlds; a man who knows and loves to build his set by hand, but does not fail to see the ease of using a 3D world. I had a wonderful chance of interviewing him online and learned so much about a world not ventured by most.


As note, I did not edit his answers as they were perfect as they are, at least we get a grasp of Raffy Tesoro on a more personal approach.


1. How did you start in this industry? Why did you choose this path?


I guess I was just born into it.� My parents are both artists.� My mom is a fashion designer and my dad is a lawyer by trade but an actor & theatre denizen by heart.� So I was learning how to bead and embroider when I was a kid and just kept moving on from there.� As for production design specifically, I got into it because my friend Jay Tablante sort of egged me on into it.� I started by making one set because I was bored and he thought I should just do it regularly.� I think I was too stupid at the time to say no… and here we are.� All in all I think that the path chose me more than I chose it.


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Art Endures – I made this shot in November 2008 with Jay Tablante.� I wanted to show how beauty and art can and will survive the test of time.� My reference was how archeologists dig up bones and pieces of the past.� Clues to our history through art… which basically is the only thing that does survive.� Well in this case… what if they uncovered a beauty untouched by time?� To give it a sense of realism… I buried the model in 200 kilos of sand, flour and cornstarch.� Then the rest was posted in.




  • Photography:� Jay Tablante�

  • Hair & Makeup:� Lanie Acedilio for Paul & Joe�

  • FA:� Genald Tungol for Whitewall Industries�

  • Model:� Nadine Howell


2.�Humble beginnings, a little history of who you are. Perhaps background on how were you as a kid?


Growing up was different for me.� When most kids were out playing, I was helping my mom make clothes.� At 12 or 13 I decided to try doing events and shows full time so I asked my mom’s director, Ogee Atos, if I could apprentice.� I was basically juggling school, fashion shows, pageants, design and a whole gamut of things.� Somewhere in between I was a bouncer, a dyer, a t-shirt maker, a talent agent, a bum, a secretary… whatever..� It seems like a lot of rubbish at the time and I was definitely finding my way through life but I wouldn’t change it for anything.� All these experiences help me with my work, my passion and my outlook in like.


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Rogue – This was for Jay’s exhibit.� He wanted to make something interesting so I suggested doing a comic book character.� Together with Gelo Lico, we came up with this concept.� It was kinda fun!� I had to make that pillar and break it up so it would look more realistic.� Gelo came up with the layout and I figured out the storyline and look.�



  • Photography:� Jay Tablante�

  • FA/AD:� Gelo Lico�

  • Model:� Rhian Howell


3. Raffy Tesoro is synonymous to…?


Strange.� That’s about it really…. ask my friends.� I never get anything normal in this life.


Nadine Wallpaper.jpg


Rock & Roll – Nadine wanted a kinda rock & roll concept for herself.� So I took inspiration from the old Rolling Stone mag covers and came up with this.�



  • Photography:� Wesley Villarica for Parallax Studios.

  • Model:� Nadine Howell


4. Set design is…?



…is all about creating a world. May it be a glimpse, a touch… or an entire panoramic view of reality and/or fantasy.� Production designers like to joke that our job was the first one ever since God created a world to his liking… lol.� But yes, we create time (periods, timelines, etc.), space (rooms, worlds, props,) ideas (genres, concepts, fantasies) and whatever else.� Production design isn’t only about making things to be placed in the physical aspect of the job… but also to design an aesthetic and create concepts that are pertinent to the work at hand.� Its more mental than menial but don’t let that fool you… there’s a lot of hard, dirty, hands on work involved.� PDs are usually the first on the set and the last to leave… plus there’s a lot of prep time before construction even starts.� Photogs usually just have to show up and set lights, or MUAs just need to bring their kit and brushes.� We’re there hours, even days before anyone else is.� I’m not saying that our work is more important than anyone else’s in the team… but rather, everyone has to realize that each profession has its requirements.� This one is ours.� Gotta put in more time than the others.


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My Sorrow – This one was totally on the fly.� Well okay not really… I made the mask and had the idea in mind… the execution of it was a bit of a bitch tho. We ended up using one light and even that was gobo’d.� I wanted to convey a feeling of sadness and solitude with this but not make it come out so much in the expression.� Actually the mask was there to show how we conceal our true emotions especially when it comes to our own sorrow.�



  • Photography:� Genald Tungol of Whitewall Industries

  • Model:� Karen Pamintuan�

  • Makeup:� Noel Flores







5. I think your Flickr site is just a little glimpse of your work and they sure are mind-blowing. How do you come up with these ideas? Any weird rituals before coming up with a design? Any memorable story?


Guh I really need to update my flickr more often.� I just think them up!� Okay that’s not the whole story but in a nutshell that’s how it goes.� I can just be watching TV and I just start thinking that it would be fun to make people fly naked through clouds of creamy cocoa.� But no… its more like a product of just being immersed in the arts for so long.� The experiences, the lessons, aesthetics, rules, etc… all go in and out in a flash but leave a mark on the idea.� A good example of this is a story I heard about this big company that wanted to update their logo… so they hired a very talented big name graphics designer to do it.� During the preliminary meeting, she was doodling on a napkin while they were talking about what they wanted the new logo to signify.� So at the end of the meeting she showed them her napkin doodle and voila… there was their logo.� They loved it.� But they didn’t want to pay her so much since they thought… she just scribbled on a napkin!� To which she said that this design didn’t come out of thin air.� Sure it was made out of nothing really… but behind it, her experiences, her travels, her studies, etc.� That cost her a lot of time, money and personal investment.� That’s what they were paying for.� Her Vision.� And this is something that most people don’t realize about artists.� We may create something out of nothing… but that nothing had to come out of something.


As for my stories…. well… they’re just too weird to be published I think.� Sometimes people think I make it up… but truth IS stranger than fiction sometimes…


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Power – This is part of my personal headshot project. I’m doing a series of head shots that convey a word and a story. I get actors to do the shots and work out the emotions pertinent to the word then get my team together to create the setting, graphics, styling, makeup and whatnot in order to complete the effect. This one is “Power”. I wanted to show how the use of colors, effects, layout and placement could control people’s minds. It’s a very effective tool used by authoritarian regimes.



  • Model: Gino de la Pe�a

  • Photography: Jay Tablante

  • Makeup: Noel Flores

  • Styling: Raffy Tesoro

  • Graphics: Gelo Lico

  • Concept: Raffy Tesoro


6.�How is it working with one of the best fashion photographers (referring to Jay Tablante) in the local scene?


They’re the best?� Wahahaha!� No really, they are.� I mean… with the likes of Jay Tablante, Wesley Villarica, Doc Marlon, Genald Tungol, Erik Liongoren, Dix Reyes, Neal Oshima, Wig Tysmans, Dominique James… All these guys are awesome..� I just can’t see how it can’t be fun and productive.� But we can’t overlook the rest of the team either.� The makeup artists like Omar Ermita, Xeng Zulueta, Josa Primero, or stylists like Hannah Sison, Guada Reyes… models, designers, art directors, graphics designers, and whoever else.� I mean I could name all the guys I’ve worked with but that’s gonna be a long and boring read. Regardless, they’re all an intrinsic and important part of the project.� You may have a great photog but if your model is bleh… you’ve got a problem.� OR a lousy MUA but the model is drop dead gorgeous… still won’t work so well.� We are only as strong as our weakest link after all.


It tends to spoil you in some ways since you can just pull something out of your ass creatively and they’ll understand you immediately.� God knows how many times I’ve done that to a newbie and they would just stare at me, completely flummoxed by whatever insanity I was spouting out at the time.� They all have their styles, their quirks and their perceptions… but what makes them good and talented is their versatility, smarts, creativity and experience.� It’s hard to make anything that would please yourself if the people you’re working with can’t execute the vision to your liking.� That’s just how it is.� I’d like to think I give them the same options as well.� Most of the time.


rhian-strings.jpg


Strings – Did this shot with Jay Tablante and a bunch of other photogs for our Singapore workshop. I created a concept for them where I wanted pure elegance… like timeless jewelry shots… but using only the simplest of materials… like white thread.



  • Photography:� Jay Tablante

  • Model:� Rhian howell


7. Any favorite style (?) that is you see is prominent in your work. It’s like if we see ___________, that’s Raffy Tesoro.


I don’t think I have any defining style really… other than that I like detail.� Not just detail in the sense that oooh there’s so many things going on… but more like how the whole thing was thought up down to the last few bits here and there.� I have some pretty ornate stuff and I also have a good number of minimalist work… since for me even the lack of detail is a detail in itself, as long as you thought about it first.� Plus I always need a story or an idea in the shot.� If it doesn’t than its just a snapshot, no matter what it is.� Unless your concept WAS to make a snapshot…


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Temple Warrior – Made this for a fashion show some time back.� Decided to give it an amazon feel… and like she was guarding something important.� Heh.



  • Photography:� Jay Tablante

  • Makeup:� Omar Ermita

  • Model:� Michelle Fedalto


8. Opinion on the digital age: with advanced (?) technology on our side now, we can make sets through clicking. Some photographers even use shoot the model and render a 3D background. Any thoughts on this?


Not that keen about it.� I don’t hate photoshop or digitech.� They are tools just like any other.� The beef I have with it is that its extremely abused and creates a veneer of laziness in everyone.� I just love (insert sarcasm here) how people would shoot something… then when they check the LCD and see things off here and there… they’d just say, “oh we can photoshop that” instead of fixing it in situ.� If that was the case… I’d solve every design problem with my favourite tool as well:� A hammer.� “Oh… wall’s not in the right place.� A hammer can fix that.” Or,� “Hey the model’s not in her light.� No prob… gimme my hammer..”� See what I mean?


Any good piece of art has to be convincing…� and that means there has to be a healthy balance of all the skills, talents, tools and ideas involved.� I use graphics if the shot calls for it.� Same way that I call for a nude if I think the concept needs it as well more than “oh… the model’s hot, let’s strip her.”� Believe me I’ve heard that line waaaay more times than I’d like to.� But yes, there is a reason to making art… and doing it well means you have to draw the audience into the world you’re creating.� A one-sided world made by one tool or thing usually doesn’t make it very appealing.� Despite the fact that most who look are laymen, always remember that everyone has the capacity to detect a lie.� If you look at it in a certain way, all forms of art are lies.� So be a good fibber.� :p


I’m a huge advocate of learning the old techniques.� It instills discipline and a deeper understanding for the craft.� I usually explain this to people when they question why I push for this by telling them about my Zombie theory.� Imagine that you’re in a reaaaaaalllly bad B-movie situation where you’re stuck in the middle of nowhere and a gazillion shuffling zombies are comin round lookin for a lovely brrraaaaaainnns buffet.� Guess what… you’re on the menu!� This scene is never complete without managing to escape long enough to find a decrepit barn with a battered Ford inside.� YOU’RE SAVED!!! Except when you discover that its a stick shift and you’ve only ever driven an automatic.� Poor, poor you.� Hope you find a shotgun…. except… dammit you don’t know how to reload the thing since the only time you’ve EVER used a firearm was for Time Crisis 2.� And the list goes on and on…


Bottom line is:� don’t gimp yourself by not learning the old ways.� Yes, technology has made things more convenient, but to deny oneself of a proper learning experience isn’t good for the artistic technique or creative output.� Its part of earning a proper education in whatever career you’re passionate about.


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Priscilla – This was for a men’s magazine that never launched.� Got our friend Priscilla to model for us… and when I got to the venue I found out that it was basically a blank hut made out of concrete and steel pipes.� So I had to make do with some wood, cloth and whatever else I could find to make this into something shootable.



  • Photography:� Wesley Villarica for Parallax Studio

  • Model:� Priscilla Mereilles

  • Styling:� Rachel Lisbeth So


9. (Cliche question, well, all of them are) Tips for the starters in this field?


Sure… this one’s easy.� Don’t get into it.� LOL.� Unless you’re passionate enough, stupid enough and stubborn enough to really want to… then go ahead!� I’m just saying this because a lot of people want to get into PD, Fashion, Photography, etc… because it’s hip, cool, fun… whatever.� Sure it’s all that.� But behind it is a LOT of hard work and a lot of heartache.� Be prepared for it and don’t bitch when you find out the hard way.� That’s just how life is.� Well okay you can bitch from time to time but every artist needs to cultivate patience, discipline, mental stamina, open-mindedness, morality and thick skin with a thick skull to match.� People are either going to love your work or hate it… but I take both as a compliment.� The worst thing that any artist can hear is when their work doesn’t illicit an opinion at all.� Ouch.


There’s that and there’s that one other uber-important aspect:� Education.� PDs need to know a lot about construction, safety, materials, surfaces, textures, spacial reasoning, etc… but you also need to know a little about everything.� You’re creating a world after all, down to the pots and pans, nails, bedbugs and whatever else is there no matter how big or small.� Like I said… you’re a god… even if its for a little while.


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Wedding Essentials – Did this for Wedding Essentials magazine.� Made a few paintings for it and set the theme… kinda like sitting in an art gallery or something.



  • Photography:� Jay Tablante


Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.



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An Interview with Set Designer Raffy Tesoro







Full story at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/DigitalPhotographySchool/~3/B2SLJvh07D4/an-interview-with-set-designer-raffy-tesoro

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Photo Productions Launch Website

On Monday, November 30, 2009

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Photo Productions - a London-based company that designs and produces premium photobooks for photographers - have opened up their service to the wider public.


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Three teens have been selected as national winners in Sightsavers International?s i-click competition 2009.


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Full story at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/photographyblog/~3/eZRTIxspp1I/

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Panasonic has announced that its Lumix cameras have been used to capture 109 images for The Caravan Gallery?s latest book, Is Britain Great? 2.


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Full story at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/photographyblog/~3/r-oXdsqx8CE/

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Ricoh GXR to Debut on 18 December

On Monday, November 30, 2009

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According to DC Watch, the launch day of the Ricoh GXR system will be 18 December in Japan.


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Full story at http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/photographyblog/~3/fAbRKs2TgAU/

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Nikon Coolpix S70 Review

On Monday, November 30, 2009

Nikon Coolpix S70 Review thumbnail



The Nikon Coolpix S70 is a new 12 megapixel compact camera with a very interesting OLED screen. The S70's large 3.5 inch monitor offers a touch-sensitive interface, featuring a Touch Shutter function that allows you to focus on and photograph a subject by simply touching it on the camera?s display. Other key features of the Nikon S70 include a 5x zoom lens with optical vibration reduction, Subject Tracking, Scene Auto Selector Mode and Nikon?s Smart Portrait System. The Nikon Coolpix S70 officially costs �339 / ?379 / $399.95 - we find out if it's worth it in our latest expert review.

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