Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York City. Show all posts

Feb 7, 2013

Photogene2: A "must have" iPhone app for photographers






Photogene2 has been around for quite a while. It's a "must have" for any serious iPhone photographer. It's simple to use and it only cost .99 cents at the iTunes store.











If you haven't used a photo editor and dread the expense and the steep learning curve for the complicated processes in Photoshop, you will be pleasantly surprised by how quickly you'll pick things up in Photogene2. In fact, using this app is a good introduction into the photo-editing world. And, if you are one of the millions of photographers who use your smartphone as your primary camera, then you'll be surprised at how much better your photos will look once you edit them in Photogene2.

I started using the Photogene2 in earnest once I began my Project 365 for 2013, but in less than a month I developed an appreciation for many of the sophisticated editing tools. You can crop, change aspect ratios and rotate or straighten horizon lines. You can adjust clarity, brightness, color saturation and vibrancy, white balance, shadows and highlights, sharpen, remove noise, view a histogram, adjust RGB values and adjust curves.




If you go to "Presets" you'll find automated pre-configured adjustments, for color, b+w, vintage photography looks that add that old-time flavor to your images. You can make you photos look like they were taken in the 1920's, or give them that lomo, cross processing, and old pink look that adds mood and texture to your photos. If that's not enough, try preset frames to help make your photos pop even more. Or, try some fun presets that make your image look  like a painting or a pencil sketch.



Photogene2 doesn't stop there. You can remove red-eye, and you can heal and clone to get rid of unwanted elements in your image. You can dodge and burn like the big boys and girls do in Photoshop and you can use a brush to localize an effect. And, you can make all these adjustments non-destructively as Photogene2 leaves your original image intact.


Add to that, the cataloging functions like the recording of EXIF data and GPS coordinates, and a tab where you can add keyword tags, captions and other supplemental information that can help you retrieve the image some time in the future when your photo library becomes very large.



Once you finish adding your edits, you save the corrected image to your camera roll or photo stream and then automatically export to your Facebook page, your Twitter feed or your Flick'r portfolio. You can even send the photo to your AirPrint compatible printer. (See a List of compatible printers.)







This is a fully loaded photo-editor that can take average smart-phone photos and make them pop. At .99 cents it certainly makes Photoshop look like a Hummer in a world of zippy Fiats.

Aug 13, 2011

Travel Photography: Skylines



This image is available for purchase at iStockphoto


When we think of skyline photography we conjure up panoramic images of urban architecture against a twilight or night time sky. The dramatic and iconic representations of a time, a place and a culture make these images some of the most used photographs in travel publications. The uniqueness of a particular skylines make them easily recognizable. Cities like Athens, Rome, Paris, London, New York, Chicago and San Francisco have distinct shapes and are emblematic of western culture. More recently, as air travel made the world smaller, the images of cities like Dubai, Sidney, Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai are now recognizable features in our world view.



Here are two sites that offer galleries of skyline photos. The first, Phototuts+, is simply a list of the author’s favorites with a few tips, while the second, Luigi DiSerio’s Photo Adventures and More provides a discussion of the criteria the author uses to judge which cities have the “best” skylines. Popular opinion makes this one of the top sites on the subject. His top 15 choices include Dubai, Seoul and Frankfurt.


I don’t think there are any modern city skylines that haven’t been photographed. Just search “city skylines of the world” in Google images and you’ll get back more than 9 million results. Competition is stiff for photos of places like New York City, Hong Kong, London, Seattle, and Chicago, so if you’re thinking about offering those images for sale, then try to take them from different points of view.


Seattle from Space Needle. See iStockphoto.
Gaining access to rooftops is one way to to find different view points for your skylines. If you have friends who live in buildings that have rooftop common areas or terraces that offer views of a city, then ask them for access so you can photograph from there. Rooftop restaurants or those that offer a high vantage point is another way to get panoramic images of city skylines. Cities like New York and Chicago have observation decks on several tall buildings from which you can get a grand view of their skylines. If you can afford an hour on a helicopter or small airplane then you can certainly gain a unique perspective.


Chicago skyline from tour boat. See on iStockphoto.
If a city is along a river, lake or marine environment, you can take a tour boat to gain access to some nice skyline imagery. Scheduling is important here so pay attention to the time of sunset for that location and take the tour when there is enough light to handhold the camera. Tripods, if allowed on board, are often useless on decks of boats because of boat movement, and engine vibration so night photography is almost always out of the question. When hand-holding a DSLR in lowlight conditions, try shooting bursts of three to five images of the scene while exhaling. Often one of the shots will be very sharp.


Light adds drama to an otherwise cliche image. See more here.
Dramatic light during spectacular weather events can bring a skyline to life. Storm clouds or lightening that serve as a backdrop, spectacular sunsets or dawns reflecting off buildings or simply rain or snow can offer excellent photography opportunities and add uniqueness to a commonly photographed skyline.





Foreground adds perspective. See iStockphoto.  
You can add foreground elements to gain a different perspective on a cityscape.




NYC skyline from across East River.  See iStockphoto
If you are shooting at twilight into darkness then learn to calibrate exposure and focus manually. You should also learn about the light values of the ambient light so you can set white balance, even though if you shoot Raw, you can make the adjustment later. 



Smaller aperture diffraction. See iStockphoto
If you have specific light sources like street lights or rows of lights on bridges, you risk having them portrayed as star bursts if you stop down too much. For example, try shooting at image like a street lamp at F16 and then at F5.6 and see which one has less diffraction. However, if you want that look, then shoot at the smaller aperture, but you risk losing some sharpness in the rest of the image.


Don't neglect skyline photography when you travel. Even though you may not think of small city skylines as photo-worthy because they don't sport dramatic "skyscraper" architecture, they are distinctive in their own right and offer unique photo opportunities for traveling photographers.