This weekend, Helene, Keith, and I took a ride into the Georgia countryside and visited Gibbs Garden. Enjoy the great Fall color....
click to enlarge image
November 03, 2013
September 24, 2013
Web Post On Tethered Shooting
Check out this on-line profile on tethered shooting on the Tethertools blog
July 05, 2013
Digital Imaging Institute Workshop in Sedona Arizona
This past week Helene and I taught at the fourth annual Imagery in Ophthalmology Workshop in Sedona. Organized by Cathy and Mark Maio, it was a nice mix of great photographers all learning from each other around the beautiful Arizona mountains. From early morning sunrise panoramics to late night star trails, we spent long days in the field shooting and in the classroom teaching Lightroom and Photoshop Extended. Here are some of my favorite images I shot this week. Enjoy!
Click image to enlarge
May 29, 2013
Cutting The Cable On Tethered Shooting
One of the coolest products I have come across in a long
time for digital photography is the new CamRanger. Tethered shooting has always
been my thing. When I started with the first Leaf DCB in 1992, tethered
shooting was the only way you could capture a digital photograph. Of course it
was pretty slow compared to today’s technology. In the early days of digital capture, the camera took three images
through a red, green and blue filter wheel and you would wait about 45 seconds
to see your image appear on the monitor. When DSLR cameras became the standard
several years later, everyone was excited to cut the cord, but not me….
I have always appreciated the accurate info on a calibrated
and custom profiled monitor. We are visual artists. We react to what we see and
the little image on the back of a DSLR just doesn’t cut it in precision
professional photography. With the introduction of Lightroom, Capture One and
the proprietary camera capturing software, tethered shooting came back in a
big way. Now we have a new choice to work with in the CamRanger. Let’s capture
to the ipad, iphone and computer without any wires…. This is really going to
bring the tethered type shooting in to all areas of photography.
One of my favorite places to shop for my digital photography
accessories is www.Tethertools.com.
All the products I need for tethered shooting can be found in one place. I started last year with the purchase
of the orange tethering cables and ipad accessories and was super excited to
see the new CamRanger in their line-up at the recent Photoshop World conference
trade show this past April in Orlando. As far as I am concerned, this is what
the ipad was created for. As soon as I saw a demo on it, I knew I had to have
it and bought it before I even asked how much it was. For $299, it s a sweet
deal and a must have product in your camera bag.
Wireless shooting is not new… but what is new is the ease of
setting it up. From the time I opened the box to the time I had an image from
my Canon 1Ds Mark III to the ipad was about that 5 minutes…. Unbelievable! It’s
just too easy. Now I have just want I need for those hard to shoot situations
where the art director needs to see exactly what’s going on with out all the
fuss of cables and computers.
In the studio I still love shooting with the tethered cabled set up to my (comes free with the camera) Canon Utility software that sends the image right to the hard drive in a few seconds as well as saving an image to my Hoodman 32 gig internal CF card in the camera. With the 15 foot extension cable, I now have 30 feet of cable and the orange color really helps me see it in the dark studio. I see it quickly on my monitors and everyone can put in their input on what needs to happen on the set.
In the studio I still love shooting with the tethered cabled set up to my (comes free with the camera) Canon Utility software that sends the image right to the hard drive in a few seconds as well as saving an image to my Hoodman 32 gig internal CF card in the camera. With the 15 foot extension cable, I now have 30 feet of cable and the orange color really helps me see it in the dark studio. I see it quickly on my monitors and everyone can put in their input on what needs to happen on the set.
That’s fine in an average situation, but average is not what we do.
Sometimes we are up in the air on the top of our monostand, or laying on the
floor trying to see what we are doing as we set up a shot. Bringing an ipad
over to the set so the model can see what going on without getting out of
position. This is where CamRanger really comes in handy.
Out in the field where having a cable connected to your laptop is not practical, the CamRanger really shines as an incredible advantage. The software has all the features you could ask for in a wireless system. Some of the key features are having the ability to access the camera settings, control image viewing, view and download the thumbnails or hi res Raw images, control metering, and view the histogram. You can shoot HDR's, control bracketing, focus stacking, live view, remote triggering, time lapse photography, movie recording, and tag and rate images. Being able to put the camera in hard to get areas and control it from up to 150 feet away sets it up for all kinds of sports and wildlife photography as well, For now, this is the best possible answer for total control in you image making. Till next time.... work smarter.... not harder....
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