Saving Your Images

Saving Your Images

One of the greatest challenges in the digital world of photography is managing all your images. Here are a few tips.

Shoot Raw

Always shoot in raw. Raw images contain the image data plus image information such as shutter speed, aperture settings, and ISO. Jpegs files only contain image data. Also, raw files have more image data than a Jpeg. Raw files allow expanded image manipulation techniques. I never shoot Raw and Jpeg images at the same time. I only shoot raw images. When I have raw and jpeg images in the same folder it is too confusing.

One Event, One Folder

Import your images into a single folder for that collection of images. Don’t mix image from multiple in events into the same folder. If you do you will end up with big mess.

Name the Folder

Name the folder with a date and descriptive name. For example “20120214_Valentines Party” Start your folder name with the four digit year followed by two digit month and day and then the title. This will help you sort your images by year, month, and day. If you don’t do this you will have a mess. I know I have tried it.

Name the Images

Name the image files with the same naming convention and a sequential number after the descriptive name. For example “20120214_Valentines Party.nef.” Depending on your camera your raw file will have a different file extension (suffix). Nikon uses .nef. Canon uses CRW or CR2.

Final Thought

This technique of folder creation and folder naming has made my life a lot easier. If you have any questions about these four steps please call, email, or contact me on Facebook. To get my contact information please go to my website.

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2012 Charity Model Search

I am a member of Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep.

The mission statement of Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep is to introduce remembrance photography to parents suffering the loss of a baby with the free gift of professional portraiture. We believe these images serve as an important step in the family’s healing process by honoring their child’s legacy.

As a member, I serve as a volunteer professional photographer that goes into local area hospitals to photograph babies. What I have seen are parents pouring all of their hope, desires and love into their baby’s final moments.

I am asking you to join in supporting Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep by participating in the 2012 Charity Model Search.

For additional details please call me at (817) 905-9241 or go to www.littleonesbysteve.com/specials.html

For contest details go to www.charitymodelssearch.orgwww.charitymodelssearch.org

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Was Fuzzy Wuzzy a bear or just Out of Focus.

Was Fuzzy Wuzzy a bear or just Out of Focus.

I was at a group gathering and someone came up to me and asked why their photos were fuzzy. My initial reaction was similar to this guy in the Chevy commercial.

Well, uhhh. But in the middle of Well and uhh was a two hour class on photography.

The simple answer is your point-and-shoot camera jacks up your ISO, lowers your shutter speed, and opens your aperture in low light conditions. All three of those actions taken by your camera result in fuzzy images.

This not complex or hard but you will probably need to read you camera manual.

The first step is set you camera on Manual Mode. Set your Shutter Speed to 30th or 60th of a second. Then set your ISO to its lowest setting such as a 100 or 200 ISO. The Aperture should be set to about f4 or f5.6 so that you can capture ambient light. The final step needs your flash. Pop up your flash and stand about 10 feet from your subject. Take a shot. If the subject is two bright then take a few steps back and try again. If the subject is to dark then get a little closer. You need to find the distance that works best for you camera and its flash. Once you find that distance, then all have to do is shoot your subject at the distance to capture a properly exposed and not fuzzy images.

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Eliminate Reflection in Glasses

Earpiece lifted up.

Earpiece not lifted up

It is your job to take a great photo of Uncle Fred.  It is his fiftieth birthday party. Everyone is thanking you for bringing your camera and they can’t wait to see the photos.

You go home extremely excited because you know you got the perfect shot.

There you are in your pajamas downloading the images, when Uncle Fred’s image pops up.  You have this sinking feeling in your gut.  You can’t see his eyes because his glasses are filled with the light from your flash.  The next words out of your mouth I can’t write in my blog.

I want to share a simple trick to eliminate this problem.

Just ask Uncle Fred to lift the earpiece off of his ears.  He only has to lift the earpiece enough to redirect the light down and away from your camera.  It works every time.  Just check out the sample images.  You can’t discern the difference in his glasses but the reflection is gone. Oh by the way this will also work with Aunt Minnie.

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