Leaderboard
728x15

Nice Photo Sizes photos

Large Rectangle

Some cool photo sizes images:


jules shooting me shooting jules shooting me shooting jules [redux]
photo sizes
Image by the|G|™
all sizes is better! :)

nay, all sizes is demanded!

redux.

still a shake and bake, but i like it much more than the framed iteration.

a sincere pleasure to meet this guy.

www.flickr.com/photos/spaz-winchester/

no fucking bullshit detected.
uber cool candour.

in this man's world, spade is a spade.

period.

that, i always like.

when the platoon goes out, this badass motherfucker is on point.

every time.

thank you is not enough. nowhere near enough.

big props to thee white rose dude.

the|G|™ [paul]



Edge-Punched Index Card
photo sizes
Image by mpclemens
Actual-size example of a homemade edge-punched 3x5 index card. The holes were put in by Staples binding service -- spiral binding without the spiral. I chopped off the corner with a guillotine cutter, and the red overlays show different hole punch sizes I've tried for notching. See photo notes for more details.

I plan to use these for NaNoWriMo to keep track my various story ideas. See my blog entry about this.

There's a video demonstration of using these cards, too.


Nokia 808 dynamic range workaround
photo sizes
Image by Vineet Radhakrishnan
View full size: www.flickr.com/photos/vineetradhakrishnan/7988192939/size...

For more tips and photos please go to my facebook page:
www.facebook.com/vineetradhakrishnanphotography

The Nokia 808 Pureview is a phenomenal camera considering its strapped onto a phone. It's Achilles heel though is pretty poor dynamic range. For instance this shot has a bright sky and relatively darker foreground. You can either overexpose the picture a bit to get the foreground or underexpose a bit to get the sky correctly exposed. The Nokia 808 , since it produces JPG and not RAW files is pretty good at retrieving image details from shadow areas but produces TERRIBLE results if you try and retrieve details from the highlights (bright areas). So always underexpose a bit to ensure your brightest objects still have detail and you will be able to get a decent photo once you edit it in photoshop. Its a basic rule of photography but probably something many photography enthusiasts who buy the Nokia phone may not know as I've seen tons of such shots with blown highlights on various sites :-)

Banner