Photokina 2010

24 09 2010

Last thursday I had the pleasure to visit photokina in Köln, Germany.
Of course I was drooling over all the new gear and stuff like the Nikon D7000 etc. I was also one of the lucky ones to win a Blackrapid RS7. I’ll write you a review once I have used it a bit more. I also found a great solution for geotagging, unfortunately my own camera, the nikon d60, can’t handle gps input. But once I upgrade I’ll give it a shot. It simple adds a tiny bluetooth device to the camera which can be combined with any Bluetooth gps module. It  enters the geolocation directly in the image. Check it out at www.foolography.com
The best experience for me however was the ability to hear some top of the notch photographers talk about photography. I had the pleasure to watch a presentation by Jonathan and Angela Scott at the Canon booth and Vincent Versace at the Nikon booth.
One thing complete me baffled me. When, at the end of their presentations, they asked the audience for questions, hardly anybody did! I mean what on earth are you doing at a photography event with a camera around your neck if you think there is nothing you can learn from these great photographers. All the better for me as I could ask multiple questions. After the presentations I stayed behind and had the opportunity to talk to them and even to have Johnathan Scott look at my animal photos and give me some advice on how to improve. Having an iPad with your photos on it, is a great help here. I’ll share the lessons I learned In another post.
Johnathan Scott at Photokina 2010
So if you are listening to a presentation by a world renowned photographer and he is asking if there are any questions, ask! Anything. They don’t bite and you might learn something.
I had a great time at Photokina and could have easily stayed more days.

Happy shooting!





My iPad workflow

16 09 2010

This summer I bought an iPad and here I will tell you how I use it with my photography.

I like to travel and I like to make photos. Many photos. After a weeks trip I easily have over a thousand images. The problem often is that it takes a long time for me to process them all e.g. Select the best ones, do some post processing and share them or make a book. It often doesn’t get done.
And here is were the iPad comes in; it takes part of the work I would do after the trip to during the trip.
Say at the end of a day I have some down time. I upload the images from my sd card to photos. The size of the display is large enough to determine if the images are good or not. If they are not I delete them.
After the selection I can given enough time pull some of them in Photo fx Ultra (iTunes) to do some post processing. If I want I can than upload directly from my iPad to Facebook flick or use them in my WordPress post.
After I come home I hook my iPad to my Mac and load the images into Aperture. As the images are still in raw I can do some post processing if I want to. I have to note that the import from iPad to Aperture is not yet flawless. I sometimes have to reconnect my iPad before aperture ‘sees’ the iPad.
The flow is nice and works well the only thins still missing is a editor which keeps the raw. E.g aperture for iPad would be nice :)

Happy shooting!








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