Archive of ‘Photography’ category

Printing Image on Inkjet Printers Part 1

Lincoln Memorial - monochrome HDR - ©TimeLine Media

Because of the nature of event photography, and the way I sell my photos, I do not do any of the printing of these images using my own inkjet printers. With the amount of images that I need to print, and the number of different places that I need to send these, I outsource this task to professional photo labs. They have the expertise in doing this work, and they have the best in optical printing machines to create the best possible prints for my clients.

So, if you have come across this post because you have purchased prints from TimeLine Media before, please know that no changes will be made to how I create those photos. If I print using inkjets, it will only be for personal work for the near future. In this case it was the first experiment in printing on inkjets using this HDR photo from a recent walk in D.C.

Original File

Lincoln Memorial - monochrome HDR - ©TimeLine Media
Lincoln Memorial – monochrome HDR – ©TimeLine Media

This is an HDR image that was processed in HDR Efex Pro 2. It was subsequently converted to black and white in Silver Efex Pro 2. At this time, I wanted to try a monochrome image first. I thought it would be easier to see and fix any problems compared to adding color into the mix. Here is my first attempt with the default settings from my printer. Undoubtedly it is not pretty! To keep the changes to the images minimal, I kept the 4×6 aspect ratio. It was then printed onto 5×7 glossy paper:

Inkjet Print

First inkjet print from black and white HDR image - ©TimeLine Media
First inkjet print from black and white HDR image – ©TimeLine Media

Truth be told, I just hit print immediately, and did not even see a dialog box for printing settings. There is some serious banding problems in this attempt. In looking at the settings as the print was going through, the printer was using some of the color inks. It was not just using the black ink to create the print. For my second attempt, I made a few more changes in the dialog boxes prior to printing the next try.

TimeLine Media www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

2013 Events Expire Today

Smooth ballroom dancing - ©TimeLine Media

Today is the last day to view and order photos from these 2013 events. They had previously expired, but were renewed prior to the holidays. Afterwards they will be removed from the website to make more room for 2014 events. If you have any questions, or need any help finding your photos, please let me know! The website for all the photos that are expiring, and the others that will still be viewable is:

http://proofs.timelinedc.com

DC Area Arthur Murray 2013 Summer Showcase

2013 DC Area Arthur Murray Spring Freestyles

American Rhythm dancing - ©TimeLine Media
American Rhythm dancing – ©TimeLine Media 

That’s Dancing 2013 Summer Showcase

2013 American Star Ball

2013 Baltimore Dancesport Challenge 

Arthur Murray Summer Showcase - ©TimeLine Media
Arthur Murray Summer Showcase – ©TimeLine Media

Marsha Bonet Dance Showcase

2013 Salsa Bachata Throwdown

Smooth ballroom dancing - ©TimeLine Media
Smooth ballroom dancing – ©TimeLine Media

2013 River City Ballroom Dance Competition

2013 USA Dance Mid-Atlantic Championships

These event will be going back into the archive. It will be $40 to have the photos retrieved and re-uploaded to the website later. Thanks to everyone that has visited our website over the holidays to review their images. We are so happy that many of you have found images that you want to have hanging in your house, or posted all over your Facebook pages. We hope that you continue your dancing, and we catch you on the dance floor again this year!

Arthur Murray Summer Showcase - ©TimeLine Media
Arthur Murray Summer Showcase – ©TimeLine Media

TimeLine Media – www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

Black and White Ballroom Dancers

Dancesport monochrome photo - ©TimeLine Media

Washington, DC

It is rare that I shoot ballroom dancing in black and white. For those that shoot RAW files with their cameras, it is possible to shoot in monochrome styles and preserve the color information in your images. What is displayed on the back of your camera is a JPG file. If you shoot to JPG files, there are many settings that the camera makes for you – sharpening, white balance, color saturation, that are more difficult to change once the settings are “baked in” to the JPG file. If you shoot RAW, all of these settings can be manipulated in the RAW processor/converter software afterwards. Adobe Lightroom or Adobe Camera Raw which is built into recent versions of Adobe Photoshop, are examples of these.

Ballroom dance monochrome photo - ©TimeLine Media
Ballroom dance monochrome photo – ©TimeLine Media

Black and White Images

Most digital cameras allow users to shoot monochrome images directly in camera. If you shoot to JPG, the color data from your image will be tossed out by the camera. It will be impossible to recover this color information. Similarly to shooting on black and white negatives on a film camera this information is not recorded. However, if you shoot to desaturated RAW files, the only file that will be black and white is the JPG preview that will be show on the back of the camera. The RAW file will still retain all the color information taken at the time of capture.

Ballroom dance monochrome photo - ©TimeLine Media
Ballroom dance monochrome photo – ©TimeLine Media

That being the case, you can easily go back to the RAW file and convert it to black and white in Lightroom, and possibly do a better conversion than your camera! The images in posting today were all captured in RAW files. Although it does take up more room on your memory cards and hard drives to do so, there are just so many advantages to shooting in RAW, that I cannot see myself doing it any other way. This color to black and white conversion is just one of the many reasons to do so.

Dancesport monochrome photo - ©TimeLine Media
Dancesport monochrome photo – ©TimeLine Media

TimeLine Media – www.timelinedc.com
703-864-8208

1 184 185 186 187 188 331