Archive of ‘Technology’ category

Creating a Facebook Cover photo – Tech Thursday

Sunrise Tidal Basin and Jeffeson Memorial - ©TimeLine Media

The use of a good cover photo in Facebook is something I have underestimated in my social media marketing. I do not change my profile photo very much. However, I am thinking that the cover photo can be changed more frequently. Hopefully it will not change how visitors recognize and remember my photography site. Recently, I used some images from my cherry blossoms photo walks to create a new cover page for my personal Facebook page. Here are the steps I used to make it.Looking through the Facebook help files on cover photos, they give the exact dimensions that the application uses:

At this time, cover photos are 851 pixels wide and 315 pixels tall. If you upload an image that’s smaller than these dimensions, it will be stretched to this larger size. The image you upload must be at least 399 pixels wide and 150 pixels tall.

Looking at this ratio, I know that it will be a panoramic photo – one with very long dimensions left to right compared to the dimensions top to bottom. Consequently, there were two photos that immediately came to mind:

Social Media Templates

Sunrise Tidal Basin and Jeffeson Memorial - ©TimeLine Media
Sunrise Tidal Basin and Jeffeson Memorial – ©TimeLine Media
Sunrise Tidal Basin and Washington Monument - ©TimeLine Media
Sunrise Tidal Basin and Washington Monument – ©TimeLine Media

These two were taken with the X100s which has a fixed 35mm lens. It is not very wide, and I wanted to get the entire Tidal Basin from the Washington Monument to the Jefferson Memorial. However with all the other photographers setup there at the time, I needed to work quickly. So I just made some photos looking straight ahead to the Jefferson first, then panned my camera to the left to get Washington Monument. I checked the camera to make sure there was a lot of overlap between the two photos before moving out of the way. After processing the photos in Lightroom, I brought them both into Photoshop CC which has some nice automated tools for combining photos into a panorama. This is the result:

Photos combined by Photoshop CC - ©TimeLine Media
Photos combined by Photoshop CC – ©TimeLine Media

The crazy bend in the perspective comes from the movement of the camera focal plane with respect to the horizon. Photoshop combines all the important elements seamlessly in the middle of the frame. I then brought this combined PSD file back into Lightroom because I like how the crop tool works there.

Cropping in Lightroom for Facebook cover photo - ©TimeLine Media
Cropping in Lightroom for Facebook cover photo – ©TimeLine Media

For cropping, I entered in a custom dimension of 8.51 x 3.15 to match the settings from Facebook. When you do this, your photo will look its best as a cover because there is no stretching or converting being done before it is displayed.

Cropping settings in Lightroom - ©TimeLine Media
Cropping settings in Lightroom – ©TimeLine Media

After uploading, it looks great on both the PC and mobile versions! Let me know if you have any other tips for making these.

Cherry Blossom Facebook cover photo - ©TimeLine Media
Cherry Blossom Facebook cover photo – ©TimeLine Media

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

Caricaturist and the Tablet

Caricaturist at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media

What does a caricaturist and photographer have in common with cutting edge technology? This blog has shown my growth in practicing digital photography in both professional and personal projects. The tech behind these new cameras has really advanced passed analog/film technology. Not long ago, this was not the case. There is a place still for film photography as an artistic choice in fine art and other personal work.

For me and most photographers, it is digital for client work. At ballroom dance events, we are able to send digital files to iPads for dancers to flip through themselves. They are not completely finished files, but they are good enough to show content. Also, it gives them a good preview of the images. We also have a running slideshow of our best images right out of the camera that can be viewed by many from afar. This has helped our business immensely! The immediacy of the photos means that dancers are excited to come back to the proofing website to view their images after the event has passed.

Tysons Corner Center

Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media
Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center – ©TimeLine Media

In a similar fashion, I photographed a caricaturist at Tysons Corner Center that was making drawings of people in the mall using a new Microsoft Surface Pro. The tablet is compatible with more than just your finger, you can also control with a stylus. This allowed him to draw directly onto the tablet making it a very similar action to drawing on a pad of paper. With the tablet, Microsoft directly connected the tablet to a very large TV monitor. The monitor was a mirror of the tablet which allowed people walking by to see how the drawings were made in real time!

Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media
Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center – ©TimeLine Media
Caricaturist at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media
Caricaturist at Tysons Corner Center – ©TimeLine Media

This made for a much larger projection of the drawings – and it drew quite a crowd. Just this little change allowed the artist to reach a much larger audience. There is only a few that can see him working on a traditional pad and easel, the large TV brought in more eyes, and thus, more portrait subjects! After the drawings were completed, the subjects could just enter their email address into the same tablet, and they were sent their drawing in a few seconds. Amazing! For these artists, though, I think there is still much more value in analog tools than with photography. I wonder what my architect father could have done if he had access to a tablet!

Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media
Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center – ©TimeLine Media
Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center - ©TimeLine Media
Microsoft Surface display at Tysons Corner Center – ©TimeLine Media

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

Photo Spot Check – Tech Thursday

Air Force Memorial, Arlington, VA - ©TimeLine Media

Ever go through a series of photos to see a spot at the same place on every image? Digital cameras have made so many advancements in convenience, and accessibility to photographers. Just going around the Tidal Basin in Washington, DC to look at cherry blossoms, you can see the impact. I can remember going walking around the blooms when I was younger with many cameras around, but not nearly to the extent that there is today.

Shooting with film, however, did have some advantages. One of them was that the “sensor” was cleaned EVERY single time a photo was taken. The film was nicely protected in a hard plastic cartridge, fed through a tiny slit that wiped the sides of the film clean before it was placed in position to be exposed. After an exposure was made on the frame, it was moved out of the way as a new part of the film was moved into place – there was no reuse of the same section – unless you had a failure of your mechanical system, or were very advanced in your multiple-exposure plan for your image.

Arlington, Virginia

Air Force Memorial, Arlington, VA - ©TimeLine Media
Air Force Memorial, Arlington, VA – ©TimeLine Media

When taking landscape or other travel images where you are exposing large parts of clouds or open sky, digital cameras will show you spots where there is dust on your sensor. When shooting landscapes from a tripod, you have the luxury of using low ISO and a stopped-down aperture. Using these settings, it will be very evident where dust spots are on your sensor. When the using more open apertures, the dust will be too close to the sensor to be seen in your images. Regularly shooting at f/4 or below, you may not notice that you sensor even has any dust!

Air Force Memorial, Arlington, VA - ©TimeLine Media
Air Force Memorial, Arlington, VA – ©TimeLine Media

This image looked perfectly fine at the time I took it at the Air Force Memorial. When I brought it into Lightroom and took a look at the images at 100%, there were so many spots. Here is a screen shot of the image where each circle is a point from the “Spot Removal” tool. I have made them larger if you would like to download and see how bad this case was.

Spot Removal tool in Adobe Lightroom - ©TimeLine Media
Spot Removal tool in Adobe Lightroom – ©TimeLine Media
Close up of spots from sensor dust - ©TimeLine Media
Close up of spots from sensor dust – ©TimeLine Media

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

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