Posts Tagged ‘Chase Jarvis’

Three Links: Rosh.com, 2011 tech and sixty second portrait

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

It’s a new year.  Starting January 2011 I will be sharing photography ideas at rosh.com (Still a work in progress) . You can see my current portfolio now, blog posts will begin next week.  I’ve linked to a Techcrunch article listing seven technologies to keep an eye one in 2011. Lastly, Chase Jarvis shares an interesting concept with of the sixty second portrait.

Rosh.com -  Portfolio and future home of great photography tips and ideas.

Tech Crunch 2011 technology

Sixty second portrait

Interview with C.C. Chapman: Podcast 133

Monday, December 27th, 2010

This week: Interview with C.C. Chapman Co- author of Content Rules.

Play

The new street photography

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Traditionally, street photography has been a documentary style of photography that uses 35mm or compact cameras. The goal is to capture candid images of people on city streets or in public places.

Many street photographers pound the pavement each day shooting from the hip to capture unique moments in time. Sometimes they don’t even bother looking through the view finder.

Technology drives street photography — first with the invention of 35mm and smaller range-finder cameras.

Technology has spawned a new generation: the phone photographer.  The quality of camera phones is beginning to rival that of the earliest practical digital cameras.

Street photography doesn’t require multiple types of lenses and an external flash. The names of the game are simplicity and stealth.  Plus, camera phones are easy to use and conceal, which is perfect for documentary-style photography.

One major advantage camera phones have over standard cameras is the ability to send images to the Web.

Once Web sites such as Posterous, WordPress, Flickr and Tumblr made it easy for people to post via e-mail and upload through phone applications, a new world of possibilities opened.  These two technologies opened the door to the camera phone blogger with the ability instantly upload their compositions.

Phone photographers are gaining in popularity and credibility.

Well-known commercial photographer Chase Jarvis was an early champion of the camera phone photographer. He recently created an iPhone application, published a book and created an online community called The Best Camera .

Below is a list of camera phone blogs and examples:

iPhonephoto.org

justwhatisee.com

hsugene.posterous.com

iPhone-shots.blogspot.com

Flickr  street photography

iPhoneography by sionfullana

photo by

photo by sionfullana

Flickr pool of photos taken with the iPhone Contains more than 9,000 members and 100,000 photographs.

The iPhone and the Canon Rebel are in a tight race this year for most popular camera used on Flickr and other photo sharing Web sites.  As phone cameras gain quality and versatility, the art of camera phone street photography will continue to gain in popularity.

Street photography will not have the same mystique as it did in the early days of Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans and Robert Frank because we have grown accustomed to this method.

Society continues to change and evolve and the new style and generation of photographer is here to offer its perspective.  These new photographers will capture the everyday moments of life, in greater numbers, for future generations to reflect on, laugh about and remember their contemporaries’ intimate pasts.

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Nine new things you need to know

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

In our continuing effort to keep the New Media Photographer community well informed, here is a catch-up list of nine newsworthy items from recent weeks:

Posterous now has customizable pages.  Posterous is a blog site designed for e-mail users.  The system allows bloggers to post information or photographs to their site via e-mail.  It has become very popular with camera phone photographers who like to post their images immediately.

TinEye will begin indexing PhotoShelter images.  Partnering with sites that cater to photographers who would care the most about keeping track of their image usage is an excellent move for TinEye. As a PhotoShelter subscriber, I am pleased.

Twitter, a company that has not generated any real income during the three years of its existence, has or may be receiving $100 million in funding to keep it going.

Shutterstock announced last week that is has acquired BigStockPhoto, a credit-based stock photo agency headquartered in Davis, Calif. Also, Shutterfly bought Tiny Pictures; the consolidations continue.

Google will release the Wave application to 100,000 testers soon. Will you be one of the testers?

Clixtr.com is a new photo-sharing application for the iPhone.  It’s a location-based application that allows people at the same event to share photographs in one location.

Photo505.com is a new photo effects site that claims it will offer a different effect for your image every day.

Best Camera release: Chase Jarvis released his highly acclaimed photography application for the iPhone. Chase also has a book and new community related to phone photography.

Dropbox just released a new application for the iPhone.  It’s an easy and convenient cross-platform media storage site.


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New Media Photographer Podcast 68

Monday, September 28th, 2009

This week Rosh asks – how do creative visual people adapt to new technology?

  • Time 30:00
  • Hosted by Rosh Sillars
  • This podcast is about social, digital and new media and how it relates to the photographer.
  • Topics on this week’s show:Dave Warner Lensflare35, would you like to be interviewed on the podcast, Do you need a 60MP camera, Chase Jarvis, Photos with the iphone, Would photography be better off with one stock house monopoly, photo copyrights and usage ideas,www.rosh.comwordpress
  • This week new media photographer – news headlines:

Hasselblad H4D-60 Medium Format DSLR

ThinkTank Photo’s New Airport TakeOff Rolling Camera Backpack

Adobe Photoshop Elements 8 and Premiere Elements 8

Adobe Creative Suite 4 Unleashed – Seminar Tour

The Best Camera is the One That’s With You: by Chase Jarvis

PANTONE Releases New iPhone App – myPANTONE

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