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Posts Tagged ‘Towner Jones Photography’

PRESS RELEASE: Announcing the TJM Media Group

For Immediate Release…

Towner Jones Photography, LLC and Jason D. Moore Photography are pleased to announce the formation of the TJM Media Group. This new association serves as a common brand through which exciting new projects can be presented from these two established photography and graphic design content providers.

On February 1, 2010 the TJM Media Group will present the first episode of “Start to Finish” a Photoshop and photography training series showing viewers the complete creative process from capture to presentation. TJM Media Group content will be available through each of the members’ blogs as well as directly through the TJM Media Group website (tjmmediagroup.com) when it goes live in the coming weeks.


New Online Magazine: Creative Studio (CAFE)

Photoshop Cafe's New Creative Studio Cafe Online Magazine

I was looking through my latest email CAFE Cup news from PhotoshopCAFE and noticed that Colin just launched the first issue of his new online magazine, Creative Studio (CAFE).

For this inaugural issue, Colin has assembled an awesome group of experts to talk about what’s new in CS4. It’s more than just a listing of new features, they go in-depth to really show how some of the newest features work and how they will help you improve your workflow.

In other news, I was reading Scott’s post the other day about AllTop.com and how they are now letting you create your own page of RSS feeds. Scott links us to his page to see the blogs that he checks up on every day and I was pleasantly surprised to see that I am on his list! Very cool!

And speaking of Scott, I was reading the blog of my buddy Rob Jones of Towner Jones Photography and he recently posted about the judges for the “On Assignment” contest. I was asked to be on the panel of judges but when I saw that the other members were Scott and Photowalker Extraordinaire Jeff Revell, I was humbled.

I never want to sell myself short but I am always amazed when movers and shakers in the digital photography community take notice of what I’m doing here in my little corner of the web or when others count me among those same individuals whom I hold in such high esteem.

So, thank you Scott! And thank you Rob! for such honors.


“On Assignment” with Towner Jones Photography

Summer Photography Contest

This summer, our friend Rob Jones of Towner Joens Photography is hosting a really cool photography contest.

Here’s the rundown:

The contest, like always, is open to amateur and professional photographers alike. However, that’s about the only thing it has in common with our regular monthly contest.

The biggest difference is – you get to choose your theme. The goal is for you to pick something that you can get excited about. And… something that will inspire you to take multiple pictures. You see, another key difference with this contest is that we’re looking for a series of photos, instead of a single shot.

To participate, you’ll need to send an email to onassignment@townerjones.com with your name, address, and “theme of choice” no later than June 30th. Once you submit, your theme will be reviewed and upon approval you’re “On Assignment” to capture 10 to 20 images related to your theme! (Only images captured during the contest dates qualify)

Next, on July 31, you’ll submit one of your photos (from your themed collection) to give the rest of us a “sneak peak” of what you’ve been working on. (Actually, we’ll be posting some selected photos from the “sneak peak” on the web – but three months is a long time to wait and we’ll be excited to see you’re great work, you’ve got to give us something!)

Finally, on August 31, you’ll submit all of your final photos for final review. (Details for submission will be emailed to all our registered contestants)

Photos will be judged on three categories: General Appeal (50%), Creativity (25%), and Relation to Theme (25%)

Rob has generously invited me to be a member of the team of judges he is assembling to go through all of the entries and select the grand prize winner.

For complete contest details, and a list of prizes, visit Rob’s website and get moving!


P&P Weekly: #117

Jason D. Moore Photography - P&P Weekly Newsletter

Welcome to the 117th edition of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

This whole week seems to be about the buzz surrounding Scott Kelby’s 2nd Annual Worldwide Photowalk. And as I was preparing for this week’s P&P Weekly, I noticed just how many of our members will be hosting a photowalk as part of this awesome event!

So I decided to dedicate this week’s edition to highlighting the photowalks being led by members of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll or other Friends-of-the-Blog:

If you live near one of these areas and are able to attend, I highly recommend going! This will be my 4th photowalk in the past year and they are such fun events and you get to meet some amazing people while living out your passion of photography.

If I’ve forgotten anyone, or if you’re a regular reader who will be leading a walk as part of this event, please leave a comment with a link to your photowalk page so others can sign up!

Which photowalk are you attending? Let us know in the comments!


Photoshop Interview: David Ziser

Photoshop Interviews

David ZiserThis month we welcome wedding photographer, lighting expert, trainer, blogger, and all-around great guy, David Ziser of Digital ProTalk. I first got in touch with David back when he was a newbie blogger in the summer of 2007 and he’s now logged well over 1650 posts in the midst of his regular schedule of shooting weddings, running his successful master class for photographers, traveling around the country to run photography workshops, and writing a new book.

I was lucky enough to sit down with David over the phone about a week ago to talk a little bit about where he comes from and where he’s headed.

Jason D. Moore Photography: First off, thank you for taking the time to sit down with me today. Tell me a little bit about your background and how did you get into photography?

David Ziser: I never really went to school for photography. My dad always told me to get a “real” job, while he was alive. My background is actually in physics and engineering. I’ve got a degree in physics and I’ve got another degree in engineering. And I was actually trying to attempt a triple major back in my college days so I’m like 2 classes short of a computer science degree.

I worked my way through college as a photographer so I’ve actually been shooting weddings for 45 years.

I graduated college in 1971 and worked as an engineer for a couple of years. My friends started to get married and asked me to do their weddings ‘cause they knew that I’d been doing it since I was 15 years old. So it was actually in October of 1978, 31 years ago, when I opened my studio doors for business  and I’ve been doing it ever since. And, as a matter of fact, I started winning different awards by around 1979-1980 and was asked to start lecturing by Art Leather, the album company, around 1982/83. Lisle Ramsey got word about what I was up to and put me on the international circuit around 1984 so I had already lectured in New Zealand only 5-6 years into my career and then again in Australia. And the rest is history.

I’m a guy who carefully avoided public speaking my entire high school and college career and now it’s about half of what I do for a living.

JDMP: How did you get started with Photoshop?

DZ: I’m not like some of these guys who jumped in with version two, I didn’t jump on board until around version 5.

I shot my first digital wedding at the end of 2000. I was an expert, I could just about use the dodge and burn tool and maybe the rubber stamp tool and that was about it! If I didn’t need it I never really tried it. Finally with Photoshop 7 I started getting more involved with it because by then we were into the whole digital swing of things.

Now I feel like I’m pretty good at it. I wouldn’t call myself a Julieanne Kost or a Scott Kelby or any of those guys but I know my way around a Layer Mask or two.

We probably do 80% of our image adjustments and enhancements in Lightroom and just go to Photoshop for the heavy lifting, do skin retouching and taking out big exit signs or something like that.

JDMP: How do you see the relationship between these tools and the execution of the artist’s vision?

DZ: The camera is a tool and the software is a tool. For Ansel Adams the developer and the developing time and exposure, those were his tools to get what he wanted, and burning and dodging and so forth. And aren’t we doing that with the software now? What’s cool with the software these days is our vision can change. I think the software can even modify your first impressions of what you wanted image to be.

Look at the painters from the traditional painters to the modern art painters. We can adjust any pixel the way we want it, and they adjusted any pigment on their canvas the way they wanted it. Who cares if it’s pixels or pigments we still have the control and the latitude and the creativity that we can bring to it with our knowledge of how our tools work, whether it be brushes and pigments and inks, on the painter’s side, or pixels in Photoshop and Lightroom on the digital photographer’s side.

Some photographers say, get it right in the camera, you don’t need Photoshop. My rule is, if it takes you longer to get it right in the camera than it does in Lightroom or Photoshop, than go to Lightroom or Photoshop. Take the darn picture and fix it in two minutes in Photoshop or Lightroom.

JDMP: What about those who think you need to have the latest and greatest camera?

DZ: I had this slide in my PowerPoint about a year ago, when Nikon was running the ads with Ashton Kutcher, and the question was, “Do you think the camera lets you take a better picture?” And it was something like 40% thought most of the time, and like 30% thought all the time. It was a goofy number like 79% of the people thought that the camera would help you take a better picture. I would agree to that, to some extent, that you can get the exposure down and everything else but A good picture is more than just a properly exposed photograph.

JDMP: How did you first get into blogging?

DZ: I’m a two-finger typist, by the way, so when I blog, I really invest myself into this thing!

Scott Kelby and I had been emailing while he was doing his Lightroom 1 tour and asked me how to tweak the lighting before he went up on stage. By the time I got to email him back I said, “Well why don’t you come up to help me with a wedding?” The timing worked out and it was July 27, 2007. We finished the wedding at about 1, we went back to my home and we sat up talking until about 3/3:30 in the morning about blogging because I was curious about trying it and what he said to me was, “You’ve got to feed the monster every day or it dies. And that was where we left it.” My wife and I took a trip to Paris and I started blogging the trip. It was called “David and LaDawn on the Road” and that was my first blog.

We came back and I started Digital ProTalk in mid-August. #1 I find the blog to be creative for me. It gets me thinking about what I do: photography and teaching. It’s leveraged how I teach because I put something on there every day. And another thing, and I’m not sure if others will say the same thing, I find it to be relaxing and rewarding when I wake up at 6 or 6:30.

I’ve done 1650 posts to date, and counting.

JDMP: You have a new tour just getting started. Tell me a little bit about your Digital WakeUp Call Tour

DZ: I’m a photographer who has studied classical lighting and posing and this and that and everything else and I wasn’t seeing that a lot in many wedding photographs. So we went out in ’06 and we talked about composition and good lighting and also some software things and some business building things.

Everyone was telling me to do it again and ‘09 was the year to do it. So for the last 6 months we’ve been putting together the content of the tour and designing the presentation and we started right after Photoshop World.

It’s 4 hours long and we’re talking about lighting, lightning and even more lighting – how to get the best use out of your on-camera flash and how to use off-camera flash to really make your images sing. There’s way too much software and way too little time to learn it all so what I talk about are “Software Magic Bullets” – things that make your workflow really streamlined. And the last part of the program is about business building and what any photographer can do, from seasoned professionals to part-time photographers to emerging professional photographers, to build their business.

The tour has caught fire! We’re giving away ¼ million dollars in giveaways over the course of the tour. It’s generated a tone of interest and people are loving it. I’m really excited about it!

JDMP: What else do you have going on?

DZ: I’ve got my first book coming out this summer and I teach my Digital Master Class, a week-long class where photographers come in here for about 50 hours a week. I think we’re the best value class going.  It’s photography for 2 days, software for about a day or so and then, of course, business building at a price that doesn’t break the bank.

JDMP: Thank you so much for taking the time to sit down with me! It’s been a real pleasure!

DZ: Thanks for your support and for linking over, and I really appreciate it! We’ll have to guest blog for each other sometime.


Towner Jones Photography, LLCPhotoshop Interviews is brought to you in part by Towner Jones Photography, LLC. Check out all of the great things Rob is doing over there!

If you would like to sponsor Photoshop Interviews or any of our other regular series, or if you would like to advertise with us, visit our Become a Sponsor page today!


P&P Weekly: #114

Welcome to week #114 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

This week is about reminders and news of upcoming happenings here on the blog:

  • First off, thank you to my friend David Ziser of Digital ProTalk for sitting down with me last Saturday to do a phone interview for my ”Photoshop Interviews“ series - sponsored by Towner Jones Photography. I wasn’t able to get through the whole thing to make it ready to post this week but it will be coming early next week, I promise! Thank you, David, for sending your readers this way, and Welcome to all of you who are becoming regular readers here from Digital ProTalk!
  • Speaking of following, become my friend on Facebook and/or follow me on Twitter
  • The Ithaca Photowalk is coming up on Saturday! Let me know if you’re planning to come join us! I’ll be setting up a Flickr Group for the walk so that everyone can see what our walkers saw along the way.
  • The April Photo Contest is under way! Be sure to enter for your chance to win!
    NOTE: If you have submitted shots for the April Contest but added them to the old Flickr Group, please be sure to add them to the April Contest Flickr Group to be eligible for this month’s prizes.
    (Sponsored by Competico.com)
  • Our new series Points of View is growing really well in it’s second installment with many great submissions already in, but we’re always looking for more! Read about this new project and grab our starting image here. Please send in your interpretations by Wednesday April 22nd to pov@jasondmoore.com so you can be included in the project!
  • I am still accepting user photos for my series of Photo Reviews. If you would like to get some feedback and advice about one of your shots, send an email to reviews@jasondmoore.com with your photo today!
  • There are many opportunities available for sponsoring of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” page to learn more!


P&P Weekly: #113

Welcome to week #113 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

I’m going to just jump right in and get started with all the news that’s fit to post:

  • Starting this month I will be a regular contributor to the PsPrint.com blog writing about graphic design, tips and inspiration. I’ll be posting on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays once I get going. My first month’s topics have been approved and I’ll be starting to write soon. So check over at http://blog.psprint.com starting in the next couple of weeks to follow me there.
  • The Ithaca Photowalk is coming up in a couple of weeks and we still have a few openings left! Let me know if you’re planning to come join us!
  • There are many opportunities available for sponsoring of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” page.
  • The April Photo Contest is now open! Be sure to enter for your chance to win!
    (Sponsored by Competico.com)
  • Our new series Points of View is coming up this Friday. Read about this new project and grab our starting image here. Please send in your interpretations by tomorrow (Thursday) afternoon to pov@jasondmoore.com so you can be included in the project!

And now, on to some of my favorite posts from our Blogroll Members:


P&P Weekly: #112

Welcome to week #112 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

Yes, it’s true! I’m back to publishing “The P&P Weekly” once again! It’s been a crazy few weeks around here with the developing saga of Kim and I buying our first house. On that front, all is going well – we got final approval of the mortgage yesterday - and we’re eager for the next month to go by quickly.

Based on some feedback from readers and to make things a little more manageable on my end as well, I have decided to make a few changes starting with next week’s P&P Weekly.

You will still find the complete listing of members of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll on its own page so that readers can peruse what member bloggers have been posting at any time. Also, there will continue to be a recap of ongoing projects, as seen below.

However, the main difference will be in which blogs get featured each week. As it always has been, I will only feature blogs written by our membership but I will limit it to roughly 20 blogs a week and will only highlight posts that I think are exceptional and really catch my attention. If yours is not listed, please don’t take it as a snub, it’s never personal. I hope this will serve as a form of encouragement and challenge to all members to push themselves to produce better and better blog entries.

Finally, if you’ve been following me on Twitter (“JasonDMoore”) here are the details for our next new series!

With the close of Geographic Composition, I thought it would be good to develop a new project to take it’s regular slot in the blog lineup. Today I would like to announce the launch of a new series called Points of View.

On Fridays, alternating with the Workflow Fridays series, I will post a new, unprocessed photo for download. You will have a week and a half to process, manipulate, composite or otherwise alter the photo however you wish before emailing your version back to me by the Wednesday leading up to the next post for inclusion in the project. For example, I will post the first image this Monday. You will have to submit your entry by Wednesday April 8th to be a part of the April 10th posting. Make sense?

This is not a contest or competition. It’s simply a way of stretching our creative muscles and to get those juices flowing through experimentation and seeing how many different interpretations can be applied to the same starting photo. So go crazy with it. If there’s a technique you’ve always wanted to try, go for it! The only requirement is that you use the given image in some way as part of the final product.

If you’re interested, stop back on Monday to grab the first image and go to town! I think this has the potential to become a fun regular exercise to get our hands dirty and create!

Looking forward to it!


Advertise With Us or Become a Sponsor!

There are many opportunities available for sponsoring of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” page.


 Ithaca Photowalk

Details have been updated for our upcoming photowalk on April 18th in the Ithaca Commons. So far we have a decent size group signed up but there’s still plenty of room!

I am also still looking for suggestions for restaurants so please drop me a line or leave a comment to let me know!


Monthly Photo Contests

The March Photo Contest is quickly coming to a close so be sure to enter your photos for your chance to win a prize worth $50!

(Sponsored by Competico.com)


 Photo Reviews

Just a reminder that I am still accepting photos for review. Simply email me one of your images, I’ll take a look at it and give you an assessment of what works and what I think you could do to bring your photography to the next level. Learn More!


Workflow Fridays

Every other Friday, we will welcome a new guest blogger that will share their personal workflow with all of us. They will take one of their own photos and walk us through the how’s and why’s of their post-processing techniques so that we might learn and expand our own workflows.

Next week we will be welcoming Scotty Graham.

If you would like to participate in this new series, please email me or leave a comment!

(Sponsored by Competico.com.)


Photoshop Interviews

Coming soon: An Interview with David Ziser 

(Sponsored by Towner Jones Photography)


On the 4th

On the 4th of each month throughout the year I invite you to take a photo and send it in. Join me and other photographers from around the world in documenting a day in the life, of sorts. For full details, take a look at our introductory post. If you shot something on March 4th, be sure to send me your images today for inclusion in this project!

(Sponsored by User 40.0)


Geographic Composition

 

As I have announced before, this Friday will be the final installment (#50) of the Geographic Composition photo project. If you’ve contributed in the past, please let me know which was your favorite shot (of yours) from the project by tomorrow morning. Also, if you would like to participate in this final edition, please send a favorite photo by tomorrow morning along with a link to you site/blog and your location.


Monthly Desktop Calendars

I am offering special desktop wallpaper calendars. These desktop calendars will feature my personal photography as well as a listing of holidays and important dates. I offer these wallpaper calendars in a variety of sizes to accommodate a number of screen resolutions. April’s desktop wallpaper is in the works and will be available for download early next week.

Get Your Monthly Desktop Calendar Today!


Photoshop Interview: Mike McHugh

Photoshop Interviews

Photoshop Interview - Adobe's Mike McHughThis month I sit down with Adobe Creative Systems Engineer, author, trainer, host of the popular Creative Sweet TV video podcast, and all-around good guy, Mike McHugh.

Jason D. Moore Photography:  Hi Mike! First off, thank you for sitting down with me today! I’d like to help give everyone an idea about who you are and what your background is. Tell us a little bit about yourself. Where are you from? What is your educational/professional background? That sort of thing….

Mike McHugh: I was a finished artist once upon a time. I started working in Graphic Design in about 1994 and even got to do the artwork on an official Sydney Olympic poster in 2000. Heaps of Photoshop and Illustrator work in those days. I’m based in Melbourne Australia, Ive always been here and Now I work for Adobe.

JDMP: Along similar lines, what is your current job and what does it entail?

MM: I’m a Creative Systems Engineer for Adobe that means I do A LOT of CS4 Presentations, Last week we finished a  5 State roadshow and spoke to over 6000 people, That was fun.

JDMP: In your excellent video podcast, Creative Sweet TV, you touch on individual parts of the Adobe Creative Suite as well as how they can work together. How did Creative Sweet TV get its start?

MM: I used to write for a local Magazine here called Desktop. On one occasion I decided to record the article with Audio instructions and posted it for download, that was really the first episode. It was utter rubbish but got me thinking.

JDMP: You spend a good deal of time with Adobe users and get to learn about their experiences with the software, positive and not so positive. What are some of the favorite new features of Photoshop that you’ve heard from users? What are the biggest gripes?

MM: The content aware Scale blows people away, but my personal favorite is the 3d stuff. I love making anoglphs and viewing them with the 3D glasses. Of course when Adobe changes anything people complain, even if they don’t realise its much better. Things like the application frame and the new Zoom and Pan Features.

JDMP: I know the majority of my readers are from the US and Europe, with a growing audience from other parts of the world. Here in the US Photoshop and the concept of all types of media perceived as being “Photoshopped” has become a regular part of the culture. From your perspective, what effect has Photoshop – or image manipulation in general – had on culture or how people consume media in Australia?

MM: People are now more savvy to that concept. I think its a generational thing. Young people tend to realize that a certain amount of Photoshop work goes on, still not sure if they know the extent. I find that on social network sites like facebook, people tend to want a glamorous looking Profile image, if only they knew about Surface Blur and good layer mask!

JDMP: Conversely, and I imagine you might have a unique perspective on this as an Adobe engineer,  what effect as the creative community had on the development of the various Adobe products?

MM: Certainly other technology has a great effect, like the introduction of Digital Video and Cameras. Something like an economic downturn also has an effect. People want to do more with less. For example we have a customer with a large workforce of print designers can now extend the workforce but introducing InDesign CS4. Now those designers can design for the web and flash with the SWF export. 

JDMP: Regardless of the day job, it’s important to have a means to stretch our creative muscles. Aside from your professional work with Adobe, what are some of your personal creative ventures/outlets?

MM: I love Photography and have recently become interested in Photography for Astrology. (Photographing the stars and Planets) Look out for more on that real soon.

JDMP: Where can our members and readers go to find out more?

MM: www.creativesweettv.com  or follow me on twitter mmchugh

JDMP: My last question is always the same, is there anything else that I haven’t given you a chance to say? Any areas that you feel need to be touched on?

MM: Lets all get excited about editing video, there is too much rubbish on youtube and we need to lift our game and do some cool creative stuff.

JDMP: Thanks for sitting down with me, Mike! And keep up the great work with the podcast!

MM: Thanks again!

*****
Towner Jones Photography, LLCPhotoshop Interviews is brought to you in part by Towner Jones Photography, LLC. Check out all of the great things Rob is doing over there!

If you would like to sponsor Photoshop Interviews or any of our other regular series, or if you would like to advertise with us, visit our Become a Sponsor page today!


Workflow Friday: Rob Jones

Photoshop Workflows

This week we welcome another exceptional photographer to our Workflow Fridays series, Rob Jones. Rob and his wife Rose run Towner Jones Photography based in Gainesville, VA.

Thanks for sharing with us today, Rob!

First let me say, I feel quite humbled to be in the company of the talented folks that have contributed to this great blog. I also want to say “thanks” to Jason for allowing me to participate and thanks to all of you for sharing your time with me today.

When I first started preparing for my edition of “Workflow Fridays,” I was quite excited. I had, on my schedule, a perfect photo shoot lined up which I thought would provide some excellent shots to put through my workflow. The plan was to hike into Shenandoah National Park, here in Virginia, and capture images of the waterfalls in Whiteoak Canyon. However, when I got up the morning of the shoot, there was no hot water in the house. I did get to see a waterfall that day – unfortunately it was coming from the hot water heater in the basement. Oh the life of a great adventurer…

Why am I sharing this story with you, you might ask? I’m sharing it because, I did manage to find a “waterfall” picture in my collection to work over for you, but it’s a tad smaller than the eighty-six footer I had planned on shooting.

Just imagine the splendor of what could have been in your mind’s eye, and we’ll get started.

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Before

So here’s our “waterfall” shot. It was taken early in the morning, also in Shenandoah National Park, back in October. For those of you that are interested in the image specs, it was taken with my Nikon D90 using Nikon’s 18-200mm lens. The exposure is 6 seconds, at f/20 (ISO 100). (On a side note, the D90 has become a beloved addition to my gear for situations when carrying the D3 with its big, heavy glass just won’t do)

Now for all intents and purposes, I think this is a pretty decent shot – though a little underexposed. My goal, however, is to bring back the color, vibrance, and “pop” that the early morning sun cast on this little corner of the park.

For a little background, I’m a Lightroom convert. I used to post-process all of my images in Photoshop. Since Lightroom hit the scene, I’d estimate less than 10% actually make the trip out of Lightroom over to Adobe’s flagship application. For me, the decision is all about efficiency, and that’s the name of the game in Lightroom. The steps I’m about to outline, took me a little less than a minute from start to finish. The order of these steps sometimes varies, but these are the “basics” I do to almost all of my “keepers”.

Step 1: Correct White Balance

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 1

I’ve read a great deal of discussion regarding “correct” vs. “incorrect” white balance. For those of you that read my blog, you’ve heard me say that I believe “correct” is always in the eyes of the photographer. For me, finding the right color temperature involves using the WB tool in Lightroom to sample a number of target grays and finding the one that, I feel, reflects the mood that I’m trying to convey in the photograph. In this particular picture, I wanted a little more warmth than what the camera captured, which I found in the gray at the center of the rock in the upper left corner.

Step 2: Exposure Adjustment

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 2

As I mentioned earlier, I felt that this image was a little underexposed from what I remembered, so I bumped up the overall exposure about three-quarters of a stop.

Step 3: Tone Curve – Contrast Adjustment

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 3

In Lightroom, the Tone Curve sliders give quick and easy access to adjusting ranges of tones.  At this point, I wanted to bring the water from the waterfall and the rock on the bottom of the stream up a little relative to the shadows and mossy undersides of the rocks, so I bumped up the “Highlights” and “Lights” a bit. I didn’t, however, want to dramatically change the overall relative contrast too much, so I brought the low-to-mid range “Darks” up a hair as well.

Step 4: More Exposure “Tweaking”

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 4

I often do a little dance back and forth between steps 3 and 4 to get the proper balance of exposure and contrast. Here in step four, using Lightroom’s “Fill Light” and “Blacks” sliders bring out a little more of the detail (particularly in the moss) that I didn’t achieve using the Tone Curve adjustments.

Step 5: Adding Pop

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 5

Consider this step optional, and let me take a slight mental detour. Lightroom offers three “Presence” sliders, which we all know and love… Clarity, Vibrance, and Saturation. These guys have the power to dramatically affect a photos representation of “reality” – and I, for one, am NOT ashamed to use them. In this step, I’ve added some “pop” to the image by bumping up Clarity and Vibrance. Generally speaking, I use these two to add a little flavor, and Saturation to mellow things down if I go overboard.

Step 6: Fine Tuning Color

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 6

Some of my favorite tools in Lightroom are the Detailed Color Adjustment sliders. Here I’ve continued to “tweak” the image to achieve the vibrancy of colors I remembered from that morning. My other favorite use for these sliders is eliminating color cast that I’ve introduced by pushing other adjustments in Lightroom.

Step 7: Finishing Touches

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - Step 7

The finishing touches most common for all of my work are Sharpening and Vignetting. Zooming in on the moss, I applied an appropriate boost of sharpening to bring out edge detail while minimizing edge artifacts. When it comes to vignetting, I want to personally thank the folks at Adobe that added “Post-Crop” vignetting in Lightroom 2. I’ve used a slight post-crop vignette to bring the viewers focus in on the waterfall at the center of the scene.

And last but not least… the final shot.

Jason D. Moore Photography Workflow Friday with Rob Jones - After

I’ll note that I’ve left off a number of the other cool things (Adjustment Brush, Graduated Filters, etc.) that Lightroom makes available. Though I love them, I’ve personally found that the amount of time I spend “messing with” my photos goes up exponentially if I’m not careful to use them sparingly. As a result, I follow the basic process I’ve outlined here for most of my pictures, and save the more advanced tools for the shots I want to give some extra attention.

One closing thought about developing your own workflow.  Make sure that the end of your workflow involves sharing your photos with others. It doesn’t matter if you’re a novice or a pro, sharing your photos with others will provide healthy criticism and (if you choose your audience well) positive affirmation – both of which will help you continue to grow as a photographer. And with that, thank you, sincerely, for the opportunity to share my work with you.

All the best, Rob

Thanks Rob!  Check out more from Rob by visiting his blog today!

If you enjoyed this edition of Workflow Fridays, please help keep this and our other great Photoshop & Photography series going by becoming a sponsor today! You can sponsor an individual series or support the blog as a whole with a banner in the sidebar or leaderboard. Find out how!


Photoshop Interview: Larry Becker

Photoshop Interviews

NAPP Executive Director Larry Becker

This month I sit down with NAPP Executive Director Larry Becker to talk about Photoshop, NAPP, and the community of users from around the world that has built up because of this software.

Jason D. Moore Photography: First off, welcome! Thank you for taking the time to sit down with me. Let’s start off with some background. Tell me about yourself – where you come from, a little history about life before NAPP, education, personally, etc. If you would, include what brought you to NAPP and to your current position.

Larry Becker: I’ve been in advertising and marketing as the owner of my own small shop in central Florida, and I’ve been a public speaker since my first post-college job with United Way. It was at United Way that I started down the path to what I’m doing today, though I never would have guessed it back then. I was there for 5 years and my job required speaking in front of groups of 5 to 500 people. The other part of my job was layout and design of all of the printed materials for the local United Way. Ironically, because of my background and early adoption of desktop publishing, I wound up teaching PageMaker and Quark Express after hours to all of the local print shops in the county.

After my stint with United Way, I started my own small ad agency and when the web started to explode commercially, and became a part of business marketing, I was an early adopter and provider. About 2 years into the web marketing thing, I followed another one of my early adopter passions, and made the first ever, Palm Pilot training video. The Palm training thing was just a fun side business and I only intended to post the videos for sale on the web, which I did. But the response was so overwhelming that I sold my web marketing firm and went on the road as a Palm PDA trainer. Luckily for me, Palm thought their devices were so simple nobody needed video training or live seminar training on their devices, so I was cleaning up. I had clients like Pepsi, GE, the National Association of Realtors, Lawrence Livermore National Labs, Sony, and eventually even Palm, Inc. hired me to come to their headquarters and teach their own employees how to best use their device!

The entire time I had the Palm training business, I was doing my own marketing and stayed up on the latest developments with Photoshop. I attended a 1-day seminar put on by Scott Kelby and his partner, and sponsored by their magazine, Mac Today. I became fast friends with Scott and his partner Jim and, as it turned out, Scott and I grew up a block apart from one another and had lots of friends in common. I helped my buddies with their fledgling magazine by distributing copies to Mac User Groups, by taking time off from my Palm training business to work at their 1-day seminars, and eventually by becoming their web editor for the magazine as it went national and became Mac Design magazine.

During those years their business was growing and they asked me several times to consider leaving my Palm gig and working for them full time. I kept taking time off from my Palm job to help them with their growing Photoshop training business and eventually began to help them with hosting duties at Photoshop World conventions. Even though I wasn’t really working for what is now the Kelby Media Group, I was always at their events and writing for their magazines. Around the time the Palm popularity began to fade and smartphones were taking their place, I was starting the difficult task of exploring totally new markets, because Palm PDA users weren’t automatically smartphone users, so my customer base was changing dramatically. It was then (3 and a half years ago) that Scott and the partners offered me the job of Executive Director of NAPP. As a charter member and unofficial part-time employee, I made the jump to join the group full time and haven’t looked back. I love working with these crazy folks!

JDMP: Though you are known to a wider audience through your weekly NAPP News segments, you are more of a behind the scenes kind of guy making things run smoothly. Tell us about your current position and what your job entails, both the day-to-day and on a larger scale.

LB: Well, essentially I do whatever I can to make the member experience of NAPP better. I do a mix of customer service, arranging discounts, marketing messaging, program development, and in order to stay in touch with members on a user level, I even do occasional training tutorials.

JDMP: As a person who has worked with Photoshop regularly over the years you’ve had a chance to witness tremendous growth and advancement, what have been some of your favorite features/tools/etc. over the lifespan of the software?  Obviously it’s an evolving program, but is there anything you thought was unnecessary or wasn’t done quite right, even if it was updated or will probably change in a future version?

LB: I have been using Photoshop long enough to remember how thrilled I was when they added layers. I remember being excited about the ability to add noise to images or parts of images to help them blend with other images. And it seems like there’s a lot I’m thrilled about in Photoshop every time the software revs. As far as being critical of Photoshop features that weren’t or aren’t exactly what I’d wish, I’ve got to defer to the high-end power users like Scott Kelby and Dave Cross. I love thinking of myself as a power user but because of how I use the software, I don’t really have time to contemplate how Photoshop might be better if only they would… Scott and Dave do that because it’s so directly tied to their job. I try to use my creative thinking for things like, ‘NAPP could be better if we would only…’

JDMP: What effect has Photoshop had on the creative community? How has it helped? And have you seen any ways in which it may even get in the way of our creative process?

LB: There’s no question that Photoshop is the tool of choice for graphics and for photo retouching, so as capabilities are added to the software and as tutorials are developed to show the masses how various ‘hot techniques’ are done, that there has been a solid progression and continuing improvement in the world of visual imagery. Overall it’s a good thing and with clever artists, photographers, and designers constantly creating new effects, as well as Adobe and 3rd parties always enhancing Photoshop’s capabilities, there are bound to be continued improvements. And certainly, when powerful tools of any type become available to a wider audience, there are bound to be big, ugly visual mistakes that assault the viewer. It’s a tradeoff, but the balance sheet is heavily weighted toward more quality from more people and better images for everyone.

JDMP: Speaking of the creative community, I know a large part of your job is to connect with and support the NAPP community. Are there any stories that stick out for you that illustrate the kind of community that has grown up around this piece of software?

LB: Wow! There are hundreds of them and I read about individual success stories every day in our NAPP member forums. It’s a place where people meet in our virtual community and sharing ideas and success. And since they’re NAPP’s forums, I read and contribute ideas and answers there almost daily.

There have been lots of different types of successes at all levels, but one that really stands out is the story of a member named Lisa Sage. She is a gifted, classically trained painter who had to give up her love of painting because of a reaction the chemicals. A friend told her about Photoshop and while she was investigating Photoshop, she discovered the Wacom tablet and was sure she wanted to get back into art in this new medium. I love Lisa’s story (we’ve even run it as a story in our magazine) because she’s a perfect example of a hard-working, gifted artist who has taken full advantage of everything NAPP offers our members.

Lisa learned from our tutorials and constantly contacted our Help Desk to get good at Photoshop. She lurked in the member forums for over a year before posting questions and answers but now she’s a regular there who contributes help, answers and even tutorials. She regularly uploaded her works to our member portfolios so I had seen and been impressed by her work, so when I met her at a Photoshop World convention in Boston a couple years back, I commented how great her imagers were. Up to that point, she hadn’t done anything commercially using Photoshop, but just seven months later she called me and let me know what was going on.

She had a 4’x5’ gallery print hanging in a Boca Raton, Florida gallery (she lives in Maine), she was painting matte paintings for a theater-released motion picture, and she was selected as the still artist for the release of a Spider Man video game’s ad campaign. And while she worked hard and applied for lots of freelance work, she let me know that most of the folks who hired her had originally found out about her because THEY were NAPP forum users too. Heck, Lisa is kind of our NAPP poster-child artist.

JDMP: NAPP has been at the forefront of Photoshop education and has resourced so many of us in unique and entertaining ways. It has also been an advocate for members providing benefits and challenges to help us do what we love to do. What’s next for NAPP? Are there areas that you are exploring for growth? Any new and exciting projects coming down the pike?

LB: Well, we certainly do have some new ideas and we’re working on reaching new markets, but I’ve got to take the Apple corporate approach to this answer and say that we can’t discuss any new programs until they’re officially announced. Still, there are programs that are already out there, which lots of folks don’t know about. For example, we’re always talking about the fact that members get free shipping with B&H photo, and that we have the whole Apple store, but with lower prices for our members… and every single time I go to a 1-day seminar, I meet NAPP members who have never heard about those discounts! It’s amazing to me. And if they don’t know about the discounts, I’m sure they miss things like the fact that we have a whole library of around 1,000 videos, each 30-60 seconds long, that simply explain a single menu item or terminology of Photoshop. It’s an amazing library we call the How to Education Library for Photoshop (H.E.L.P.) and that doesn’t even include our 450+ tutorial videos that are 5 minutes or so each, which teach beginning through advanced Photoshop techniques.

JDMP: Working with Scott, Dave, Matt, Corey, and RC everyday – as well as the tremendous team that we often don’t see – it must be just an awesome work environment. And you must have some great stories to tell! What’s it like working in a place that is filled with such creative individuals?

LB: It’s awesome. I worked for myself for more than a decade before joining this team, and I thought I’d never work for anybody but myself again. But this company/family is so amazing that I like it better than working for myself. Still, there’s a lot more to my answer than just that.

As you know, Scott Kelby has a guest blogger every Wednesday on his amazingly popular Photoshop Insider blog. When I had a chance to write up a story for him, I did a complete behind-the-scenes thing. If you’d like to see it, there’s a link here: http://www.scottkelby.com/blog/2008/archives/1912

JDMP: I know you led a photowalk back in August as part of Scott’s Worldwide Photowalk, but I’m not sure many people have seen your photography. Do you get a chance to do any personal shooing in the midst of your schedule? Is there a place we can go to see your work?

LB: Well, the quick answer is that I have a few items in my NAPP portfolio here:
http://www.photoshopuser.com/members/portfolios/view/gallery/67554

Larry Becker

Larry Becker

JDMP: My last question is always the same. What would you like to say that I haven’t given you a chance to say?

LB: First of all, thanks. Obviously I love having a chance to talk about NAPP any time I can, and not because I’ve been here for nearly 4 years. I love NAPP because I’ve been a member for 11 years (since the beginning) and I used the resources NAPP made available to me as an artist, designer, and photographer. It’s one of the easiest $99 I ever spent because it paid me back so many times over with savings, education, and keeping me ahead of my competitors. — It’s like cheating off the smart kid’s paper in Photoshop class, without the guilt. — With the recent economic news, people are watching every penny they spend and I’m thrilled that so many members understand that they need to renew because NAPP helps them make more money or save production time, or both. That’s a strong testament to NAPP’s value.

But the one thing I haven’t mentioned yet that really keeps NAPP on track is our members. They help one another. And they help us by telling us what they want and what they need. It’s a great symbiotic relationship… we need members for NAPP to be successful, and our members tell us what they need from us in order to succeed. The formula has helped us become the largest image-related association in the world and even though we’re 11 years old, it feels like we’re just getting started.

JDMP: Thanks for taking the time to sit down with us!

For more information or to become a member yourself, please visit the NAPP site at photoshopuser.com today!

*****
Towner Jones Photography, LLCPhotoshop Interviews is brought to you in part by Towner Jones Photography, LLC. Check out all of the great things Rob is doing over there!

If you would like to sponsor Photoshop Interviews or any of our other regular series, or if you would like to advertise with us, visit our Become a Sponsor page today!


P&P Weekly: #109

Welcome to week #109 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

There are many opportunities available for sponsoring of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” page now!

On the 4th

It’s that time again! On the 4th of each month throughout the year I invite you to take a photo and send it in. Join me and other photographers from around the world in documenting a day in the life, of sorts. For full details, take a look at our introductory post. And since today is February 4th, get out there with your cameras and shoot something!

Monthly Photo Contests

Thank you again to everyone who participated in the January Photo Contest! It was really tough with all of the amazing shots that were submitted. The February Photo Contest is running now! So enter your shots for your chance to win a $25 B&H Gift Card!

Full details can be found on our Monthly Photo Contest post and you can submit your shot(s) to our Monthly Photo Contest Flickr Group.  

Workflow Fridays

Every other Friday, we will welcome a new guest blogger that will share their personal workflow with all of us. They will take one of their own photos and walk us through the how’s and why’s of their post-processing techniques so that we might learn and expand our own workflows.

This Friday we will be having a very cool guest who will surely inspire all of us, photographer Joey L! He’s guest-blogging over on Scott’s blog today, but it’s only a prelude to his appearance here. Scott’s blog is just the opening act, if you will. (I don’t really mean that Scott, really.)

If you would like to participate in this new series, please email me or leave a comment!

Photoshop Interviews

Coming on Monday is my interview with NAPP Executive Director Larry Becker!

Geographic Composition

Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #47 – Frbruary 13: “Round”
  • Week #48 – February 27: “Contasts”
  • Week #49 – March 13: “Wood”
  • Week #50 - March 27: Contributor’s Favorites

More details about Geographic Composition. 

Monthly Desktop Calendars

I am offering special desktop wallpaper calendars. These desktop calendars will feature my personal photography as well as a listing of holidays and important dates. I offer these wallpaper calendars in a variety of sizes to accommodate a number of screen resolutions.

February’s Calendar is now available! Get Your Monthly Desktop Calendar Today!

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #107

Welcome to week #107 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

It’s been an exciting couple of weeks here at Jason D. Moore Photography! I’ve seen a dramatic increase in readers and I’d like to start off by welcoming all of the newcomers! I would also like to thank those of you who have linked here, particularly about Part I of the John Nack interview. It is very much appreciated!

There has been some growth on the sponsorship front! As I announced last week, the Photoshop Interviews series is now sponsored in part by Towner Jones Photography and there has been interest in sponsorships for other ongoing projects which will be announced once the details are finalized.

If you are interested in becoming a sponsor of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” page to find out how!

Also this week, and I realize it might’ve gotten lost in the midst of all of the inaugural excitement, I am now offering my photographic prints for sale! Not only will you now be able to own a piece of my work you can get it for a discounted rate for a limited time! Scroll down to yesterday’s post for more details!

On the 4th - Send your photos in today!

On the 4th of each month throughout the year I invite you to take a photo and send it in. Join me and other photographers from around the world in documenting a day in the life, of sorts. For full details, take a look at our introductory post. If you shot something on January 4th, send me your images today so they will be included in the project!

Monthly Photo Contests

Full details can be found on our Monthly Photo Contest post and you can submit your shot(s) to our Monthly Photo Contest Flickr Group.  

Workflow Fridays

Every other Friday, we will welcome a new guest blogger that will share their personal workflow with all of us. They will take one of their own photos and walk us through the how’s and why’s of their post-processing techniques so that we might learn and expand our own workflows.

This Friday we will be welcoming photographer Jeff Revell of PhotoWalkPro as he shares his Lightroom workflow.

If you would like to participate in this new series, please email me or leave a comment!

Photoshop Interviews

Part II of my interview with Photoshop Hall of Fame inductee and Principal Project Manager for Adobe Photoshop and Bridge (and Friend-of-the-Blog) John Nack is coming soon!

Geographic Composition

Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #46 – January 30: “Shadows”
  • Week #47 – Frbruary 13: “Round”
  • Week #48 – February 27: “Contasts”
  • Week #49 – March 13: “Wood”
  • Week #50 - March 27: Contributor’s Favorites

More details about Geographic Composition. 

Monthly Desktop Calendars

Starting in January I am offering special desktop wallpaper calendars. These desktop calendars will feature my personal photography as well as a listing of holidays and important dates. I offer these wallpaper calendars in a variety of sizes to accommodate a number of screen resolutions. The January Desktop Calendars are up now and February’s will be posted next week.

Get Your Monthly Desktop Calendar Today!

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #106

POST 850!

Welcome to week #106 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly! 

I’d like to extend a special welcome to our newest sponsor, Towner Jones Photography! Friend-of-the-Blog Rob Jones of Towner Jones Photography will be a sponsor of the Photoshop Interviews series throughout 2009! I’m really excited to announce this new partnership and I invite you to head over to his blog and check out all the great things Rob is doing over there!

If you are interested in becoming a sponsor of one of our weekly or monthly series, or if you would like to be a sponsor of the blog as a whole, please take a minute to review our “Become a Sponsor” post.

Monthly Photo Contests

Full details can be found on our Monthly Photo Contest post and you can submit your shot(s) to our Monthly Photo Contest Flickr Group.  

Workflow Fridays

Every other Friday, we will welcome a new guest blogger that will share their personal workflow with all of us. They will take one of their own photos and walk us through the how’s and why’s of their post-processing techniques so that we might learn and expand our own workflows.

If you would like to participate in this new series, please email me or leave a comment!

Photoshop Interviews

Part II of my interview with Photoshop Hall of Fame inductee and Principal Project Manager for Adobe Photoshop and Bridge (and Friend-of-the-Blog) John Nack is coming soon! After a few hiccups with his computer, John is getting back up to speed and we’ll have the rest posted soon.

On the 4th

On the 4th of each month throughout the year I invite you to take a photo and send it in. Join me and other photographers from around the world in documenting a day in the life, of sorts. For full details, take a look at our introductory post. If you shot something on January 4th, be sure to send me your images by next week for inclusion in this project!

Geographic Composition

Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #45 – January 16: “Green”
  • Week #46 – January 30: “Shadows”
  • Week #47 – Frbruary 13: “Round”
  • Week #48 – February 27: “Contasts”
  • Week #49 – March 13: “Wood”
  • Week #50 - March 27: Contributor’s Favorites

More details about Geographic Composition. 

Monthly Desktop Calendars

Starting in January I am offering special desktop wallpaper calendars. These desktop calendars will feature my personal photography as well as a listing of holidays and important dates. I offer these wallpaper calendars in a variety of sizes to accommodate a number of screen resolutions. The January Desktop Calendars are up now and February’s will be posted towards the end of the month.

Get Your Monthly Desktop Calendar Today!

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the top half (A-J) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


Photoshop Interview: John Nack

photoshop-interviews

John Nack

To kick off our new series of Photoshop Interviews, where better to start than Adobe? Today we welcome Principal Project Manager for Adobe Photoshop & Bridge, and Photoshop Hall of Famer, John Nack.

Jason D. Moore Photography: First off, welcome John! It’s an honor to have you with us. Why don’t you start off by telling us a little bit about your background both Educationally and Professionally?

John Nack: I graduated from the University of Notre Dame with a degree in history–which has nothing whatsoever to do with Web design or product management, the two things I’ve done professionally.

I’ve loved drawing since I was little, and when I saw the first Macintosh at my friend’s birthday party in 1984, it completely blew my mind.  I finally talked my parents into getting an Apple IIgs in the late 80’s, and in college I taught myself Web technologies while helping professors put their coursework online.  My job at AGENCY.COM New York (‘98-2000) gave me intensive hands-on design and production experience, and it introduced me to folks from Adobe, Macromedia, and other tech companies.  My desire to improve Flash production led me to Adobe in 2000 to work on LiveMotion.

JDMP: What is your current job? And could you describe for us a little bit of what that entails?

JN: You know, I’m never really clear on what it is I do, except that it seems to involve an awful lot of email. :-)

In a nutshell I try to figure out what people need (and hence will pay for), and then I work with the team to get that built.  That means talking to customers via a variety of means (blogs, forums, face-to-face meetings, etc.) and working with the team to keep making feature decisions and refining priorities.  There’s also an enormous amount of semi-random work (answering press inquiries, supporting tradeshows and user groups, and so forth).

JDMP: Photoshop has come a long way since version 1, with many milestones along the way (layers, adjustment layers, smart objects, HDR, etc). For you, what have been some of the most significant advances over the life of the software? Any missteps?

JN: I think the greatest hits are pretty obvious: Layers, the History palette, re-editable type, the Healing Brush, and Camera Raw jump to mind.  Save for Web and ImageReady were pretty huge for me in my past life.

As for missteps, I’ve certainly championed things that it *seems* people should love, but which go largely unused (e.g. Layer Comps, the How To content under the Help menu).  I sometimes say that there are problems people have & problems people will let you solve.  The latter set is much smaller than the former.

A certain set of things like Smart Objects and customizability are underused, but I think that’s because we haven’t yet finished what we started.  Sometimes you have to build a house brick by brick, and the whole thing looks a little silly until it’s complete.

JDMP:  There have been a lot of new arenas in which Photoshop has delved, especially starting with CS3 Extended. What was the motivation for developing areas of Photoshop with the medical and scientific fields in mind?

JN: Well, from very early on Photoshop has been used by people outside the traditional core markets (photography, graphic design, etc.).  I remember reading about an early version where Mark Hamburg bumped up the maximum document dimensions to 30,000×30,000 pixels at the request of government users (the CIA, if I remember right) who were processing satellite imagery.

He figured “That ought to hold them for a while”–and it did.  Of course, years later we raised the limits again by 100x, and I’m sure that’ll happen again someday.

In any case, even though we were aware of these specialized uses of Photoshop, each market was too small to justify a lot of direct investment. That is, we couldn’t justify making their needs a priority at the expense of more broadly applicable features.  Photoshop Extended gives us a chance to say, “Here’s a version that adds just the kind of things you’ve requested.”

We don’t market it as “Photoshop Pro” or “Photoshop Premium,” i.e. as the version that everyone would buy if money were no object.  Instead we try to present it as a version that extends beyond Photoshop in some targeted ways.

JDMP:  In a related question, what is the process for including new features? How do you determine what’s in and what has to wait for the next version?

JN: I’d love to tell you that the process is simple or straightforward, but it’s more complex than that.  At the front of our minds, of course, is the feedback we’re getting from customers.  The thing is, we get so many more good requests than we’d ever have time to address that we have to consider other factors.

Various engineers have specific skill sets, so it’s not always possible to mix and match.  Some people are great at user interface code, others at math (HDR, warping, etc.), others at deep software architecture, and so on.  We also need to make time to keep improving the Photoshop architecture and requests/requirements established by the Suite.  And, of course, sometimes feature work goes faster than expected, sometimes slower, so we’re constantly adjusting plans.

At the end of the day we have to deliver a release that’s a good mix of power for a wide range of customers.  Otherwise it just won’t entice customers to upgrade.

*****
Thanks again to John for being our first guest as part of the Photoshop Interviews Series here at Jason D. Moore Photography! We’ll have “Part II” of the conversation in the coming days.

For more information about John Nack and his work at Adobe you can visit his blog, John Nack on Adobe, at http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack.

And be sure to come back on Monday, February 9th when I sit down with NAPP Executive Director Larry Becker!

*****
Towner Jones Photography, LLCAlso, we welcome a new sponsor for the Photoshop Interviews series, Towner Jones Photography! If you would like to become a sponsor of this, or any other series here at Jason D. Moore Photography, please visit our “Become a Sponsor” page to find out how!


P&P Weekly: #104

Welcome to edition #104 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

Apologies once again for being late with last week’s P&P Weekly. Instead of seeing this as a late edition, I like to look at is as a “special bonus holiday edition” - or something more festive than “late.” If it really upsets you that it’s late, I mean REALLY upsets you, we’ll call this the “Festivus Edition” and you can use the comments section as the forum for the annual “Airing of Grievances” – just don’t for get to bring your pole!

It’s been an exciting week here at the blog. After an unexpected email from one of our fellow members at just the right time a number of ideas for where to take the blog in the New Year sprang into my mind and it’s been a flurry of activity at “P&P Central” ever since.

I know I’ve been throwing out teasers for awhile now about what’s coming but you won’t have to wait much longer. The first of, count ‘em, six new features/series will be on Wednesday following tomorrow’s regular installment of The P&P Weekly.

Until then, just sit back, relax, and read on!

The Geographic Composition series is now open to anyone who would like to contribute. A special welcome to our newest participants! And I hope some of you are inspired to join us next time. Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #44 – January 2: “Moving Parts”
  • Week #45 – January 16: “Green”

More details about Geographic Composition.

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #102

Welcome to week #102 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

Sorry it’s taken me so long to get to this week’s P&P Weekly. It’s been a crazy time all around with work for both Kim and I and we’ve been feeling pretty burned out. I hope you’ve been enjoying some of my London and Paris shots in the meantime.

Thank you to those who responded to my reader survey a few weeks back. I tried to incorporate a few of the suggestions right away and there are still a few that I am mulling over for how best to revive or retool other aspects of the blog. I always welcome your input and hope that if you have ideas you will leave a comment or drop me an email.

There are a few ideas rattling around in my head of some new personal projects that I will be working into my regular schedule of posts that will start popping up towards the end of the month. So be on the lookout to see what’s cooking!

The Geographic Composition series is now open to anyone who would like to contribute. A special welcome to our newest participants! And I hope some of you are inspired to join us next time. Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #43 – December 16: “Signs of the Season”
  • Week #44 – January 2: “Moving Parts”

More details about Geographic Composition.

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #100!!!

Welcome to week #100 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

That’s right! last week we hit 800 posts and today marks the centennial edition of The P&P Weekly!

Thank you to each and every member of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll for helping make this publication, and the community as a whole, what it is. And a very big thank you to Andy Smith of Visual Realia, our longest standing member who has been with us since P&P Weekly #3. Andy, your support has meant a lot!

The Geographic Composition series is now open to anyone who would like to contribute. A special welcome to our newest participants! And I hope some of you are inspired to join us next time. Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #42 – December 1: “The Letter Q”
  • Week #43 – December 16: “Signs of the Season”

More details about Geographic Composition.

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #98

Welcome to week #98 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

As I mentioned in last week’s P&P Weekly, to make each edition more manageable, I have split the Blogroll roughly in half and will now be alternating coverage between the two groups (A-J and L-W). I think this will make things a bit easier and help ensure that there will, in fact, be a posting each week.

I also noted last time that I am reinstating a policy I had once held regarding members who haven’t been posting on a regular basis. I do not revoke membership in The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll but I want to be sure that visitors are being linked to members who maintain regularly updated blogs.

Therefore, I will take your blog’s name off of the list – hiding it from view, not deleting it – if I see that your blog has been idle for more than 2 months. I monitor most of the member blogs with Bloglines so I should notice when you begin posting again, but if you notice that you are not being covered even though you have returned to posting, please let me know so I can show your blog in the list once again.

The Geographic Composition series, as seen last Friday, is now open to anyone who would like to contribute. A special welcome to our newest participants! And I hope some of you are inspired to join us next time. Our upcoming themes – and their posting dates – are:

  • Week #41 – November 14: “Old Numbers”
  • Week $42 – December 1: “The Letter Q”

More details about Geographic Composition.

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in the bottom half (L-W) of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #96 – Part Two

Welcome to week #96 - Part Two of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

I know this one is in a similar vain as yesterday’s photowalk shot, but I really liked how in this case, the orange and yellow leaves played off of the green background in a similar way as they did with the blue in the shot from last time.

I’m still making my way through my shots from the photowalk and will have a post later this week with all of my favorites from the day, including those featured in these P&P Weekly posts. So be sure to stop back to check them out.

As promised, we are now opening up the Geographic Composition series to anyone who would like to contribute. Our upcoming themes – and their posring dates – are:

  • Week #40 – October 31: “Autumn”
  • Week #41 – November 14: “Old Numbers”

More details about Geographic Composition.

In the meantime…

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


Guest Blogging at Towner Jones Photography

Friend-of-the-Blog Rob Jones of Towner Jones Photography is featuring me today as part of his new guest blogger series. I’ve never been a guest blogger before and it’s a really cool thing to be asked to step in and offer my thoughts to his audience. So a huge ‘thank you’ goes out to Rob for the invitation and I hope I do the series justice with my contribution.

I put together a post about how creative vision and visual storytelling is more important than what type of camera you use or if you have the latest and greatest software package. So, in lieu of a post here, please head on over to Towner Jones Photography to check out what I have to say on the subject and be sure to take a look around at all of the other great things Rob has over there.

And Rob, Thanks Again!


P&P Weekly: #95

Welcome to week #95 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

First off, our next photowalk on October 18th is coming fast and there is still plenty of room! Drop me a line to let me know if you’re planning to attend. We’re hoping to have a count by the end of the week, so please sign up today! Full details can be found on our photowalk page.

For those of you keeping track, and I don’t know why you would, this is post #775 here at Jason D. Moore Photography and at some point today we’ll be hitting 38,000 unique visitors sine mid-September 2007! Also, as of this post, we are on the verge of hitting 70 member blogs! Very Cool!

For those interested in my day job, I just launched the new skin for one of the company’s websites: RunWorldwide.com. It has certainly been my largest project to date in this position and it’s cool to see it finally out there. I know of a couple of things that still need to be tweaked but I think it’s a great step forward from how it used to look. By the way, there are tons of great running shoes, apparel and accessories available, if you’re interested.

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #94

Welcome to week #94 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.


P&P Weekly: #93

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Welcome to week #93 of The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll’s P&P Weekly!

As I wrote last week, we’ve scheduled our next Binghamton-area photowalk for Saturday October 18th. Full details can be found by visiting the photowalk page above.

Click here to become a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. A great resource for training, tips, and connecting with other creatives.

And as always, take a moment to grab one of the chicklet links to show your support for this blog and, for blogroll members, be sure to pick up your P&P Blogroll Member badge link.

Finally, here are some of my favorites from what’s been happening in The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll:

Please be sure to visit the great blogs of our other members found in the sidebar. And if you would like to be considered for The Photoshop & Photography Blogroll, email Jason.