I’m considering getting this as a 20×30″ print for our living room – I think I may have caught Kat‘s ‘thing’ for moss.
I’m considering getting this as a 20×30″ print for our living room – I think I may have caught Kat‘s ‘thing’ for moss.
Clearing at Rufford Abbey Park in Nottinghamshire.
Kat has an awesome camera satchel from Porteen Gear that she uses to carry her various cameras around with her when we’re out and about. Satchel-type bags are great for photographers because they allow easy access to your gear. I personally use LowePro rucksacks for carting my gear around (currently a CompuDay Photo 250 and a Fastpack 350), as I’m usually travelling with more than just my camera. If anyone has any particular preferences then I’d […]
Tram stop at The Forest, Nottingham.
I have decided to start a photoblog on danfoy.com. See the post on the main blog for more information. Click the image to view it larger. This one is from Sherwood Forest, Nottingham, on a recent trip with Kat.
I take photographs all the time, but you wouldn’t know it from looking at this site. For the past 6 months or so I’ve been reserving the blog for more substantial, wordier posts, and I’ve been posing my images to Facebook, and occasionally to various accounts on sites such as Flickr and 500px, whilst the galleries on here become more and more outdated.
So, I spent the majority of yesterday coding a photoblog section for my site. I’m proud to say that I managed the whole thing without needing to resort to plugins, which may have broken compatibility down the line, and the process was useful upskilling for another attempt at fixing some long-standing backend issues on another blog that I’m a part of.
I’ll be posting a mixture of new and old material, at least initially, to build up the section. At the moment the posts themselves are formatted similarly to the normal blog, but I’ll be changing the images to appear larger by default on a future update.
WordPress 3.5 was released a fortnight ago, and along with it a new gallery system. The new system works significantly better with tablets than the old Fancybox system that I was using. Fantastic! Check out this new gallery for a demonstration (click on images to view them in the new full-screen gallery view). A couple of weeks ago, after a day spent revisiting old negatives and fawning over prints, it struck me that I was becoming […]
My partner Kat and I recently moved into our first non-student home together, in Nottingham. I’m from Derby, which is a half hour drive away, and Kat is from Wellingborough, which is around an hour on the train. Nottingham was an obvious choice for a couple of reasons: it’s the city in which we studied together, it’s a great city in its own right, and it’s also where the highest concentration of our friends live.
There are essentially two ways to surround yourselves with photographs in a new home: prints, and albums. I love both, but they function very differently.
Prints | Albums and books |
|
|
Photographs are important, and I like them to be printed large so that they become a dominating feature of the space. The problem is that printing and framing large photographs can be prohibitively expensive, so care must be taken in deciding which photographs (out of literally thousands) to commit to printing. In contrast, the main problem with photobooks is having enough images available to commit to the expense of printing and binding, without the images becoming incohesive.
Deciding on how to display photographs in our new home got me thinking about the benefits of presenting images in book format. My favourite photobook is American Power by Mitch Epstein, which Kat – in a small, isolated example of what an amazing girlfriend she is – bought me for Valentines day last year. American Power is 144 pages long, and requires a decent (but well-rewarded) investment in time to properly enjoy. It is beautifully printed on thick paper stock, hardbound, and lovely. It is expensive to print books like this, especially as a consumer and as a one-off.
It no longer has to be this way, however. I use Adobe Lightroom to catalog and process my photographs, and version 4 of Lightroom introduced the ability to produce elegant photobooks for publishing either through Blurb’s printing service, or – significantly – as a PDF or series of JPEG files. I decided to try this out by creating a short photobook based on yesterday’s trip to Attenborough Nature Reserve with Kat. Think of this as a self-contained section in a family photo album. The same principals should transfer nicely to short photographic projects.
Unfortunately the PDFs exported from Lightroom split each double page spread into separate pages. To get around this, I exported the book as separate JPEG files, and then recreated the book in InDesign CS3. The book I created, which is presented as double 10×8″ spreads, is embedded below. However, I recommend you download a copy in PDF format, for better quality.
Producing books in this way is quick and costs nothing, which means publishing photographic projects in book format no longer necessitates said projects being as epic a commitment as American Power. Expect more eBook mini-projects in the near future.