#584 Exposed! Photo Newsletter – Lightroom vs Photoshop?

Photoshop vs Lightroom

Digital photography was supposed to be easy! No more film. No more processing. Right?

In reality, modern photography now involves a tech-heavy process relying on processing power and software. And when we talk about photo software, really, we’re talking about Adobe’s cousins Photoshop and Lightroom.

In this month’s Exposed Photo Newsletter, we look at your software options, what to buy and when…

And this month we thank DaveAndrews.ca for supporting the Exposed! Photo Newsletter.

Dave Andrews - digital art and restoration

Dave Andrews - digital art and restoration

#583 Review – Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Two weeks ago, we brought photo and hockey enthusiasts to a big treat – we brought students to shoot the Ottawa 67s hockey team alongside mainstream media photographers. The Ottawa 67s beat the London Knights handily.

Ottawa Hockey Photo Workshop

Ottawa Hockey Photo Workshop © Alan Dunne

These teams are the next NHL stars. London’s goalie, Bobkov, won the Jr World Champs for Russia recently so the skill level is high and the players are hungry (ie work hard) to make an NHL team.

Hockey Photography Workshop

Hockey Photography Workshop Student

The photo course went well with students progressing nicely. We covered technical aspects, of course, but also encouraged our photographers to experiment with different lenses, styles, and subjects – not all the action is on the ice.

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class - © Barb M

Students excelled. See some of the photos from the hockey photo workshop throughout this post. Three students wrote about their experiences – read their posts – thanks Alan, Barb and Wayne!

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class - shooting with media: Valerie Wutti

And student’s loved the photo class:

Harry is a personable and gifted teacher, drawing upon a wealth of photographic and other life experience, and I thoroughly enjoyed the workshop.” 2011 student

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class © Wayne S

A big thanks must go out to the Ottawa 67s for providing access for the course. And thanks to Valerie Wutti, graduate of our first Hockey photo workshop, who now shoots the 67s fanblog at every home game, for encouraging the students.

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Ottawa Hockey Photo Student

Sign up for next year’s hockey photo workshop at the Ottawa 67s!

Ottawa Hockey Photo Class

Get close to the action on our Ottawa Hockey Photo Course!

#582 Where’s Harry!?

Ok, ok, this last week we have been slow on the blog posts.

I could tell you that I was on a fabulous photo assignment to capture northern Finnish ski culture.

Or that I was teaching a photo course in California’s Cascade Mountains.

But I was not!

ski photo

Whitewater ski vacation

I was in southern BC skiing myself silly.

I took a fun and relaxing ski break to visit friends and telemark ski some of the most fun ski hills out west.

I wanted to find low key ski hills that were far from the glitz of Whistler, Tremblant and geared towards skiing and local community, good snow and friends.

I wasn’t disappointed – the terrain made my quads burn, heart pound and my face smile. The people were small town friendly and old friends became new again.

ski photo

Whitewater Ski Photo

I spent almost a week in Nelson and Rossland in southern BC skiing at Whitewater and Red with friends. It was fun. Really fun.

So, Let’s see all the photos!!

Well, see, there’s the problem.

I was skiing. On vacation. Time off.

I have a few snapshots and I shot a little with medium and large format film for the photo art side of the business… but I went to ski.

Now it’s time to catch up.

ski photo

Whitewater ski vacation

#480 Oh no!

Yikes.

We had a bit of a fright. Wednesday night I went to check our blog to upload a new post and I got a dire warning (see below) about nasty things ON OUR site that could harm computers. I gasped!

We are a small-ish business with good intentions. Over almost 20 years we have worked hard to develop lots of goodwill in the community. Much of our new business comes from searches via Google and other search engines. This nasty hacked in code was not good for business. I was aghast!

After a late night of interventions, finding the hijacked-in code and resubmitting to Google we waited and, ta-daa, our site is live and safe to surf.

We apologize profusely for the nasty, scary messages. Our research discovered these tidbits from Google reports:

• “Over the past 90 days, harrynowell.com did not appear to function as an intermediary for the infection of any sites.

• “How did this happen?
In some cases, third parties can add malicious code to legitimate sites, which would cause us to show the warning message.

Thanks for your patience!

We now resume normal programming.

Yikes!

#476 The Future of Film cameras

I got an email from one of our photo course students, Prasad. He is looking at film cameras and is wondering about the future of film. He said:

Hey Harry- what do you think is the future of film in cameras? Will I still be able to buy a roll of film say 10 years from now? Is there a chance people will revert back to film or are we on this out-of-control digital train ride for ever…

My answer?

I believe film will always be available and used although it will be a small niche market. Film has qualities that digital does not and will always have an artistic market. Some photographers like Helene Anne Fortin still work exclusively in film.

I draw parallels between the digital-film transition and the colour-B&W transition when colour film became prominent years ago. When colour film became widespread B&W did not disappear. It has remained a prominent, although small, product. I believe the same will happen for film.

From a business perspective I believe digital rocketed to success partly because of camera manufacturer’s foresight and sales projections…

I’ll use Nikon as an example – Nikon developed their prominent ‘professional’ grade F series film cameras starting in 1959 with the F1.
The F2 came out in 1972.
F3 – 1980
F4 – 1988
F5 – 1996
F6 – 2004

That’s six camera redesigns in 45 years.

Cameras were made so well that people did not replace cameras very often. Fast forward to digital and Nikon has produced three ‘pro’ digital cameras (D1, D2, D3) in ten years and that number at least triples if you include all the versions: D1, D1H, D1x, etc.

Digital camera development allowed manufacturers to sell far more cameras… and what has that done to profits? Read this article from 2006 – “Canon and Nikon Profits Rise“:

It’s no wonder digital camera sales rocketed! I believe manufacturers saw dollar signs and set their sales and marketing machines to sell the ‘best new tools‘ in photography. “Gotta have one!” They were billed as money saving tools – “no film and processing!!

In reality, most photographers now recognize digital costs more when you include depreciation, increased expectations from clients, increased peripherals, etc.

Ok, ok, I am way off topic. What about the future of film?!

I believe that once digital camera sales taper off – I’d expect that in the next three to ten years as digital technology growth eases up – camera manufacturers will ‘rediscover’ film and there will be a renaissance in film cameras, film and processing partly because a market will be created to replace slowing digital sales.

What do you think? Visit Prasad’s Facebook page – Harry Nowell’s Alumni Photo club – Facebook log-in may be required – to see more ideas.

Photographed with a Nikon FM2 (film camera) that was produced from 1982-2001.

Photographed with a Nikon FM2 (film camera) that was produced from 1982-2001. Shot on film with minimal post processing - colours are enhanced slightly - that's it!