Thursday 27 March 2008
Photoshop Express Beta
Hey guys, just a quick heads up, the open beta of Adobe Photoshop Express, the Flex based Rich Internet Application (RIA) has gone live today. For those of you who can't afford full Photoshop, or don't need all the features, the free, online based Photoshop Express is a kind of cross between Adobe Bridge and Photoshop Elements. All you need to run it is a browser with the newest version of Flash 9.
So what's it like to use?
I took a test drive this morning, and the features are well explained with good tool tips and it functions almost exactly like a offline application.
You get a gallery, 2GB of webspace and all the fun of the digital editing playground with none of the entry fees. Only caveat is its open to US users only, so here in blighty it runs a little slow, and you are forced to lie on the sign up form, since the only country you can select is 'United States'. But they aren't mean enough to block non-US IP addresses, so feel free to fib for Britain. Oh, and if you're struggling to enter your email address, its set up for US keyboards. The @ symbol is actually shift-2, like on an apple mac.
I've been signed up and using it for a while now, and the editing is fantastic, the integration with picasa, facebook and photobucket is seamless, and the galleries are great.
Small issues arise when uploading 8MP images from my DSLR, it takes a while (but thats hardy the programs fault, I need a faster upload speed, and could have resized the pics beforehand), but the upload dialogue is brilliantly intuitive, shows you the upload progress of the current image, and you can put the currently uploading block into a new album automatically. I'd make the recommendation to only upload images around 1MB each in size, it'll keep things quicker. Since this is going to be used for online distribution and galleries, I don't really see the point of any image bigger than about 1280x1024 (unless you plan to crop extensively), so resize to that using a bulk resizer, then upload for editing.
I'd really like to see the ability to work with photos that have finished uploading before the whole upload is complete. If you upload in a block you have to wait for the whole block to complete before going on to edit them, some kind of stealthy background uploader would be really nice for those of us with really big pics. Oh, and there's a nice 'total % complete' bar, but no ETA.
The editing is quick and easy, with very obvious buttons down the left hand side. Instead of sliders and numbers, the program works out some presets for your image, then displays each option as a thumbnail, allowing you to choose how much each effect is applied. Also, as each effect is applied, the editor puts a checkbox next to every effect you've applied, allowing you to turn them on and off to check combinations, much like the layer blending options in full Photoshop. If all you want to do is crop and straighten the tools are there, and work very well, with plenty of options for aspect ratio, and a rule of thirds grid. Rotation works well too, but it can be a bit laggy on big images.
Oh, and another reason to upload smaller files, the previews generate quicker and the effects take much less time to apply on smaller images, and the files open for editing much faster.
Try it out, and especially look at the facebook integration, its fantastic. Oh, and for that 'editing like a pro' feel, hit the fullscreen button top right, its almost like an app you had to pay for!
Oh, and the best part? I've got this blog entry running in one tab in firefox, and now Photoshop in another. This is real 21st century stuff.
https://www.photoshop.com/express/
Wednesday 26 March 2008
Nissin Di622 Review
When Kenro first mentioned they were distributing Nissin flashguns in the UK again, I was mildly surprised, since I already own 2 Nissin 360TW's I bought on Ebay after getting into off camera lighting, courtesy of the excellent Strobist site, and since I hadn't seen anything about them, had assumed they were one of the many companies that failed during the digital revolution.
Now not only had they made a welcome return, but the product they have used to kick start it is a rather well specified and keenly priced flashgun, the Di622, with an RRP of £149. I've been looking for a nice Canon fit semi-pro flashgun for a while now, especially one I can use for off camera stuff as easily as on camera. With the built in manual settings, optical remote triggering and uncluttered interface I was hoping this could be exactly what I've been looking for.
I'll start with the technical specs, mainly taken from the Kenro site, but with some bits from the instructions and my own personal usage thrown in for extra flavour;
Specs
- Guide Number: 44m (144ft) at 105mm zoom ISO 100
- Zoom Head: 24mm- 105mm (auto set)
- ETTL and iTTL Auto Exposure
- Auto Zoom Function 24-105mm (16mm with diffusion panel supplied)
- Bounce and Rotating Head.
- Supplied with built-in wide angle diffuser and catch light reflector
- 6 step manual power (1/32nd - full power)
- Built in wireless remote flash slave (optical)
- Power source: 4-AA size batteries
- Recycle time of 6 Seconds with Alkaline batteries, 4 Seconds with NiMH Batteries
- Number of Flashes: Approx 200 (type of batteries not specified)
- AF Assist Light: High Power LED
- Energy Saving Modes
- Sleep mode: After 30 seconds
- Supports Slow Shutter Sync, Red Eye Reduction and Rear Curtain Sync on Nikon cameras only (according to the manual)
- Includes protective pouch and flash stand
The box it comes in is well sized and efficiently packed, containing the flash itself in a plastic wrapper inside the fabric pouch, and a two sided sheet-style manual in English and Japanese packed in a small compartment beneath with a hot shoe stand.
Accessories Included
The manual is in good English with the odd, but not uncommon spelling mistake where they've been a little ambitious (e.g. 'Nomenclature') and the odd grammatical error. It is perfectly readable, however and gives a good overview not just of the flashgun, but some good tips applicable to any flashgun, like using a fill in reflector and flash exposure locking. It has decent illustrations throughout, but no real life photos. There are tables at the end of the manual sheet with specs for things such as battery life (200-1500 flashes, apparently. At least they quoted the lower estimate on the website), flash duration and AF assist range. There is also a GN table giving the range at specified Power Levels and Zoom Positions.
The pouch is similar to the little pouches you get with ear bud headphones (especially Sony ones) and is well made, with a flocked fluffy exterior and a plasticy fabric interior. I'd be tempted to turn it inside out so the fluffy bit was on the inside, protecting the flash, but the normal lining seems soft enough. It has a little blue tag with 'Nissin' printed on it, and closes using two opposing string loops, relying on friction to keep it closed. It is more than big enough for the unit, possibly with a little room for gels or other thin accessories, but thats all.
The Stand is large and well made in solid plastic with the same matt surface effect as on the main unit. It almost looks like it has been made for a much larger, heavier unit, as it has a large stable footprint and would be very hard to push over with the unit attached, almost overkill for this small and lightweight flashgun. On the other hand, as one of the selling points is the off camera abilities of this flash, the stand is very useful as an off camera support. It has a metal tripod socket in the bottom, for mounting on a light stand or tripod, but those considering this probably have better brackets already. Nice to have it there, though.
The Flashgun
Right, on to the main point of the exercise. The flash itself is small and lightweight, even with batteries installed. In fact, it weighs about the same with 4 Alkaline batteries as an empty Canon 550EX. The battery door is fiddly to begin with, but becomes much easier with a small amount of practice and the battery orientation is very clearly indicated next to the slots. I can see with only small amounts of use that the batteries will be very quick to replace.
The rotating head is a little stiff initially, but should work more easily with use. There are no locking buttons, instead it relies on resistance to lock into specific positions (vertically 45, 60, 75 and 90 degrees, and horizontally 30, 60 and 90 degrees anticlockwise, and 30, 60, 90, 120, 150 and 180 degrees clockwise). It locks with a nice mechanical click in the horizontal direction, and a rather rubbery squeak in the vertical, but it still held very firmly. It will still fire in between the locking points, so you can in theory point it anywhere.
The flash has a diffusion screen and a pull out white reflector above the head, similar to the 580EX Canon models, which automatically set the zoom level to its lowest setting to give the most diffuse output. On the bottom it has a plastic shoe with a screwing ring-type lock, that seems to work very well, although it can be fiddly to tighten onto the stand provided.
The back is where the magic happens, but its surprising how easy it is to operate the major functions without the now-ubiquitous LCD panel. The power button (bottom right) turns on the unit when held down for 2 seconds, and another 3 second hold powers the unit off again. The mode button (bottom left) switches from the default TTL mode to the manual power mode, and subsequent presses cycle the power down the scale from highest to lowest power, then back to TTL. The Pilot button lights when the flash is ready to fire, but according to the manual the GN of the test fire is only 10m at ISO 100 (35mm setting) when in TTL mode. In Manual, it fires at the indicated power.
To activate the optical wireless slave, you hold the mode button for 3 seconds, and the manual power level will flash every second on the selected power setting. Power level selection is via the mode button, the same as with on camera use.
The most interesting part of the flash is the novel 'power saving' system, whereby the flash will automatically keep itself in a low power standby until the camera requires it. After 30 seconds of non use when attached to a camera, it drops into a 5 second 'blip' mode, where it keeps the capacitor charged and flashes the current mode every 5 seconds. If the flash isn't attached to a camera, or the camera is turned off or in standby, the flash will drop into this mode after only 5 seconds. It will then sit in this mode for up to 5 mins before turning itself off completely. However, this doesn't discharge the capacitor entirely, so powering back on takes only seconds as the capacitor is topped back up.
So is it the perfect flash?
Well, yes and no. There are a few niggles I've found so far:
There's no manual setting for the zoom level, its automatic in TTL or widest in Manual, thats it.
You can't power the flash off directly in its standby mode, you have to wake it up, then power it off.
The optical remote doesn't trigger from any old source, it only triggers using the TTL on board flash (or hot shoe flashgun) on the SLR. this means you can't use another flash to trigger it unless its on an SLR and TTL. I can't get it to trigger using the pilot test on my Nissin 360TW, for example. This might be good to avoid accidental discharges though. (Having said this, I am trying to get a Nikon specific flash to work with a Canon SLR, so it might just be that they won't talk properly).
Roundup
In conclusion, I think the features, simplicity, lightness and power saving features more than make up for the lack of manual zoom head modification. You can always just snoot it off camera if you really need to reduce the falloff. Considering I bought the flashgun for £103.50, with next working day delivery included, its probably the cheapest flashgun of its power and features available without looking for second hand.
Also, for Strobist people's benefit, I couldn't get the Nikon fit unit to work with the PT-04 Ebay Radio Triggers, and it has no PC port for alternative triggering.
It was a nice surprise to get a pouch and stand with the unit, and the manual explains things well and goes into more detail than strictly necessary, without being too wordy.
Oh, and having had the thing on in the background while writing this, the 5 second 'peep' as the capacitor is topped up in standby mode can get pretty irritating. Apart from those little things, I think this flashgun is one of the best in its price bracket and is more than a match for the equivalently priced (at least at RRP) Canon 430EX.
Rich (VP)
richard.uni@gmail.com
Society Nissin Di622
As a result of which, rather like the 'bank error in your favour' monopoly card, I can't be bothered to spend £10 returning it, so I will be giving it to the society for cost. I will be posting a review of this flashgun shortly, and it will be available to borrow from the start of the new term.
Finally Nikon users get a decent flashgun to rival our Canon 550EX!
VP.
AGM Results, and Capital Items
AGM
The AGM was held on Tuesday the 11th of March, in the Stags, due to a lack of room availability. We had a nice chat about society based stuff with some of our members, and voted in the new committee for 2008-2009, which is as follows:
President: Richard Lewis (Current VP)
VP: Undecided
Treasurer: Sach (Current Committee Member)
Social Sec: Franzi Florack (Current Social Sec)
Committee Members: Richard Seely and Nicolas Reed
Capital Items
After a lul of a few years, we decided to pursue an improved kit lineup, starting with the last Capital Items of this year. We went for a Canon 40D and a Sigma kit lens, coming to a total of £650. I'm glad to report we were successful, and with a society contribution of £200, we will have a new Semi-Pro level SLR available for society use directly after Easter.
VP
Monday 10 March 2008
Photosoc AGM Details
We will be handing out a few little gifts to people who turn up, choices between mini tripods, packs of 20 A4 photo paper, and Lens cleaning kits. We haven't got many to give out, so get there early for freebies!
VP
Tuesday 5 February 2008
The New 'Digital' Darkroom
Our brand new digital workflow solution. We have a PC with Photoshop and a Media Card Reader, the Nikon Slide/Film Scanner (Super Coolscan 4000) and an Epson Stylus Photo R1800 A3+ Photo printer.
These will be available for use by members very soon (well they're available right now, but we have a few bugs and issues to iron out, some programs to install and a serious random crashing issue to fix, so you might not find it in a usable condition right at the moment!).
We're hoping this will make those of you with Digital Memberships really feel you're getting something for your extra money, and it will form the core of our new digital approach. Let us know what you think, and if you can think of any software/hardware we could use on the new system, we're open to suggestions.
VP
Welcome to the new Photosoc Blog!
We will, as ever, e-mail you every week (or so) with our upcoming events, etc, but the details will be found mainly on this website, and our facebook group. We hope to also post pictures from trips, and run competitions from this site, which would have been difficult, if not impossible, using the facebook 'one text box for all your news' approach. The committee will also be posting reports on equipment the society is thinking of purchasing, and small reviews of kit that we have used, along with a list of the equipment for loan and what you can do with it!
We hope that this more 'accessible' approach will work better for people with busy schedules who don't like huge e-mails full of a months worth of information.
As ever you can contact any of the committee through photo@soton.ac.uk, or if you just want me, VP Rich, then try richard.uni@gmail.com.
Let us know what you think!
VP