Digital Camera World
Transcription
Digital Camera World
2 CDS FREE: PICTURE WINDOW 2.5 FOTOPRINTER 3.0 SE PC & MAC The definitive guide to better photos 132 pages of photo ideas, reviews and image-editing tips inside! 2 FIX PROBLEM COLOURS 2 RESTORE FADED PHOTOS 2 SEE LIFE IN MONOCHROME 2 PAINT SHOP PRO PROJECTS How to get perfect white balance using Photoshop Elements Our step-by-step guide to rescuing your old prints Take great black & white photos – top techniques revealed Add mood to a photo – we show you how 16 7 TOP DENE CANVASBA TIPS TAKE YOUR DIGITAL IMAGES FURTHER! Create stunning shots like this – everything you need inside 6 DIRECT DIGITAL PRINTERS ON TRIAL Print your photos without a PC – we reveal the best solution TAKE BETTER LANDSCAPES! How to get maximum impact with your photos, from composition to editing 2 How to compose your subject 2 Make the most of natural light 2 Create stunning effects using 7 7 Budget 3MP camera with optical zoom tested FUJIFILM FINEPIX M603 Is this feature-packed Fuji really worthy of your £700? r Photoshop Elements shortcuts, howesyou niqu tech ic oram pan camera works, 03 RICOH CAPLIO RR-30 £4.99 7 4MP flagship finally arrives – see the full review on p34 MARCH 2003 CANON POWERSHOT G3 EXCLUSIVE! 5 FREE TIPS & IDEAS CARDS! 9 771479 001003 filters and lenses PRINTED IN THE UK British Landmark Series The Angel Of The North, Gateshead 2 8 Rob Mead Acting Editor Rob’s been writing about technology for the past eight years, his work having appeared in T3, Digital Home, The Mail On Sunday and FHM. 8 Kai Wood Deputy Art Editor A keen amateur photographer, Kai has recently joined us from sister mag, PC Format, where he was nominated for a PPA design award. 8 Mark Harris Photographer and journalist Mark has been writing about photography for over ten years, and has been in charge of product testing at Which? and T3 magazines 8 Tim Daly Photographer and writer Tim is one of the UK’s leading digital photography experts. He’s written numerous books on the subject and his photographs have been exhibited across Europe. 8 8 Barry Jackson Digital artist and Photoshop guru Barry combines his digital camera, computer and Adobe Photoshop to create his own particular style of photo surrealism. 8 STARTHERE Picture this… W elcome to issue five of the UK’s best digital photography magazine. Nick’s currently working on a exciting photo project – watch this space for more news soon – so I’ve temporarily stepped into the breach to give the poor chap some breathing space and bring you more of the stuff you love: in-depth tutorials, definitive camera reviews, plus plenty of top tips and techniques that will help you take better photos. Things get off to a flying start on page 14, where we taken an exhaustive look at landscapes. With spring and summer on the way, there’s never been a better time to learn new skills and brush up on your old ones. We’ve lined up some expert tips to help you make the most of that fleeting moment when the sun peeks out nervously between the rain clouds and decides to shed some much needed light on the flora and fauna below. We’ll show you how to make the most of the photogenic scenery spread before you, from composing your shot to editing and enhancing it for compelling, arresting results. And if you fancy consigning your pictures to print we can help there too: we’ve put six of the latest direct digital photo printers through their paces. To find out which one’s output deserves pride of place on your wall, turn to page 41. Enjoy the issue. Steve Bavister Photographer and editor Steve is one of the UK’s best-known photographic writers, having edited and published Practical Photography in the past. He now writes for a variety of photography mags. 8 2 4 MEET YOUR TEAM Ed Davis Photo retouching expert Ed is a commercial photographer of many years’ experience. He is a member of the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. Rob Mead, Acting Editor editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk In issue 6, we introduce a DVD option! Buy either the DVD version of the mag (all disc content is on a single DVD, which contains extra DVD-only software and material), or the two CD version as usual. It’s up to you… 8 5 ISSUE 6 ON SALE 13TH MARCH oEvery month we will show you how to capture and create better pictures, give clear, independent buying recommendations on the latest kit, and deliver two CDs packed with the best PC software. We use boxes, tips, quick fixes, quality photography, walkthroughs and diagrams to show you how to improve your photographic and image-editing skills We have a cast-iron policy of editorial independence. All our kit is reviewed assold. We discourage our journalists from accepting gifts from advertisers. We welcome your opinions on the magazine, ideas for articles, photography, thoughts and questions. Send them in today – see the email addresses below. c Departments We want your letters, ideas, photography, articles, tips and more! Write in today to the following areas: Issues with your discs support2@futurenet.co.uk Your letters letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Photos for our galleries gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Events, ideas, places to visit getupgo.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Camera/photo help and advice help.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Articles/ideas for publication editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Visit our website today! www.digitalcameramagazine.co.uk Customer services/subscriptions customerservice@futurenet.co.uk 2 HOW WE RETOUCHED THE COVER IMAGE Aidan O’Rourke Technical expert Aidan is a contributor to the Manchester Evening News. He lectures on digital photography around the UK. ; Our promise to our readers 8 The original RGB image had an unnatural yellow colour cast on the skin tones, probably caused by a gold reflector. The cast was removed in RGB mode, but was previewed in CMYK. If converted straight away, detail would have been lost so it was better to work with a range of colour detail and then convert it. Retouching was done to the image and the canvas was extended to the left. The background was blurred and then painted in by hand. It was then given some grain to blend into the rest of the shot. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 003 Contents DCM#05 What’s hot inside your magazine this March TAKE BETTER LANDSCAPES! How to get maximum impact from your landscape photos ■ How to compose your subject ■ Make the most of natural light ■ Create stunning effects using filters and lenses STARTS PAGE 14 PAGE 58 Creative project Egg man Getup&Go* Ancient monuments, UK wildlife parks and zoos, sport and icy water. Plus 9 top tips for photographing animal shots! We combine three images to create this surreal and rather disturbing portrait DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE Add atmosphere to your photos with Paint Shop Pro PAGE * UK editions only 006 Creating night moods PULL OUT SECTION – FIND IT AFTER p34 74 2 Kit reviews The UK’s definitive reviews package every month HOT SHOTS PAGE 08 TRAILBLAZERS PAGE 49 2 Your 2 coverdiscs FUJIFILM FINEPIX F402 28 PAGE 120 Picture Window 2.5 Built-in image browser that makes short work of finding your pictures NIKON COOLPIX 4500 30 FUJIFILM FINEPIX M603 32 Enhance your photographs using this image-editing tool, plus create high-quality prints, multimedia slide shows and much more ON DISC 1 CANON POWERSHOT G3 34 SIX CAMERA BAGS 38 Your images 21 pages of image-editing tips SURREAL GROOVY PHOTO PROJECT 58 PHOTO CLINIC 64 NEGATIVE IMAGES 79 DENEBA CANVAS 6 TIPS 76 FULL Picture Window 2.5 DEMO Color Mechanic 1.1 TOURS 5 x 3D tours TEST SHOTS for each of our main cameras VIDEO TUTORIALS Imageediting techniques FULL Multiple Image Resizer .NET FULL FotoPrinter 3.0 SE FULL Multiple Unzipper DEMO Photobase 3.0 DEMO Canvas 8 DEMO Lightbox 2.0 £ 48 OF FULL SOFTWARE IN TOTAL! ON DISC 2 PLUG-IN Photokit 1.0 PLUG-IN Simplifier 1.0 PLUG-IN Mezzy Deluxe PLUG-IN Digital ROC Plug-in 1.1.1 Regulars EYEWITNESS Hotshots gallery Frontline news p08 p10 YOUR PHOTOS & LETTERS Reader profile Trailblazers Day in the life Viewfinder p12 p49 p52 p54 OFFERS Subscribe! Upgrade your software p80 p121, 122 HELP AND ADVICE Photo Clinic Your questions answered p64 p90 FOLD-OUT SECTION AFTER PAGE 34 Britain’s Megalithic monuments Capturing sport Icy waters in Scotland Wildlife parks and zoos Tips for animal shots DEALER BANK Suppliers GETUP&GO TO ZOOS Pullout section THIS ISSUE WE SHOW YOU HOW TO… 1 RICOH CAPLIO RR-30 26 CAMERA TECHNIQUES PAGE 84 102-119 TAKE BETTER PICTURES Making the most of the landscape Creating a sense of depth Shooting a seasonal series of photos Vertical and horizontal formats Photographing water Light in your landscape shots Using a digital SLR Shooting in autumn and winter Creating a panoramic photo Shooting graphic elements Using primary colours Looking for monochrome subjects High and low contrast subjects 15 16 16 17 17 17 19 19 20 84 85 88 89 IMPROVE YOUR IMAGE-EDITING SKILLS Improving composition and contrast in landscape photos Combining three pictures for a surreal image Colouring a faded photograph Basic selecting techniques in Photoshop Elements Solving white balance problems with Elements Fixing dark photos with Paint Shop Pro Creating night moods in your photos Black and white negative effects 22 58 64 68 70 72 74 79 USE YOUR PC BETTER Making simple PC fixes with Microsoft Paint Sharing photos and print options on the net Colour management tools for your printer HOTSHOTSTURNOVER Every issue, we print the best digital photography we can find. Turn over now and see some of the shots that have inspired us this issue… 96 98 100 2 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 007 Hotshots Images with impact 01 02 008 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE SHOT OF THE MONTH GATESHEAD PHILIP HUNTON “This is Gateshead Millennium Bridge just before dusk. I adjusted the Levels in Photoshop to enhance the effect of the polariser.” Fujifilm FinePix 6900Z [w] www.philiphunton.co.uk [e] info@philiphunton.co.uk 2 ProfileMe and my camera 03 JULIAN JEFFERSON GOATS IN THE MIST www.pembrokeshireimages.com 02 MARSH IN WINTER Charlie Brown 04 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-F707 [w] www.CharlieBrown Photos.com/Hyatt 03 COTSWOLD BUILDING, CIRENCESTER Jon Pink I took my camera on Brean Down near Westonsuper-Mare on New Year's Day. Although it was a murky day (low cloud, light rain, flat conditions and no contrast), I saw these goats sheltering near gnarled thorns and thought there was a shot in it. I switched to the black and white filter on my Pentax Optio 430RS and took the snap. When I got home, I was disappointed with the NOW SEND US YOURS! Fujifilm FinePix 2800Z [e] jpink@fuci.co.uk gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk RED Anona Boyte Casio QV2000 [e] boyte1@tds.net [w] www.pbase.com/boyte1 05 TULIP Heather McFarland Nikon D1X, 60mm Micro Nikon [e] designit@fullcirclegraphics.com [w] http://fullcirclegraphics.com @ Email us a 100K JPEG thumbnail of your best shots! The best wins a 128MB Crucial CompactFlash card each issue. [w] www.fuci.co.uk/photography 04 result. However, before I binned the shot, I played with Variations in Photoshop to get some interesting colours, tweaked up the contrast and added a little unsharp masking. I’m a bit of a purist when it comes to photography, and rarely play around with images. I think this picture has taught me a valuable lesson in creative thinking! 05 Frontline MINOLTA DIMAGE F300 COMPACT APPLE ENHANCES IPHOTO, OFFERS ILIFE FUJIFILM’S 4TH GEN SUPER CCD REVEALED 5MP camera threatens rivals ■ See below More tools, better DVD burning ■ See page 11 More detail, better pictures ■ see page 12 Send in your news! Email us today at news.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Minolta’s simply smaller camera 5MP compact offers built-in image editor and subject tracker, plus 3x optical zoom THE DIMAGE F300 COMES WITH A HOST OF PROGRAM MODES THAT PROMISE TO MAKE TAKING DIGITAL PHOTOS A WHOLE LOT EASIER U sing tech employed in the brilliant 7Hi (awarded 92% in issue 4), Minolta’s DiMAGE F300 combines a 5-megapixel resolution and 3x optical zoom in one of the company’s most classy and compact camera bodies yet. Measuring just 11 x 5.2 x 3.25cm and weighing 185g, the F300 obviously has other stylish compacts like Casio’s QV-5700 firmly in its sights, and comes with a host of program modes – portrait, landscape, etc – that promise to make taking digital photos a whole lot easier. Rather pleasingly, the camera also comes with its own built-in image processor so you can adjust the colour, contrast, saturation and sharpness of your chosen subject before you press the shutter. Plus, the F300 also comes with Area AF and Subject AF autofocus modes, which enable the camera to track a subject as it moves across a scene, continually adjusting the focus to make sure it stays pin sharp. Obviously no amount of in-camera tweaks are going to save your shots if they’re not up to scratch in the first place, which is where the eight element, seven group GT lens comes in. With a focal range of 7.8mm to 23.4mm (equivalent to a 38mm to 114mm 35mm zoom), the lens is also armed with three aspheric elements to ensure decent contrast and sharpness at any focal length. Housed in an elegantly curved aluminium and stainless steel shell, the F300 even enables you to shoot colour Motion JPEG movies in the dark, thanks to an improved Night Movie mode which automatically fires up as the amount of ambient light goes down. We hope to bring you a comprehensive evaluation of the £500 F300 next issue, but if you can’t wait that long, go to www.minoltaeurope.com for more info. MINOLTA DIMAGE F300 FULL SPECIFICATIONS CCD 5.3-megapixel 1/1.8-inch CCD; 5.0-million effective pixels Still images JPEG, TIFF, DCF standard, DPOF compliant Movies Motion, JPEG (MOV), WAVE Memory 32MB buffer, SD and MMC flash memory support Image sizes 2,560 x 1,920pixels, 2,048 x 1,536 pixels, 1,600 x 1,200 pixels, 640 x 480 pixels, 1,280 x 960 pixels Lens 7.8mm-23.4mm (38mm-114mm 35mm equivalent) Zoom 3x optical, 4x digital Focusing Video AF autofocus system with wide focus area (Area AF), spot focus areas with focus area selection, subject tracking AF, single shot AF, full time AF, manual focus, macro mode. Approximate focus range Light metering 256 multi-segmented metering, centre weighted, spot Exposure Programmed AE, aperture priority, shutter priority, manual Exposure compensation -2, +2 EV in 1/3 increments ISO sensitivity Auto, 64ASA, 100ASA, 200ASA and 400ASA ISO equivalents Recording modes Auto, portrait, sports action, landscape, sunset, night portrait, macro Shutter speed 4 second to 1/1,000 second in programmed AE and aperture priority modes, 15 second to 1/1,000 second in shutter priority and manual exposure modes, BULB Aperture f/2.8-f4.7 White balance auto, preset (daylight, tungsten, fluorescent, cloudy), custom Flash modes auto, auto with red eye reduction, fill flash, flash cancel QUICK SHOTS TV PHOTO TECH Armchair Electronics has come up with an enticing alternative to editing and viewing pics on a PC – the TV Photo Album. The £99 device comes with slot for popular flash memory formats like CompactFlash and SmartMedia, although you will need an additional adaptor if you own Memory Stick, SD or MMC cards. The builtin image editor offers basic editing functions as well as the ability to create slideshows and albums. On sale now. www.intro2020.co.uk LEXAR UPDATES JUMPDRIVE The company’s JumpDrive Trio mobile USB storage solution comes with a three-in-one card slot for Memory Stick, MMC and SD flash cards, and promises fast image transfer, thanks to USB 2.0. Available with 64MB or 128MB Memory Sticks supplied, price TBC. www.digitalfilm.com FOUR-IN ONE MADE SIMPLE The FlashLink 4-in-1 PCMCIA adaptor from SimpleTech enables you to copy images from MMC, SD and other cards to your laptop, and runs under Windows ME, XP or Mac OS 9/X. Available now for £45 from www.intro2020.co.uk Sony’s Memory Stick hits 1GB 256MB and 512MB cards coming too Sony has teamed up with hard drive experts SanDisk to produce 256MB, 512MB and 1GB Pro MEMORY versions of its Memory Stick flash memory card – finally putting it back in contention with rival formats like Secure Digital (SD). The announcement is a pleasant surprise for anyone already using Sony’s card since it appeared that Memory Stick had hit the buffers early in terms of capacity, while SD (currently offering 512MB cards itself) raced ahead in popularity and data-storage arenas. Sony has also announced a new 256MB Memory Stick Select card that comprises two 128MB units with a mechanical switch that enables you to choose between them. The card is aimed at Sony’s existing camera and camcorder users and costs £150. SanDisk card prices have yet to be confirmed. www.sony.co.uk, www.sandisk.co.uk 2 3 Best sellers Information supplied by www.dabs.com BEST SELLER FujiFilm FinePix A202 £128 SUB-£100 Mustek Gsmart II Mini £45 SUB-£300 Canon PowerShot A40 £210 SUB-£800 Nikon CoolPix 5000 £719 Picture Perfect PDA People don’t normally buy a PDA on the strength of its digital HARDWARE imaging capabilities, but when it comes to Sony’s CLIÉ PEGNZ90, they may need to think again. The PEG-NZ90 comes with a built-in 2-megapixel snapper capable of delivering an image resolution of up to 1,600 x 1,200 pixels and comes with a 2x digital zoom and built-in flash to help you make the most of those photo opportunities. Aimed at business users, the CLIÉ packs in six photo modes to optimise the camera’s white balance for different conditions and the flash even features red-eye reduction for portraits. Images taken using the fixed focus F2.8 lens can be viewed and edited in-camera using the CLIÉ’s 320 x 480 colour LCD and proprietary Photo Editor software. Transferring images promises to be a breeze, too, thanks to the CLIÉ’s built-in Bluetooth chip and optional Wi-Fi capability. The PEG-NZ90 is based of vX.X of Palm’s handheld operating system, and is available in the USA for $799.99, although Sony reckons the UK version will be winging this way very, very soon. For an early look at what’s on offer, go to Sony’s USA website at www.sonystyle.com Apple delivers iPhoto 2, iLife In scenes reminiscent of the Falklands conflict, HMS Ark Royal leaves Portsmouth Harbour, bound for the Middle East The time: 11th January 2003 The Place: Portsmouth, Hampshire New tools and library-management enhancement, plus DVD burning Apple Computer has updated its free digital photo-editing and library-management software, SOFTWARE iPhoto2. Available as a free download, the software offers new and refined editing tools including Enhance, which helps optimise less than perfect images and Retouch for removing dust, dirt, scratches, etc. iPhoto2 is also included as part of the £39.99 iLife pack which comprises the iTunes 3 MP3 player, iMovie 3 digital video editor and iDVD, Apple’s simple, but effective DVD burning tool. For more info, go to www.apple.com/uk Families, friends and well-wishers crowd Portsmouth’s harbourside to say their fond farewells to the 800 crew and 100 Royal Marine Commandos on board the aircraft carrier. This ship will eventually meet up with 15 other ships carrying 5,000 Navy personnel and 3,000 Royal Marine Commandos in the Gulf – the largest Royal Navy deployment since the Falklands War in 1982. The sight of the 20,000 tonne ship leaving the harbour was captured by Rex Features photographers Chris Balcombe, Ian Jones and Jeremy Durkin. They show how simple, iconic images can capture the sense of emotional impact such monumental events can bring: the use of the graphical emblems like the Union Jack adds poignancy and a sense of place and time to otherwise banal images of military hardware; the sight of the crowded walkway leads our eye from front to back of the image, enabling us see not only on the sheer numbers of people who are there but also to focus on the faces of the individuals whose serviceman husbands, wives, fathers and sons could well be on board. The fact that such scenes were to be repeated by the families and crews of the other ships in the taskforce adds even more weight to images, and reveals the gravity, pathos and sense of duty that accompanies those en route to war… WIDEANGLE What’s happening around the world WORLDWIDE Space based spy-cam Digital photography’s been taken to new heights with the launch of the OrbView 3 spy satellite. The device delivers real-time high-res images of the world from space, and can also be used to deliver detailed maps and 3D fly-throughs. get their way. They are working on a way to print transistorised circuits using layers of electronic polymer to create the circuitry, capacitors, even the outer casing of devices like light bulbs, TV remote controls and artificial muscles for robots. ©WWW.REXFEATURES.COM 2003 GREAT BRITAIN 25,000 reasons… USA Print your own hardware The humble inkjet could soon be printing out its own digital cameras, if scientists at the University Of Berkeley Behindtheimage Next-gen Sony CLIÉ comes with built-in 2MP digital camera Scientists at Philips’ research centre in Southampton have developed a 3cm 4GB disc that be enable you to store up to 25,000 digital photos in your camera. The first discs should go on sale in 2005. TALKBACK 1 Tell us what you think! Our website forums at digitalcameramagazine.co.uk are just the place. Add your comments, ideas and more and join the Digital Camera club! 2 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 011 Sweeter pics with FujiFilm’s double-honeycomb… Fourth-generation Super CCD SR promises wider dynamic range, better pictures THE AIM IS TO CAPTURE THE LOWER LEVELS OF LIGHT AND DETAIL THAT ARE OFTEN MISSED WHEN YOU SHOOT HIGH CONTRAST SUBJECTS, SUCH AS LANDSCAPES Ever the innovators, FujiFilm has come up with a newly designed CCD which promises TECHNOLOGY to deliver a much greater dynamic range with your pictures. Based on the company’s hexagonal Super CCD, the new SR chip comprises two 3.32 megapixel photodiodes (3.1-megapixels effective): one with low sensitivity to light, the other with high sensitivity to light. The aim is to capture the lower levels of light and detail that are often missed when photographing high contrast subjects – when using flash or shooting landscapes, for example. Super CCD SR effectively captures the image twice: the high sensitivity sensor works like a conventional chip capturing the overwhelming majority of light from your chosen subject; while the low sensitivity sensor is able to capture more detail in dark areas as well as picking out highlights. The images are then processed and combined using a digital signal processor. Despite the power of the two photodiodes, the 9.4mm sensor still only has an effective resolution of 3.1million pixels and a file output of 6-million pixels. Samsung’s new convergence cam Camcorder promises high-quality stills The swivelling body of Samsung’s SCD5000 has the digital imaging tech in one half, and MiniDV camcorder mechanism in the other QUICK SHOTS COLOUR COSTS SLASHED TypeMaker has slashed the price of its CRT Colour Confidence Studio colour management solution to £417.57. The package comes with a Pantone Spyder monitor calibrator and OptiCAL software. More info at www.typemaker. co.uk MOBILE SOUND AND PICTURES However, FujiFilm says that the increased dynamic range will enable cameras equipped with the tech to deliver better image quality than conventional 6MP versions. It’ll soon be easy to make the comparison: FujiFilm is launching both 6MP HR and 3MP SR cameras in February. Digital camcorders have long offered digital stills capability in addition to their movie-making spec, but HARDWARE Samsung's taken the notion one step further with the launch of the SCD5000, a MiniDV camcorder with dedicated 4.13-megapixel CCD for digital photography enthusiasts. The high-spec chip delivers an impressive 2,274 x 1,704 pixel resolution for stills and also packs 3x optical and 6x digital zooms into its swivelling lens body. Images are stored on the supplied 16MB Memory Stick, with easy transfer to a PC possible using the USB connector. There are some compromises however: the lack of a dedicated stills viewfinder means that framing your shots is only possible through the SCD5000's video viewfinder or via the 2-inch LCD. However, the 690g camcorder also comes with an 800,000 pixel CCD for movies (680,000 effective), a DV-in/out socket for easy digital video transfer to and from your PC and camcorder, plus a Power Nite Pix mode that promises to deliver better quality movie images under tricky light conditions. The SCD5000 is expected to go on sale in the UK in the summer for £800-£1,000. For more details, go to www.samsungelectronics.com Intro2020 has launched the Phototainer, a portable digital image viewer and MP3 player with 20GB hard disk. The machine supports Compact Flash I and II as well as IBM’s Microdrive, but you’ll also need a suitable adaptor for Memory Stick, MultiMediaCard and Secure Digital cards. Data transfer between the Phototainer and your PC is made easy, thanks to the presence of USB 1.1 and 2.0 and you can even use the device as a PC backup if required. The Phototainer costs £499.99 and is available now. You can find out more at www.intro2020.co.uk PANASONIC LUMIX UPDATE Panasonic has announced two new cameras at Las Vegas CES. The first is the 2megapixel DMC-FZ1, which boasts a Leica 12x optical zoom (equivalent to a 35mm to 420mm zoom lens on a 35mm camera). The second is the DMC-F1. This stylish compact comes with a 3.2megapixel resolution and comes with a Leica 3x optical zoom. Both cameras will be available in March, but prices are still to be confirmed For more call Panasonic on 08705 357357. Budget Pentax offers high spec 3-million pixels, 3x zoom for £300 Pentax claims to have raised the bar for entry-level cameras with its new 3-megapixel Optio 330 GS. The HARDWARE £300 camera comes with a 3x optical zoom (equivalent to a 38mm to 114mm 35mm lens), five point auto-focus and sixsegment light metering; plus seven auto picture modes, including landscape, sunset and soft, surf and snow. Adding a touch of novelty to the otherwise unremarkable specs are the swing-out LCD screen – great for self-portraits – and a 3D mode, which enables you to take three-dimensional images that can be seen using the supplied viewer. As reported last month, the camera also offers direct printing option with Epson photo printers via USB and comes with a 16MB CompactFlash card. To find out more about the camera go to www.pentax.co.uk Lexar comes to the rescue Recovers deleted digital pics Lexar Media has launched ImageRescue, a new file-recovery program. Sharing superficial SOFTWARE similarities with the free PhotoRecovery program on this month’s Cover CD (see page 125), ImageRescue uses a proprietary file system to recover data from Lexar’s own CompactFlash cards that have possibly been damaged by accidental formatting, removing the card before an image has been saved or low battery power. The software bundle, which includes a USB card reader, is available for both Windows and Mac OS X for £39.99. To find out more, go to www.lexarmedia.com or call 01483 722290. FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHING LANDSCAPES YOUR GUIDE STEVE BAVISTER Steve Bavister is an experienced photographic journalist and freelance photographer. He is editor of The Photographer, a leading magazine for professional photographers, and author of ten books on photography including Digital Photography and Take Better Family Photos bavister@easynet.co.uk PORTFOLIO STEVE BAVISTER How to take great landscape shots Landscape photography can appear deceptively easy, says Steve Bavister, but it requires controlled use of lighting, composition and lens settings to come up with something beyond the obvious 014 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE L andscape photography – what could be easier? All you have to do is find yourself a photogenic location, step out of the car, lift the camera to your eye, and capture your masterpiece. And, given that every corner of this green and pleasant land is bursting with stunning vistas, you’ll have a some of winners in no time. If only! As you’ve probably already discovered, it isn’t quite that simple. Because landscapes are all around us and immediately available, many photographers think they’re a straightforward subject. And, in a sense, they are. They simply sit there, waiting for you to come along and take pictures of them. But while the vast panorama that’s spread out before you may take your breath away, how can you capture it in an image that will do the same? What’s the secret of retaining the excitement of a 3D scene when it’s reduced to the two dimensions of a computer screen or inkjet print? Making the most of the landscape Through the skilled use of light, viewpoint, lens setting and composition – that’s how. And in this article we’re going to show you how to use them to make the most of the features that occur naturally in a landscape. It’s pretty obvious, but well worth saying anyway, that life for the landscape photographer is a lot easier when you start with a photogenic location. It’s true that you can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. So if you want to give yourself a head start, it makes good sense to visit somewhere that offers plenty of exciting views – such as The Lake District, Snowdonia National Park, the 4 WHY WE CHOSE THIS PICTURE Depth of field is maximised to retain detail in the background The meandering river leads your eye into the picture Reflections on the water add interest to the overall composition It makes good sense to visit somewhere that offers plenty of exciting views – such as The Lake District, Snowdonia… DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 015 FEATURE LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY 2 THE FOUR SEASONS One of the most fascinating projects you can set yourself as a landscape photographer, is to take a series of pictures of the same scene throughout the four seasons. Ideally, the location you choose should be close to where you live, so that when you get a fall of snow, or a typical summer's day, you can dash off and capture it without delay. Obviously you'll need to remember exactly how you framed the shot – although to make it easy you could used the last picture you took in the series for reference. Having done a series of four pictures, your next project could always be to photograph the same every month of the year. Now that would take commitment! Of all the tools that you have at your disposal in landscape photography, your legs are easily the most valuable Cotswolds, the Scottish Highlands or the Peak District. It’s also a good idea to choose one area and get to know it like the back of your hand – going back time and again under different conditions and a range of seasons. Investing in a couple of detailed guidebooks will tell you where the best viewpoints are, and a good Ordnance Survey map is worth its weight in gold. Having chosen a location, where do you begin? By walking round it. Of all the tools that you have at your disposal in landscape photography, your legs are easily the most valuable. As you walk around, you’ll almost certainly discover that high vantage points are often the best places from which to shoot – they give you a bird’s eye view of the countryside below. Perched high on a hill you can see the shape of the land laid out before you, bringing all the elements together in a perspective that you don’t 016 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE get at ground level. An elevated viewpoint will also give you the opportunity to identify specific points of interest for investigation later. Sometimes, though, the opposite approach works best, and by crouching down at the lowest point of a valley looking up, a small hill can seem to rise up into a mighty crag above you. It won’t take you long before you realise that viewpoint and composition are inextricably bound up with the lens setting you’re using, and can’t be considered in isolation. Most digital camera these days feature a zoom lens that goes from moderate wideangle to short telephoto lens. This provides plenty of options in terms of how you can frame the shot. Creating a sense of depth When shooting landscapes, most people select the wide-angle position automatically, so they can get as much in as possible. That’s a good approach, but care does need to be taken to avoid everything looking small and far away – with the shot lacking any kind of impact. To create the sense of depth you’re after, you need to look for ways of making the viewer’s eye read ‘through’ the picture. One excellent option is to include ‘foreground interest’ – something at the front of picture that gives a sense of near and far. This can be a bush, rock, boat – in fact, anything at all – but it’s worth actively seeking one out. Sometimes there are natural frames, such as trees, which you can place around the edge. Another approach is to compose the shot so a natural element, such as a river, dyke, road, wall or fence threads through the picture. Try to get in as close to it as possible, so that it looms large in the front of the shot and then rapidly diminishes in size as it leads away. The effect works best when the direction of travel is from the bottom left of the picture up towards the top right – and if the ground over which it runs is uneven, this will help to imply the shape of the land. Generally, with this kind of approach you’ll want the images to be sharp from front to back. If you have direct control over your exposure settings you’ll want to set as small an aperture as possible – ideally f/16 if you can. That’s one of the reasons why a tripod is so useful for landscape work, because it enables you to set small apertures without fear of camera-shake – producing images with maximum sharpness. Using a tripod also helps you slow down and encourages you to work in a more considered, contemplative way that’s worlds away from a quick snap. As you look at things more carefully, you are more a Compose your shots according to the rule of thirds, where imaginary lines dissect the image horizontally and vertically. Aim to make two-thirds of the image either land or sky, or split it into equal thirds with objects of interest in each. For more go to www.kodak.com/global/en/consumer/education/programs/composition 2 WATER WORKS Rippling brooks and fast-moving waterfalls are among the exciting elements of the l andscape -– yet capturing them digitally is notoriously difficult. The main problem is that the shutter speeds cameras set automatically is normally fast enough to freeze the movement of the water, taking any sense of action away. What you want ideally is around 1/8sec to 1 second, which will give the water an atmospheric blur. If you have direct control over exposure settings, you can try a range of speeds to find what works best. If the exposure system on your camera is fully programmed, then try taking pictures on a dull, overcast day, when the shutter speeds will be correspondingly longer. In all cases, select the lowest ISO setting you have available and use a tripod or other support to avoid camera-shake. likely to come up with a better picture. The good thing about the landscape is that it doesn’t get bored and just wander off – you’ve got all the time in the world, so take advantage of it! Wide angles may take in the general sweep effectively, but telephoto settings have much to offer the landscape photographer, because sometimes picking out and isolating a small element from the landscape can be more dramatic than including everything. Because they crop into the scene, telephotos tend to give a rather more ‘abstract’ landscape effect – the more powerful the lens, the more abstract it will be, often ending up as attractive textures and patterns. Subjects that benefit from this treatment are ploughed land, rows of trees, fields of crops and cracked mud. Going closer, you might also make a superb landscape with a close-up of the rough surface of a wall or fence. With telephoto lenses it’s also easier to limit the depth-of-field to make elements stand out. This ‘differential focus’ involves setting a large aperture, such as f/4 or 5.6, to pick out certain aspects of the land, such as a single tree, which then seem to be projected forward from an out-of-focus background. As with wide-angles, a high viewpoint will often help with telephoto landscape photography, allowing you to look down and select the part of the scene that’s most interesting. Vertical or horizontal? Many landscape pictures are taken in the horizontal format, because that helps emphasise the way the scenery stretches out as far as the eye can see. But sometimes an upright treatment works every bit as well, including more sky, and giving a greater sense of depth to the shot. Both approaches can work well, and it’s largely a matter of choosing what’s right with a particular location. If you can’t decide which format you think will work best, shoot them both and choose later. Of course, you can always change the format of an image on the computer, but it’s better to keep as many pixels as possible to maximise output quality. That said, you might want to keep your eyes peeled for subjects that can be cropped to a panoramic. This distinctively long, thin format is tailor made for landscape photography, enabling you to capture the full expanse of a magnificent vista before you. Light of my life So far we haven’t mentioned light – arguably the most important element in emphasising shape and form in a landscape photograph. Light is affected by the season, the time of day and the weather. If you want to reveal the curves and contours of a scene then shadows are essential, which means the sun really has to be shining for landscape photography to be worthwhile. The position of the sun is crucial too. You certain don’t want it behind you because the shadows will fall away and be hidden, producing bland, uninspiring pictures. The best place for the sun is 90 degrees to the left or right, so that it casts shadows that fall right across the picture, giving a strong sense of shape and depth. In the right circumstances, shooting into the sun can work, with the shadows falling towards the camera, but care must be taken to expose correctly and to avoid flare. The longer the shadows, the more dramatic the effect, which is why the best summer landscapes are often taken early in the morning or late in the evening, when the sun is low in the sky. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 017 Dawn and dusk shots At dawn and dusk, sunlight is warm and rich, and shadows lengthen, giving additional detail to subjects. The light can be spectacular after the sun sets when the sky lights up like a theatre stage backdrop 018 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE g Many of the best scenic images are captured just after the sun's come up, so set your alarm clock for an early start – you can always go back to bed afterwards! While you can take good landscapes within walking distance of your car, the best locations are more remote and only accessible on foot 2 FILTER TIPS If you choose your weather carefully, a straight record of the scene will guarantee success. But sometimes landscapes need a bit of help. Now your first thought might be to tweak things on the computer, but it's also worth considering using filters, as you would on a film-based camera. If you're planning to take a lot of landscape shots it's much quicker and easier than enhancing dozens of images. The most useful filter for landscapes is graduated – half-coloured, with the top the darkest fading to the middle. This is used to add interest to bland, empty skies. For general use, grey or blue graduated filters are best, but it's also wroth experimenting with some of the more dramatic ones such as tobacco, which gives a stormy effect. And nothing beats a polarising filter to deepen the colour of an already blue sky and make fluffy clouds stand out. 2 USING A DIGITAL SLR The lens on most 'compact' digital cameras is only moderately wide angle, and to produce jaw-dropping compositions you really need something with greater coverage. If you already have a film-based SLR system, and have invested in one of the latest digital SLR bodies, such as the Fujifilm S2 or Canon D60, you have the potential to create something more dramatic. Many companies are now producing wideangle zoom lenses that start from 15mm, which, even allowing for the magnification factor of 1.6x that results from using the lens on a digital camera. This gives the equivalent of 24mm in film terms – significantly wider than is possible on most cameras without the interchangeable lens facility. There are many fair-weather landscape photographers who only go out snapping scenics when the sun is shining. And, of course, they get some good pictures. But they’re also missing out on other shots they could take in bad weather, which would add variety to their portfolio and make it far more interesting. Changeable conditions can produce some truly dramatic pictures, especially if you’re ready, with your finger on the shutter release, for when the sun breaks through the clouds for just a few seconds. If you’re lucky you may be rewarded with a rainbow. The more you’re out taking pictures, the more you increase the chances of being there when a rainbow makes an appearance. Then you’ve got to work quickly. You’ve often have less than five minutes to get the picture you want in the bag, so work fast and take lots of pictures. Misty weather and fog offer the potential for capturing some memorable images, with distant elements all-but-invisible, and foreground subjects Changeable conditions can produce some truly dramatic pictures, especially if you’re ready, with your finger on the shutter release That’s where a map comes in handy, and also sometimes a compass. By planning ahead and anticipating the position of the sun in relation to a particular location, you can make sure you’re there at the time to catch it in the best light. Shooting in the autumn and winter In autumn and winter, though, the sun doesn’t rise so high anyway, so when it’s shining it’s possible to create evocative landscapes pretty much all through the day – although dawn and dusk remain the best time, because then the light is softer and also warmer in tone. The flat, shadowless light you get on an overcast day is generally the kiss of death to scenic work – although in stormy weather the dramatic skies can sometimes compensate for lack of excitement on the ground. rendered normally. In such situations you may need to select a higher ISO setting, as light levels are often rather low. Winter, too, completely transforms the appearance of a landscape, especially in areas where snow falls heavily. A canopy of white makes elements such as trees stand out more starkly, while even a sharp frost can provide interesting details that are worth recording. Do check your images before moving on, though, as all the light bouncing around can easily cause under-exposure. While this can to some degree be salvaged later, it’s better to adjust your exposure if you have the option so you can capture the scene as accurately as possible. But don’t wrap your camera in cotton wool – get out and photograph the landscape in all its many guises. Modern cameras are extremely well made, and will DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 019 FEATURE LANDSCAPE PHOTOGRAPHY Creating a panoramic image DRAW IN THE EYE The light area in the bottom left-hand corner leads the eyes into the frame TRIPOD Using a tripod allows both a fast shutter speed to avoid camera-shake and a small aperture of f/16 to maximise depth-of-field HIGHLIGHT THE DETAIL The exposure has been slightly adjusted to prevent white buildings from being bleached out POLARISING FILTER A polarising filter has been used over the lens to boost saturation and deepen the blue of the sky, producing a rich, lush tonality PANORAMIC POTENTIAL The shot is framed with the intention of cropping it to the letterbox shape TIMING The picture has been taken in the middle of the afternoon, when the light is crisp but not harsh You don't have to head off into the middle of nowhere to get great landscape shots – man-made landscapes can be just as effective suffer no harm if used sensibly. If in doubt, keep the body of the camera in a transparent freezer bag, to protect it from moisture. A good bag is also a worthwhile accessory, especially if you plan to do a fair bit of walking to find the best spots. Holdalls designed as rucksacks are most comfortable, as the weight is spread over both shoulders, and you can all your essentials such as maps and a sandwich without getting fatigued (see our review of camera bags on page 38). You don’t have to head off into the middle of nowhere to get great landscape shots – man-made landscapes can be just as effective. A rape field under a 020 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE blue sky, full of vivid colour, or a swathe of barley blowing in the wind can be every bits as appealing – and a lot more accessible if you have limited time to take pictures. Although we always talk of ‘landscapes’, it doesn’t mean you can’t take pictures with water in them. In fact, you can get the best of both worlds if you take some shots around our coastline. Small, colourful fishing boats, moored in picturesque harbours, make superb subjects fit for a calendar, while reservoirs and lakes have similar potential. If you want to get people ‘oohing’ and ‘ahhing’ when they look at your pictures, nothing beats a sunset over water. A final thing to consider is whether you want to be a purist, as many landscape photographers are, and avoid including people in the picture. While there’s certainly a strong case for doing that, as they can easily be a distraction (especially keen walkers wearing orange fleeces), including an individual or group can sometimes give a welcome sense of scale that takes the shot to a higher level. So even if your preference is to wait until people have moved out of the frame, it can be worth taking a couple of shots to see whether it works. TELEPHOTO SETTING Using a telephoto setting has helped to 'compress' and flatten the perspective SKY AND CLOUDS Waiting a few minutes for some clouds to drift by results in a more interesting picture 2 YOUR COLLECTABLE CARDS Want to create a panaroma? Take a look this month’s cover story companion tips cards. We’ve got six tips to help you produce jaw-dropping landscape panromas. FEATURE LANDSCAPE – POST-SHOOT Improving composition and contrast in landscape photos Great landscape images can be made to look even better using a few simple Photoshop edits. Tim Daly shows you how * ON OUR COVERDISC PICTURE WINDOW Enhance your photos using its powerful image-editing tools, plus create high-quality prints, multimedia slide shows etc 0 L ocation shooting can be difficult at the best of times, with changeable light and unreliable weather conditions to contend with. Happily, Photoshop has several tools to help you tweak your digital shots afterwards, in much the same way as traditional photographers would adjust their landscape prints in a darkroom. Landscape photography is all about subtlety, emphasis and dynamic composition. Composition is, without doubt, the hardest photographic skill to pick up, so in the meantime there’s Photoshop’s cropping tool. With adventurous crops, large sections of original pixels are discarded, resulting in the potential for a smaller, but more interesting print. There’s no hard-andfast rule that states that all landscape images need to be a regular rectangular size, and combined with the ability of inkjet printers to output onto any size or shaped paper, this won’t be a problem. The best tools Photoshop offers are for darkening bland areas of images and converting the whole photo into a visual mix of dark and light. Great photographic prints, whether digital or conventional, all have slightly darker areas linking to lighter areas, to encourage the viewer to ‘scan’ and examine the subtleties of the image. Compared to a snapshot with its all-over single tone and lack of strong emphasis, the carefully crafted digital print will win hands down each time. EXPERT TIPS TIM DALY PHOTOSHOP EXPERT BOOSTING COLOURS Caution is the key word when increasing the saturation of your colours because digital images can easily become overcooked. Avoid applying excessive saturation commands, especially to images that have been compressed in the JPEG format, as the blocky shapes caused by compression will become more visible. 0 EXPERT TIPS 01 ADJUST THE HORIZON LINE 04 SELECT THE SKY It’s easy to end up with wonky composition. To mend a sloping horizon line, turn on the View8Rulers option then drag the top ruler to bring a blue non-printing guide over the horizon. Do Edit8Select All, then Edit8Transform8Rotate and straighten the horizon. 02 CROP THE IMAGE 05 DARKEN DOWN THE SKY This example had far too much bland grey sky in the shot, so it was removed using the Crop tool. Drag the tool across your image and let go to preview the potential new crop. The darker grey area will indicate the section to be discarded. 03 IMPROVE DOMINANT COLOURS 06 DARKEN DOWN THE FOREGROUND Great landscape images can be dominated by a single colour, like the yellow here. From the dialog box edit menu, choose a colour, then increase Saturation (to no more than 10) by using Image8Adjustments8Hue/Saturation command. TIM DALY PHOTOSHOP EXPERT WORK ON A DUPLICATE LAYER If you’re worried about ruining your original image file, then make a duplicate Background layer to work on. Click and drag the Background layer icon on top of the tiny new layer icon, at the bottom of the Layers palette. GAMUT COLOURS You can see which colours won’t print with the same intensity as viewed on the monitor via the View8Gamut Warning command. When making colour saturation edits, turn the Gamut Warning on, so you can see when you’ve gone too far. Colours that won’t print will be tagged with a grey colour. 022 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE When natural lighting is flat, you can easily introduce drama by darkening down the sky. Use the lasso tool and draw a rough selection edge around the part you want to darken. Do Select8Feather and enter a 20 Feather Radius to soften down the edge. Now do Image8Adjustments8Brightness/ Contrast and move the Brightness slider left until you see a difference. With very neutral grey skies, this could be as much as –40. If it looks too obvious, go back one step using your History palette and try again. To balance out your dark sky, now darken down areas of the foreground. Use the Burning in tool and work on the Midtones, with a 30% Exposure. Large soft edged brushes are best, such as 120 pixels. Click and paint into areas which need darkening down. SECTION #01 REVIEWS Section highlights… KIT REVIEW RICOH CAPLIO RR-35 SEE PAGE 26 PAGE PAGE 30 RICOH CAPLIO RR-35 THE 3-MEGAPIXEL SNAPSHOT Three megapixels can turn out a decent photo these days and this is the cheapest model on the market PAGE NIKON COOLPIX 4500 THE 4-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT (BEST BUY) Better designed and specced than its predecessor the 990 – and still using that crafty swivel design PAGE CANON POWERSHOT G3 THE 4-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT Does the long awaited Canon G3 – the priciest camera reviewed this issue – stand up to scrutiny? PAGE LAB TEST DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS Cut out the middle man and invest in some printing supplies. We road test the do-it-yourself options... PAGE PAGE 34 41 Kit reviews The latest digital photo gear, reviewed and rated f Contact our reviews team Reviews you can trust! Our aim is to inform you fully about a product’s best and worst features. To this end, we guarantee each review is Independent: We have a cast-iron policy of editorial independence. Suppliers never see a review until the magazine hits the newsagent Authoritative: Every review includes the manufacturer’s range, other options, test shots, 3D tours, plus links to buy online Clear: We use diagrams and boxes to ensure each review delivers a definitive verdict # If you have a comment about our reviews, or a product you would like us to test, please email us at editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk. Visit our website at digitalcameramagazine.co.uk for reader verdicts 26 30 34 41 REVIEWS 3-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT RICOH CAPLIO RR-30 Price Resolution Lens Memory Battery Life Contact £225 3.2 megapixels f2.6-4.7 3x zoom 8MB internal, SD card slot 350 shots with optional Li-ion cells Johnsons Photopia 01782 753 300 www.ricoh-cameras.co.uk SAMPLE IMAGES ALL THESE IMAGES CAN BE FOUND ON OUR CD Ricoh Caplio RR-30 The RR-30’s as cheap an introduction to 3-megapixel photography as you can get, but has its appeal been driven down along with its price? * ON OUR COVERDISC VIRTUAL TOUR Try before you buy! Rotate and view this camera on-screen with our unique virtual reality tour C ON OUR WEBSITE OPINIONS & SHOPPING Post your views, see what other readers think then buy this camera! R icoh’s digital camera range is a bit of an odd mixture. At the top end it’s got its businessorientated i500 and i700 models, and the similarly styled 4-megapixel RR-1. These boast unusual slab-like styling which works surprisingly well, but the pricing and the business slant have left these models rather dead in the water. Meanwhile, lower down the range, there’s the cute MP3-playing RR-10 and the cheap and cheerful 2-megapixel RR-120. Bang in the middle of these two is the RR-30, with higher resolution, higher spec and more mass-market appeal, especially at current prices. Price will have to be a big factor in choosing this camera, because its feature set is pretty much par for the course in this area of the market. It does offer a choice of metering patterns, though, and can even bracket your exposures. Its rather bulbous design, then, disguises some reasonably serious intentions. 2 3 digitalcameramagazine.co.uk/ Bargain basement DIGITAL RANGE RICOH CAPLIO RR-1 Price: £469 Megapixels: 4.0 RDC-I500 Price: £375 Megapixels: 3.3 CAPLIO RR-10 Price: £285 Megapixels: 2.1 5 CAPLIO RR-30 Price: £225 Megapixels: 3.2 £ CAPLIO RR-120 Price: £175 Megapixels: 2.2 5 026 The design doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence, mind. Both the styling and the materials feel on the cheap side, and it doesn’t take long for the matt silver finish to start marking up with scuffs and scratches. In use, though, it starts to grow on you. Startup is reasonably fast at around three seconds, and the focussing seems quite speedy, too – plus, it doesn’t suffer from the same hunting and whirring that mar other cameras. The two-stage shutter action is good, too. It’s wellweighted and positive, and you know exactly when the exposure and focus have locked so that you can take the picture. This is a camera you’ll get to grips with very quickly. The main mode dial on the top plate is clear and selfexplanatory, offering access to the playback, picturetaking, scene, movie and setup modes, with a power button in the middle. On the back of the camera, everything is equally logical, though you can tell it’s been built to a budget by the way the LCD image grows dim and grainy in DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 7 LENS You’re doing well to get a 3x optical zoom at this price, and the performance is well up to par gloomy artificial lighting, and the generally cheap feel of the buttons. The controls are well-spaced, though, and, in keeping with the rest of the camera, organised very clearly. Ricoh has used four separate directional buttons arranged in a circle rather than a single four-way navipad, and even though they’re mounted flush with the backplate, they’re still easier to use than the navigational controls on far more expensive cameras (like the Nikon CoolPix 4500, reviewed this issue, for example). There are other small design changes to consider. Ricoh has adopted the latest practice of using the navigation buttons to offer shortcuts to common options in photo-taking mode. Here, the ‘up’ button cycles 7 OPTICAL VIEWFINDER The optical viewfinder is small, but easy to find with your eye through the flash settings, while ‘down’ takes you into macro mode. The menu system is easy to follow, though the EV compensation control could do with being more accessible. The Scene mode is especially good. There are only six different scene settings, but each one is accompanied by a typical photo and an explanation of when to use that mode and how it works. Playback speed is pretty good, though images take a couple of seconds to render at full resolution. Zooming in and panning is particularly fast for a camera in this price range. The Ricoh should prove practical, too. Working off just a pair of AA cells, it can also take optional rechargeable TURN THE PAGE TO COMPARE TEST SHOTS RICOH CAPLIO RR-30 PERFORMANCE 2 SKIN TONES 1 7 3 4 3 5 6 PRO Skin tones reproduce well, especially in natural lighting, with few unnatural colours CON Complexions can look a bit colourless using direct flash, or slightly yellow in some conditions 2 OUTDOOR SHOTS MODE DIAL The mode dial’s big, easy to grip, hard to move accidentally and so obvious you won’t need any instructions 7 7 lithium-ion units which Ricoh reckons should be good for 350 or so shots. The NiMH cells we used in our camera seemed to last pretty well, too. Picture quality So while the Ricoh lacks the features, style or charm to be a ‘must-have’ digital camera, it does look pretty good at the price. It’s the sort of camera you 7 Noise is well-controlled, edges are sharp without exaggerated sharpening artefacts, and there’s not too much colour fringing around bright areas, either. Indeed, while it’s the 4- and 5-megapixel cameras that tend to grab all the headlines these days, you might not have noticed a quiet revolution going on lower down the market. Some of the much cheaper cameras, using only the ‘old’ 3- With its 3.3-megapixel CCD it’s obviously not going to challenge serious enthusiasts’ kit, but it does deliver rather good shots buy with your head, not your heart. That being so, you probably wouldn’t expect anything more than simply competent image quality from this little number – but that’s where the RR-30 springs a couple of surprises. With its 3.3-megapixel CCD it’s obviously not going to challenge serious enthusiasts’ kit for image quality, but it does deliver rather good shots nonetheless. Not only are they well-exposed, they’re saturated and sharp, too. megapixel chips, are now turning out some very respectable results indeed. Our camera did produce some vertical lines down the left hand side of the frame when we were shooting into the light for our outdoor test shot, but the conditions were fairly extreme and the same fault wasn't repeated on any other occasion. The Caplio RR-30 isn’t instantly impressive. Indeed, it does feel rather cheap. The controls are RICOH CAPLIO RR-30 FULL SPECIFICATIONS Sensor Lens Focus Exposure modes Metering Monitor AE compensation Flash Video output Movie recording Other features WORTH A LOOK 2 3.24-megapixel, 1/2.7-inch 3.34MP CCD Ricoh f2.6-4.7 3x zoom Auto, 1cm in macro mode Program AE, scene modes Multi-segment, centre-weighted, spot 1.6-inch 80,000 pixels +/-2EV in 0.3EV increments Auto, on, off, slow, red-eye NTSC and PAL 320 x 240 at 15fps without sound 8Mb internal memory HP PHOTOSMART 720 £250/3MP OLYMPUS C-300 £280/3MP Image storage Batteries Battery life AC adaptor Weight Dimensions Transfer Software: OS FUJIFILM FINEPIX A303 £270/3MP good, though, it packs in some useful photographic features and – most important of all – it produces good quality shots reliably in a variety of conditions. 5 6 PRO Good exposure control, high levels of contrast and tremendous colour saturation and vibrancy CON Didn’t like shooting into the light very much, and slightly underexposed a couple of our shots 2 INDOOR SHOTS Close contenders But this is a very crowded market-place, and the RR30 is up against tough competition from a number of makers. It’s just about the cheapest 3-megapixel camera with an optical zoom on the market right now, but not by much. HP’s PhotoSmart 720 comes close, with its barmy but likeable retro styling, while Sony’s DSC-P71 is hot on its heels – likely to cost you only a little more and is much better made. FujiFilm’s A303, meanwhile, is in the same price territory again, and it’s slimmer and neater than the Ricoh. We also like the Olympus C-300, currently dipping well under the £300 barrier and another first-rate performer. So it all comes down to price in the end. If you really do need to shave off every pound, and the RR-30 comes along at the right price, then go for it. If it was our money, though, we’d spend £20-30 extra on one of its rivals, if only for the extra build quality and style. 1 SD card slot 2 x AA 350 shots with optional Li-ion cells No 160g (without batteries or card) 114mm(w) x 54.5mm(h) x 32.5mm(d) USB Ricoh Gate, DU-10 image browser/editor Windows 98/Me, 2000, XP. Mac OS8.6-9.2.2, OSX 10.1.2 or later SONY DSC-P71 £260/3.3MP NAVIPAD Four separate buttons feel a bit cheap, but they’re well-spaced and logically arranged LCD The LCD is bright and crisp enough, though it does start struggling in low light levels Verdict SHUTTER RELEASE The shutter action is good, and focussing is crisp and accurate A bit of a plain Jane that nevertheless takes good shots With so many good cameras at or around the Ricoh’s price point, it could do with a bit more appeal. As it is, it’s a camera you’ll buy on price alone 5 6 PRO The smooth shutter action should keep camera shake to a minimum using available light CON Few problems, though we couldn’t find the slow flash mode – that left shots looking harsh 2 IMAGE QUALITY 5 6 PRO Highly saturated, colourful images that show good levels of detail. You won’t be disappointed CON Watch out for colour fringing around bright highlights, and avoid bright light sources FEATURES 73 82 IMAGES BUILD VALUE 70 82 1 1 1 1 77% FINAL SCORE DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 027 REVIEWS 2.1-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT FUJIFILM FINEPIX F402 Price Resolution Lens Memory Battery life Contact £300 2.1 megapixels (4 megapixel output) f3.2 fixed focal length 16Mb xD-Picture Card 140/400 shots (monitor on/off) Fujifilm 020 7586 1477 www.fujifilm.co.uk SAMPLE IMAGES ALL THESE IMAGES CAN BE FOUND ON OUR CD FujiFilm FinePix F402 Digital dons, FujiFilm, has produced a slinky 2-megapixel point-and-shoot that uses advanced light sensing to give 4-megapixel images. But do the results stand up to scrutiny? VIRTUAL TOUR Try before you buy! Rotate and view this camera on-screen with our unique virtual reality tour. C ON OUR WEBSITE OPINIONS & SHOPPING Post your views, see what other readers think then buy this camera! digitalcameramagazine.co.uk F 3 ujifilm is one of the digital camera world’s pioneers. Its SuperCCD imaging technology is now in its third generation, Fuji is working jointly with Olympus on the new xD-Picture Card format, and FujiFilm cameras have long boasted a combination of innovative styling and build quality that’s left the rest looking slightly lacklustre. The SuperCCD chips used in many of FujiFilm’s cameras feature larger-than-usual light sensing cells. The in-camera processing produces output files larger than the SuperCCD’s native resolution. The 2.1-megapixel SuperCCD in the FinePix F402, for example, generates 4-megapixel files, while the 3.3-megapixel SuperCCD in the M603 (also reviewed this issue) can generate 6-megapixel images. So does the image quality match that of genuine 4 and 6-megapixel CCDs? That’s one of the things our test was aiming to find out. 3 OUR COVERDISC * ON 4 What can it do? DIGITAL RANGE FUJI FinePix F601 Price: £400 Megapixels: 3/6 FinePix F401 Price: £330 Megapixels: 2/4 5 FinePix F402 Price: £300 Megapixels: 2.1 FinePix A303 Price: £270 Megapixels: 2 £ 5 028 FinePix A203 Price: £230 Megapixels: 2 The F402 is designed as a highly pocketable ‘take anywhere’ camera pitched fair and square at the snapshot market – which doesn’t necessarily exclude experienced photographers if the features are right. With better build and a lot more style than entrylevel FujiFilm cameras, it’s not the cheapest camera you can get by any means. Does it justify its price tag? A cursory glance would leave you doubtful. With its program AE exposure system and simple point-andshoot controls, the F402 is no more sophisticated than 2-megapixel cameras costing £100 less. The menu system, for example, can be set to Auto (point and shoot only) and Manual (adding EVcompensation and white balance adjustment). Still, it is very easy to operate. The graphical menu system is simple and it’s immediately obvious how to navigate it. There are no custom ‘scene’ modes for portraits, landscapes, night shots and so on, but the LCD can display a grid, splitting up the scene into a 3x3 grid as a compositional aid. You can hook up the F402 to your PC to use it as a webcam, and the price does include a soft DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 7 7 CRESCENT-SHAPED PANEL This sliding panel is the power switch: nice movement case and a cradle for placing it next to your computer. The fixed focal length lens (39mm equivalent) is a bit disappointing, since nearly all the F402’s rivals have zooms, and while you can shoot movies with sounds at 320 x 240 resolution, it’s only at 10fps. Pixel performance On the other hand, the SuperCCD does have high sensitivity, going up to ISO 800 and 1600, though only at 1260 x 980 resolution, using special ‘Pixel Coupling’ technology. The xD-Picture Card you get with this and other FujiFilm cameras certainly is tiny – less than half 7 MICROPHONE GRILLE The F402 can record movies with sound, but only at 10fps LENS The fixed focal length lens restricts the F402’s versatility, but not its image quality the size of a SmartMedia card – but the 16MB capacity is OK, and these cards are reckoned to offer faster read/write times and lower power consumption. On paper at least, the FinePix F402 doesn’t seem that impressive, but all that changes the moment you take it out of the box. It’s very slim indeed, with a brushed metal finish, solid-feeling build and smoothcornered styling. The startup time is around a second and focusing is pretty fast too. The shutter action is a little uncertain at the end, leaving you wondering if you’ve taken the shot or not, but the weighting is otherwise OK. The power switch is especially neat – a TURN THE PAGE TO COMPARE TEST SHOTS 7 FUJIFILM FINEPIX F402 PERFORMANCE 2 SKIN TONES 4 3 SHUTTER BUTTON The shutter release has a reasonable action, but needs better shot confirmation 5 6 1 7 PRO A nice healthy warmth in various lighting conditions, including flash. Good tonal rendition. CON Can exaggerate reds a little at times, which seems to be characteristic of the SuperCCD 2 OUTDOOR SHOTS LCD The LCD is bright and crisp, and pleasingly, the optical viewfinder isn’t bad either 7 ROW OF BUTTONS This row of buttons looks smarter than a navipad, but doesn’t work as well. The control layout is very good, though particularly easy to use. Things are looking up for the little FinePix, then, but can the image quality from its 2.1-megapixel SuperCCD match up? Well, it’s not bad at all. SuperCCD images have sliding panel to the left of the body as you hold the camera, with a really nice action. The optical viewfinder is on the small side, but easy enough to put your eye too and quite crisp and bright. The 1.5-inch LCD on the back is good, too, though it does get a bit grainy and dark in low ambient light levels. different qualities to those of conventional CCDs, and it’s not that easy to compare them directly. Right up close, you can see that the F402’s 4-megapixel images don’t have the bite or detail rendition of ‘real’ 4-megapixel shots, and that there’s a distinct granular effect in some areas and clear edge sharpening artefacts. The detail rendition lies around halfway between that of a typical 2-megapixel camera and a 4-megapixel model. It’s roughly equivalent to a 3-megapixel camera’s results, which is about what FUJIFILM FINEPIX F402 FULL SPECIFICATIONS WORTH A LOOK 2 CASIO EXILIM EX-S2 £300/2MP PANASONIC LUMIX DMC F7 £260/2MP Image storage Batteries Battery life AC adaptor Software Weight Dimensions Transfer OS MINOLTA DIMAGE X £300/2MP 1 xD-Picture Card Lithium-ion rechargeable, NP-40 140/400 shots (monitor on/off) Supplied FinePix Viewer, ImageMixer VCD 125g (without battery or card) 77mm(w) x 69mm(h) x 22mm(d) USB Windows 98/Me, 2000 or XP. Mac OS8.6-9.2.2, OSX 10.0.4 or later CANON DIGITAL IXUS V3 £400/3MP and contrast, and shouldn’t need too much work in your image-editor later on. The only area where the camera struggled was in reproducing reds. They were all vivid, but with almost no differentiation between shades (see the red sweatshirt in our Skin Tones performance panel). The F402 may not look cheap on paper, but its main metal-built sub-compact rivals are less capable 2-megapixel models. The F402’s excellent design and build quality, plus its startlingly slim dimensions, are very appealing – a great pocket camera. Verdict The buttons on the back work well too. The conventional four-way navipad has been dropped in favour of a smart-looking but less effective strip of buttons, with the larger, central one operating up/down, and smaller buttons to the side for moving left and right. A three-way switch swaps between movie, playback and stills mode, and during playback mode the F402 cycles between images reasonably fast, and you can zoom in and pan around your saved images too, though the lack of a zoom switch means you have to toggle between ‘zoom’ and ‘pan’ modes on the navipad. It all adds up to a camera that feels well made for the money, is extremely compact and is 2.1-megapixel, 1/2.7-inch 2.1MP SuperCCD 2048 x 1536 Fujinon f3.2 fixed focal length lens Auto, 6cm in macro mode Program AE 64-zone 1.5-inch 117,000 pixels +1.5 to -2EV in 0.3EV increments Auto, on, off, slow, red-eye No 320 x 240 at 10fps with sound Docking cradle, soft case you’d hope for at this price, after all. Where the SuperCCD does score, though, is its sharpness at normal viewing distances. The shots are punchy and crisp-looking with decent saturation On paper at least, the FinePix F402 doesn’t seem that impressive, but all that changes the moment you take it out of the box Smooth operator Sensor Image size Lens Focus Exposure modes Metering Monitor AE compensation Flash Video output Movie recording Other features 5 6 A small, neat and beautifully made camera The limited specs make the F402 look dear compared to other entrylevel snapshot cameras, but there’s so much more to it than that PRO Very good exposure control, even in tricky conditions like backlit and high contrast scenes CON Bright highlighted areas can merge and wash out, but the F402 isn’t alone here 2 INDOOR SHOTS 5 6 PRO Saturated but neutral colours. The slow flash mode balances well with the available light CON The SuperCCD does offer high sensitivity, but with more noise and less shadow detail 2 IMAGE QUALITY 5 6 PRO Images are contrasty and saturated at normal viewing distances, with neutral colour rendition too CON Fine detail isn’t quite up to the standard of a 4-megapixel camera – it’s more like a 3-megpixel Features Images Build Value 1 1 93 1 90 1 FINAL SCORE 70 86 85% DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 029 REVIEWS 4-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT NIKON COOLPIX 4500 Price Resolution Lens Memory Contact £550 4 megapixels f2.6-5.1 4x zoom 16MB Compact Flash Nikon 0800 230 220 www.nikon.co.uk SAMPLE IMAGES ALL THESE IMAGES CAN BE FOUND ON OUR CD Nikon CoolPix 4500 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE Not so much point and shoot as twist and shoot. Nikon’s evergreen swivelcam design gets a bigger CCD and a cosmetic revamp * ON OUR COVERDISC VIRTUAL TOUR Try before you buy! Rotate and view this camera on-screen with our unique virtual reality tour ON OUR C WEBSITE OPINIONS & SHOPPING Post your views, see what other readers think then buy this camera! digitalcameramagazine.co.uk/ review/reviewproduct.asp?RGN =2&RCN=13&RPN=170&sp=&v=3 DIGITAL RANGE NIKON COOLPIX 5700 Price: £900 Megapixels: 5 5000 Price: £700 Megapixels: 5 5 4500 Price: £550 Megapixels: 4 4300 Price: £400 Megapixels: 4 £ 5 030 885 Price: £350 Megapixels: 3.3 W here other digital camera makers seek to make their models look as much like conventional cameras as possible, Nikon took a bold step with its CoolPix 990 model, the predecessor to the 4500. Digital cameras don’t have the long and complex optical paths of film cameras, and the designers used this to separate the lens from the LCD panel with a swivelling pivot halfway along the body. The great thing about this design was it enabled you to compose shots at waist level, overhead, and practically round corners. And despite feeling like plasticky gimmicks about to fall to bits, the 990/995 models were extremely robust, durable and practical. It’s nice to see Nikon continuing with its ‘swivelcam’ series, since its 5-megapixel models have reverted to a much more mainstream camera shape. Other cameras like the PowerShot G2/G3 and 5-megapixel Nikons have flip-out, rotating LCDs, but on the swivelling CoolPix 4500, you use your fists not your fingernails. It’s instantly practical in a way that flip-out LCDs aren’t. And that swivelling joint will last for decades. 3 7 LENS The 4500’s 4x zoom is carried over from the 995, but here it delivers sharper, crisper results Leaner and fitter? Cosmetically, the 4500 is a much more svelte, upmarket machine than its predecessor. Under the skin, though, rather less has changed. It does boast an improved processing system, which offers greater speed and improved image quality, while the designers have sneaked in a new (and useful) scene mode with no fewer than 16 different settings. There’s also a panoramic mode now, (though there’s no dedicated panorama stitching software). The 4500 swaps the rugged plastic ‘combat’ styling of the CoolPix 995 for a sleeker, more compact shape and a hard, black, magnesium alloy finish. It’s not only better-specified than its predecessor, but cheaper and better-finished too. At least, that’s how you start off feeling. However, along the way the designers have also made modifications to the control layout that offer less obvious benefits. We’re so used to the outgoing 995 that maybe DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE we need time to adapt to the new controls, but initially at least they seem to represent some odd decisions. Shrink to fit For a start, the playback mode is no longer accessed by a single rotary power/mode switch. Instead, it’s operated by a little button on the back and you have to go through the Quick Review mode (which displays a thumbnail image within the main LCD image). It takes longer and it’s more awkward. The LCD is smaller too. The old model’s 1.8-inch display has been dropped for a 1.5-inch unit that’s very bright and crisp, but still smaller. A rearrangement of the mode functions does make it 1 7 SWIVEL JOIN The 4500 has a pivot halfway along the body. You won’t believe how useful and practical this is until you try it a little quicker to get to the 4500’s aperture-priority, shutter-priority, manual and scene modes, but the miniature joystick (thumbstick?) that’s replaced the old model’s conventional navipad is really rather horrible. The directional movements are a bit vague and you have to press down vertically to ‘OK’ menu choices and actions. It takes quite a firm push and it’s too easy to push it to one side. The latest 5-megapixel Nikons have controls which are a bit smaller than you want them to be, and the 4500 seems to be following this trend. There’s no reason for it, since this is hardly a miniature camera. It does feel good to use, though. The controls are well-made, and the magnesium alloy body feels very TURN THE PAGE TO COMPARE TEST SHOTS 7 NIKON COOLPIX 4500 PERFORMANCE 2 SKIN TONES CONTROLS TO RIGHT A reorganised control layout leaves the Nikon’s top plate uncluttered, but some changes are not welcome 1 5 6 PRO A healthy-looking neutral colour balance in most conditions and fine detail rendition CON Flash shots and those taken in overcast lighting can make your subjects look a little pale 2 OUTDOOR SHOTS 3 7 THUMBSTICK What is it with digicam makers? They drop navipads, which work well, and use widgets like this thumbstick, which don’t LCD The LCD is smaller than the CoolPix 995’s, but it’s good and sharp, so you probably won’t worry classy. The 4500 starts up a lot faster than the old 995, and doesn’t sound so much like a tractor. Zooming is still a bit slow, but image playback, zooming and panning is quick. The shutter release is one of the 4500’s strong points, with a very wellweighted two-stage action that helps – along with work and when to use them – this camera comes with an excellent 164-page English manual. Although the EV compensation control is quite handily placed, the 4500 still suffers from some of the control problems of its predecessor. In particular, it’s a camera with very powerful photographic On the swivelling CoolPix 4500, you use your fists not your fingernails. It’s instantly practical in a way that flip-out LCDs aren’t the camera’s eminently ‘grippable’ design – to keep camera shake down to a minimum. The menus have been redesigned too, and while they don’t offer much that the old camera didn’t, the whole experience of using them is a bit more satisfactory – if you can live with that little thumbstick, that is. The new scene mode is particularly effective, offering not just a good range of modes, but also clear explanations as to what they’re for, how they controls – exposure bracketing, white balance bracketing, best shot selector and more – which are buried just that little bit too deep in the menus. Visibly better But what about the image quality? The increase in resolution from the 3.3 megapixels in the 995 to the 4 megapixels in the 4500 might not sound much, but we reckon 4-megapixel CCDs do a better job than 3.3-megapixel chips, size for size. Shots taken NIKON COOLPIX 4500 FULL SPECIFICATIONS Sensor Lens Focus Exposure modes Metering Monitor AE compensation Flash Video output Movie recording WORTH A LOOK 2 4-megapixel, 1/1.8-inch 4.13MP CCD Nikkor f2.6-5.1 4x zoom Auto, manual, 2cm in macro mode Program AE, shutter-priority, aperture-priority, manual, scene modes Matrix, centre-weighted, spot, AF spot 1.5-inch 110,000 pixels +/-2EV in 0.3EV increments Auto, on, off, slow, red-eye NTSC or PAL 320 x 240 at 15fps with sound NIKON COOLPIX 4300 £400/4MP CANON POWERSHOT G3 £700/4MP Other features Image storage Batteries AC adaptor Weight Dimensions Transfer Software OS CASIO QV-5700 £600/5MP 1 Swivelling body Compact Flash Lithium-ion, EN-EL1 No 360g (without battery or card) 130mm(w) x 73mm(h) x 50mm(d) USB Nikon View 5, Photoshop Elements 1, FotoStation Easy Windows 98SE/Me, 2000, XP, Mac OS9.0-9.2, OSX 10.1.2 or later OLYMPUS C-50 £550/5MP 7 MENU BUTTON Why are we showing you the menu button? Because you’ll be seeing altogether too much of it, we fear with the 4500 are clearly crisper, sharper and punchier than the 995’s which was, it has to be said, a little woolly in that respect. Compared to the other cameras on test this issue, the CoolPix 4500 comes out pretty well. Detail is well defined – its detail rendition is clearly better than that of the FinePix F402, the Ricoh Caplio RR-30 and even the FinePix M603 – and tones are smooth with little granularity. Its images are perhaps a fraction dull and undersaturated compared to the rest, but it avoids the lurid reds of the two FujiFilm models and produces commendable neutral results all round. It’s possibly got a very slight tendency to underexposure now and again, but that’s no bad thing in a digital camera, prone as they are to highlight burn-out. In terms of image quality, build quality and general speed, the CoolPix 4500 is a significant step up from the 995 – and it’s cheaper too. We still have misgivings about the controls and layout, though, and CoolPix fans might find the changes frustrating. First-time users, though, will simply marvel instead at the instant practicality of Nikon’s long-running swivelling design. Verdict 7 A classic design gets a welldeserved update Nikon’s done a great job with the image quality, build and finish, but the 995’s successor isn’t necessarily any better to use 5 6 PRO Sharp detail, accurate exposure and less prone to overexposure and burn-out than some CON Can err on the side of underexposure, which may mean some tweaking later 2 INDOOR SHOTS 5 6 PRO Slow flash balances well against ambient light and the pop-up flash appears when needed CON Could do with a slightly wider-angle zoom – it’s a tad on the long side (38m equivalent) 2 IMAGE QUALITY 5 6 PRO Very sharp, crisp, well-exposed results. One of the best 4-megapixel digital cameras CON Why didn’t Nikon slot a 5-megapixel CCD into one of its all-time classic camera designs? 95 FEATURES IMAGES 93 BUILD 94 VALUE 83 1 1 1 1 91% FINAL SCORE DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 031 REVIEWS 3-MEGAPIXEL COMPACT FUJIFILM FINEPIX M603 Price Resolution Lens Memory Battery Life Contact £700 3 megapixels f3.2 2x zoom 16MB xD-Picture Card, 512MB MicroDrive 130 shots FujiFilm 0207 586 1477 www.fujifilm.co.uk SAMPLE IMAGES ALL THESE IMAGES CAN BE FOUND ON OUR CD FujiFilm FinePix M603 The digital camera that thinks it’s a camcorder? The high-quality movie mode isn’t the only thing that sets the M603 apart from its peers * ON OUR COVERDISC VIRTUAL TOUR Try before you buy! Rotate and view this camera on-screen with our unique virtual reality tour ON OUR C WEBSITE OPINIONS & SHOPPING Post your views, see what other readers think then buy this camera! digitalcameramagazine.co.uk/ casioqv5700 DIGITAL RANGE FUJIFILM S602 PRO Price: £700 Megapixels: 3.3 S602 Price: £595 Megapixels: 3.3 5 M603 Price: £700 Megapixels: 3.3 F601 Price: £400 Megapixels: 3.3 £ 5 032 F401 Price: £330 Megapixels: 2.1 F ujiFilm’s camera range seems to be settling into three main product ranges. There are the inexpensive entry-level snapshot cameras like the A203, the high-end professional models like the FinePix S602 and the FinePix S2 Pro and, in the middle, we’ve got the company’s innovatively-styled ‘multimedia’ models. And if one camera deserves the multimedia tag, it’s this one. Other cameras include movie modes, but only at a limited resolution of 320 x 240 pixels and a flickery frame rate of 15fps. The M603 just blows them all away. With 640 x 480 resolution and a 30fps frame rate, this camera comes close to the quality of digital camcorders. And with the inclusion of a MicroDrive slot and 512MB card, it can keep recording at these resolutions for minutes on end. You even get a handgrip to make longer sequence shooting more comfortable. 2 3 Strange but true The high-quality movie mode and MicroDrive slot aren’t the only unusual things about this camera. Apart from the unusual upright shape, it comes with a giant 2.5-inch LCD screen. The resolution is no higher than that of many rivals, at 118,000 pixels, but its sheer size makes it an impressive compositional aid for still photographs and a great playback device for movies. The LCD needs to be good for composing images, mind, because there’s no optical viewfinder at all. Not a problem if you generally compose shots on the LCD screen anyway, but could be a bit of a worry as far as battery power is concerned. The quoted life of 130 shots isn’t bad at all, though, and it only drops slightly when you’re saving images on the MicroDrive. Certainly we had no complaints about battery life during our tests. The M603 looks pretty pricey given its specifications, despite that high-powered movie mode, but the inclusion of a 512MB MicroDrive accounts for a good part of the cost. You also get a Picture Cradle for your desk and a soft case to carry the camera round in. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 7 BLUEBAR That horizontal blue divider doesn’t indicate any clever kind of swivelling lens design And the fact is that, photographically, the M603 is no more sophisticated than the little F402 – reviewed on page 28. It’s got 50% more resolution, but otherwise the same combination of program AE and modest EV compensation and white balance controls. Enough for mildly creative snapping, but not much else. The M603 is bulkier than you might be expecting, and while it’s got a nice metal finish, the quality is a bit patchy here and there, with a couple of untidy panel joins on the top plate and a rather plasticky control ‘bubble’ on the right. And it’s on the bubble control that you’ll find other 7 LENS The 2x optical zoom has a modest range, and could do with a bit more at the telephoto end unusual design features. The zoom rocker works conventionally enough, but the camera defaults to the mid position rather than the wideangle setting, which we found to be a bit of a nuisance. But right next to it is the shutter release, also shaped like a rocker switch. This may prove more convenient for movie shooting, and it’s not a big disadvantage for stills, but it does takes some getting used to and it’s easy to get the wrong switch with your fingers (zoom instead of shutter and vice versa) if you don’t look first. Startup is pretty fast, but accompanied by some loud electronic twittering that you’ll want to turn down TURN THE PAGE TO COMPARE TEST SHOTS 7 7 CONTROL BUBBLE This control ‘bubble’ houses the zoom rocker and – unusually – the shutter release LCD DISPLAY The giant 2.5-inch LCD is bright and crisp and perfect for both composition and movie playback 4 7 MODE SWITCH With just three modes – still, playback and movie – the M603 is easy to grasp The movie quality is the M603’s unique feature, and the results are a step removed from novelty movie modes There are no scene modes, but the M603 does such a reliable job in plain program mode (as do most other digital cameras) that it’s debatable whether you need them. The M603’s control layout is logical and easy to understand – it doesn’t do that much anyway, let’s face it – and it’s a nice camera to use. But while it’s by no means a big camera, it’s not one you can slip into your shirt pocket either. Quality and value The movie quality is the M603’s unique feature, and the results are a step removed from the novelty movie modes of most digital cameras. You can transfer them to your computer and start building them into your home movie projects without the expense and faff of DV capture cards, too. FUJIFILM FINEPIX M603 FULL SPECIFICATIONS Sensor Lens Focus Exposure modes Metering Monitor AE compensation Flash Video output Movie recording Other features WORTH A LOOK 2 3.1-megapixel, 1/1.7-inch 3.3MP SuperCCD Super EBC Fujinon f3.2 2x zoom Auto, 20cm in macro mode Program AE 64-zone 2.5-inch 118,000 pixels +1.5 to -2EV in 0.3EV increments Auto, on, off, slow, red-eye NTSC and PAL 640 x 480 at 30fps LCD cover/shade, docking cradle, soft case, FUJI FINEPIX F601 £400/3.3MP SONY CYBERSHOT DSCP9 £430/4MP Image storage Batteries Battery life AC adaptor Weight Dimensions Transfer Software OS OLYMPUS CAMEDIA C-50 £550/5MP 1 MicroDrive slot xD-Picture Card and MicroDrive Lithium-ion, NP-60 130 shots Supplied 210g (without battery or card) 64.5mm(w) x 93.3mm(h) x 31.6mm(d) USB FinePix Viewer, ImageMixer VCD Windows 98/Me, 2000 or XP. Mac OS8.6-9.2.2, OSX 10.0.4 or later CASIO QV-R4 £400/4MP CON Tones can get a little too warm at times, and the M603 struggles to separate strong reds 2 OUTDOOR SHOTS 5 6 The still image quality is more of a mixed bag. FujiFilm’s SuperCCD chips do indeed deliver better quality than their native resolution suggests, but not as much as the final file size promises. The 6-megapixel images from the M603 offer about the same level of detail rendition as you’d expect from a typical 4-megapixel camera. Close-up detail is compromised by some granularity, edge effects and softness. Colours, exposure, contrast, saturation and overall colour balance are very good indeed, though, and prints viewed at normal distances look terrific. The only flaw is the rather over enthusiastic treatment of reds – a trait the M603 shares with the cheaper F402. You’re paying a lot here for the high-quality movie mode and the bundled MicroDrive. The M603’s photographic options are very modest indeed, so it’s just as well its point-and-shoot results are so reliable. The fact is that you can get the same quality and a whole load more features for a lot less money than this, even within the FujiFilm stable, so that movie mode is the only good reason to choose this camera. Verdict The menu system can be left set to Auto, where you’ve got little to do except choose the image size or set the self-timer, or Manual, where you can adjust the EV compensation and white balance. PRO Very good skin tones which always look warm and radiant. Your subjects will be flattered 7 NAVIPAD With a proper fourway navipad, the M603’s menus and stored images are easy to navigate Settings 2 SKIN TONES 5 6 3 on the Setup screen. Focusing is reasonably rapid too (again, with the same loud confirmation bleeps), but the zooming speed is a bit disappointing, especially since the lens only has a 2x zooming range anyway. The M603 is reasonably quick in playback mode, cycling between images in a couple of seconds, and the giant display more than makes up for any sluggishness here. Zooming in and panning is pretty quick, too (more irritating bleeps – where is that Setup menu?). PERFORMANCE 3 1 FINEPIX M603 A great camcorder, but is it a great camera? The M603 is far too expensive for what it does as a still camera, so you have to really want that movie mode to make it worth buying PRO Simple but not dumb! The exposure system does a great job, even shooting into the light CON Lens flare can creep in with strong backlighting, and bright highlights easily burn out 2 INDOOR SHOTS 5 6 PRO Good balance between flash and ambient lighting in slow synch mode. Pleasing flesh tones CON Watch for camera shake in low light until you get used to the odd shutter release position 2 IMAGE QUALITY 5 6 PRO Bright, colourful results that nearly always look great without any Photoshop tweaking at all CON The fine detail starts to disintegrate as you approach 1:1 pixel magnification on-screen 80 FEATURES IMAGES 82 BUILD 81 VALUE 70 1 1 1 1 78% FINAL SCORE DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 033 REVIEWS 4 MEGAPIXEL COMPACT CANON POWERSHOT G3 Price Resolution Lens Memory Battery life Contact £700 4 megapixels f2.0-3.0 4x zoom 32MB Compact Flash 450/1,050 shots (monitor on/off) Canon 0800 616 417 www.canon.co.uk SAMPLE IMAGES ALL THESE IMAGES CAN BE FOUND ON OUR CD Canon PowerShot G3 Canon’s PowerShot G2 has been a long-standing digital camera classic, so we were looking forward to the new G3 with bated breath… * ON OUR COVERDISC VIRTUAL TOUR Try before you buy! Rotate and view this camera on-screen with our unique virtual reality tour ON OUR C WEBSITE OPINIONS & SHOPPING Post your views, see what other readers think then buy this camera! digitalcameramagazine.co.uk/ review/reviewproduct.asp?RGN =2&RCN=13&RPN=170&sp=&v=3 DIGITAL RANGE CANON EOS D-1S Price: £7,000 Megapixels: 11 EOS D60 Price: £2,000 Megapixels: 6 5 POWERSHOT G3 Price: £700 Megapixels: 4 POWERSHOT S45 Price: £550 Megapixels: 4 £ 5 034 DIGITAL IXUS V3 Price: £400 Megapixels: 3 W e needn’t have kept our breath quite so bated. The original PowerShot G2 was packed with smart photographic features, but wasn’t the best-handling camera in the world, proving a bit heavy and, thanks to its shape and smooth metallic finish, hard to grip. Canon’s had a year and a half to come up with something better, and the G3 isn’t quite what we were expecting. With a boxier, retro style it actually feels a little more cheaply made than the G2, and has more buttons, knobs and dials than ever. True, it’s a little more wieldy, and the finish and shape are a little less slippery than the G2’s, but it’s no masterpiece and it’s going to have to have a lot of new stuff under the bonnet to overcome these first impressions. 3 1 What’s new? The list of new features does sound impressive, mind. At its heart the G3 has a new DIGIC processor, while the optical zoom range has been upped from 3x to 4x (the extra is added at the telephoto end of the range). The aperture and shutter are now separate mechanisms, apparently, offering a wider range of combinations – notably high shutter speeds/wide apertures – and an optional ND (neutral density) filter cuts down the light entering the camera. This means you can shoot very bright scenes or use wide apertures in bright daylight. If you want to experiment with time-lapse photography, there’s now an ‘intervalometer’ which lets you set delays anywhere between 1 and 60 minutes, while the new orientation sensor rotates portrait shots. This improves auto-exposure accuracy (the light patterns are analysed differently for vertical-format shots) and ensures the date-stamping is always the right way up. There are other additions and enhancements, including a new 345-point ‘Flexizone’ AF/AE system but, at heart, the G3 is still very similar to the older G2. It offers fully-programmed auto-exposure, shutterpriority and aperture-priority automation and full manual mode. This is in addition to a selection of ‘scene’ modes, extended slightly in this latest model. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 7 LENS The first-rate f2.0 lens now has a 4x zooming range, though the lens barrel now obscures part of the optical finder The G3 has to be good, mind, because there’s little wrong with the performance of the G2. The older camera has a great LCD, good lens, minimal shutter lag and – as far as everyday shooting is concerned – a very similar set of features. What’s not so new? The G3 starts up faster than the G2, but seems little quicker in practical terms at composing, adjusting, saving and reviewing shots. If you include controls and ergonomics in your assessment of ‘speed’, then it gets harder still to see where the G3’s advantages – if any – lie. You know how it is when you decide to tidy your lounge/office/study? You take everything out, put it 7 CONTROL WHEEL Some may find the new control wheel useful, but it’s too small and the action is far too light back, and find it takes up more space than it did before. That’s how the G3 feels. Some of the changes to the control layout are quite puzzling. The G2 had a nice, meaty Record/Off/Playback switch mounted around the main mode dial. It worked well and used little space. With the G3, the controls have been separated into two smaller, fiddlier dials. On the back, meanwhile, a new ‘Func’ button pops up a menu offering quick access to the ISO setting, picture effects, bracketing, file format/quality and flash power. It seems smarter and slicker until you work out that the system on the old G2 didn’t actually need any more button presses, just different ones. The G3 does make the exposure compensation and 8 Getup&go Where to go, what to shoot MARCH 2003 UNFOLD THIS 8-PAGE SECTION! ■ Map of sites ■ Top photo tips ■ Places to visit ■ Pocket guide BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 THIS MONTH ANCIENT MONUMENTS How to photograph Britain’s megalithic landscape CAPTURING SPORT The right place at the right time – snapping athletes at the ‘critical moment’ 9 WAYS TO BETTER ! ANIMAL SHOTS Fold out this guide to find out how Watch winter melt away – we head to Scotland in search of winter landscapes WILDLIFE Wildlife photographer Peter Smart goes in search of big game – at Marwell Zoo… ost wildlife photographers dream of photographing big game on safari in Africa. But the costs are high, and often it remains just a dream, requiring budding David Attenboroughs to seek alternative opportunities for photographing exotic animals such as lions, tigers and elephants. When Longleat Safari Park opened in 1966, it broke the mould of the caged zoo, putting its wild animals into open enclosures more closely resembling their natural habitats. Now, as well as being places of entertainment, wildlife parks are at the forefront of animal conservation and M WILDLIFE PARKS Dream of shooting game in Africa? There are good alternatives closer to home Detach this section and take it on your travels! 8 8 8 welfare. They’re also excellent places for wildlife photographers to hone their skills. While some parks have drive-through facilities, enabling you to shoot from the safety of your vehicle with few barriers between you and your subject; others permit foot access on fenced pathways. Either way, you’ll rarely be closer to the animals than ten feet. Just as you would photograph animals in the wild, your best friends are a monopod, a telephoto lens (the longer the better) and a good dose of patience. The most popular subjects are big cats. Lions and tigers tend to sleep during the day, 8 Hear me roar! ICY WATERS NO REFLECTIONS Peter shot these African lion cubs through perspex with the lens against the surface to prevent reflections so wait for feeding times in order to get livelier pictures. Many parks publish breeding programmes on their websites, enabling you to plan a visit in order to get pictures of newborn cubs or family groups. Elephants don’t require mesh fences, which makes them easier to photograph. However, their dark colouring can confuse a camera’s light meter, so take a reading off average tone surroundings to get this right. Less dangerous animals, such as giraffes, antelope and zebras, have more visible enclosures, and often can be approached closer. WILDLIFE INSPIRATION [w] www.zoowatch.freeserve.co.uk, ZooWatch is a UK web portal to sites related to zoological parks and gardens in the UK and Ireland. Its website is a resource for educa Getup&go to… MARWELL ZOO THE EYES Mother and baby groups always make good pictures MARWELL ZOO AIM FOR MARWELL Opposing sight lines create tension here By car: Leave the M3 at Junction 11 or the M27 at Junction 6. Marwell is six miles south of Winchester on the B2177. 8 HOW TO GET THERE 8 DETAILS BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING Animals with textured or patterned coats such as tigers, leopards and zebras are best photographed in even light. This ensures that you don’t lose the detail, and means you can have a go at capturing abstract shots. MY MUM AND ME IMAGES © XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX EVEN LIGHTING 8 8 LIGHTING TIP 8 8 WHAT IS IT? Marwell Zoo is geared up for photography – it even has its own photographic society. The 100-acre site was founded in 1972 and you’ll find three species of zebra, six species of cat, giraffes, white rhino and the largest collection of antelope in the UK. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? Adults £10, OAPS £8.50, children £7. LOCATION Marwell Zoological Park, Colden Common, Winchester, Hants, SO21 1JH. FACILITIES Family restaurant at zoo. Marwell Hotel near main entrance. EXPERT ADVICE Best results: as a rule of thumb, position yourself less than half the distance in front of the fence as the subject is beyond it (you need to be sure you know how to focus at this aperture). Switch to manual to avoid auto-focus latching onto the fence, and focus on the eyes. Flash will reflect on mesh or perspex screens so don’t use it straight-on. ation, conservation and tourism Winter hours, 10am – 4.30pm; summer hours, 10am– 6pm. There’s a Valentine’s day special from Feb 14. RED PANDA ABOVE LEFT The red panda is native to Tibet and spends most of the time in trees, making it difficult to photograph INFO www.marwell.org.uk SPOT-ON FOCUS ABOVE RIGHT Focusing in close with a long lens will help you lose the bars surrounding more dangerous animals such as this jaguar 8 Peter specialises in wildlife shots. Visit his website at www.petersmart.com Obstacles: one problem is how to remove fences between you and your subject. A telephoto lens set to maximum aperture should throw these out of focus enough to make them invisible. 8 OPENING HOURS 8 E MARWELL POST-SHOOT CROP IN TIGHT 8 CULTURED VULTURE Don’t forget the rest. The lions and tigers may be the most dramatic subjects but other species are equally as attractive to photograph – and sometimes easier! You may not be able to get as close to animals as you would like, but there’s nothing to stop you cropping your picture tighter after the event – as long as the overall image quality will take it. Be prepared to trade off size for quality at times. Getup&go to… THE CAIRNGORMS IMAGES © Laurie Campbell 2003 SCOTLAND 8 AVIEMORE AIM FOR AVIEMORE By car: Take the A9 to Aviemore, then go east towards the Great Wilderness area of the Cairngorms for six miles to Loch Morlich in the heart of Glenmore Forest. BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 8 HOW TO GET THERE LANDSCAPE CHANGING SEASONS A 5 MELT WATERS Sharp focus throughout is critical in this Cairgorms river scene. Focus about onethird back and set the aperture to about f22 BLUE LIGHT Bought by the Forestry Commission in 1923, Glenmore consists of 8,600 acres of woodland and open hillside encircling beautiful Loch Morlich. The loch is fed by countless small burns, making it good hunting ground for icy subjects. WHERE TO GO? Glenmore Forest Park. LOCATION? Near Aviemore, Highlands, Scotland PH22 1QU. WHAT ARE THE FACILITIES? Café and toilets at the visitor centre on the lake (9am – 5pm daily), plus a caravan and camp site. COST? BEST RESULTS SLOW STREAM A slow shutter speed of 2 to 4 secs blurs the water to a rushing milky white Free, but pay for parking. INFO WHEN TO SHOOT Back or side lighting make thawing ice gleam against a dark background. Even so, it’s best to shoot on a bright but overcast day to ensure highlights don’t overexpose. We recommend you don’t use flash because it’s likely to bounce straight back at you and create ugly, specular highlights. WHAT TO FOCUS ON Trying to focus close on plain snow or ice can be difficult – both eye and autofocus sensors have nothing to latch onto. Gently lay a twig or something similar in the shot at the appropriate place, focus on this, then remove it. www.aviemore.co.uk/glenmoreforest Glenmore Caravan & Camping Site, www.forestholidays.co.uk for details. 8 5 DETAILS WHAT IS IT? Shooting in the shade in overcast light has produced a cold blue-ness, emphasised by selecting white balance 8 burns are particularly good because the waterlogged, peaty soil around them drips constantly and often forms icicles – sometimes with grasses embedded in them – or icy splash areas as the water has frozen. Follow them slowly uphill from a river or loch, keeping your eyes open for attractive icicles or hanging curtains of ice full of texture from the bubbles of air trapped inside them. It’s useful to have a macro lens for this, along with a tripod suitable for rough ground. But don’t unsling your tripod until you’ve found your shot ‘freehand’, allowing the creative juices to flow unencumbered. Look, too, for contrasts between running water and snow covered rocks or built-up ice. Use your tripod and slow-time exposures (anything from half a second upwards) to blur the water and give a sense of new movement as well as increasing depth of field. Use neutral density filters (or a polariser) to retard the exposure if conditions are too bright. Larger rivers may have too large a body of water to have frozen sufficiently during a cold spell, but thin sheets of floating ice will often form in the shallows. Sometimes raised above the surface on rocky supports, the frayed edges of the ice present an almost lace-like pattern as it’s eaten away by the passing water. 5 s the days lengthen and temperatures rise, the last vestiges of winter start to melt into spring. What better time to capture the transformation of solid into liquid as frozen streams and pools trickle back to life? In its solid form, ice can be dull and opaque, but as it melts and thins, its new-found liquid transparency sparkles as it catches the light. You’ll find fertile shooting locations occur anywhere that small streams splash their way across rocks on their way downhill to join larger water courses. Scottish Highland 8 Laurie Campbell watches winter melt away in the Scottish Highlands POST-SHOOT UNDEREXPOSED PICTURE? Snow and ice can often deceive camera exposure meters, leaving you with an underexposed picture. If you didn’t compensate for it in-camera, try making a new Layer of your picture then blending this with the original in Screen mode. Adjust the effect with the percentage slider to suit. LANDSCAPE INSPIRATION [w] www.forestry.gov.uk/forestry/HCOU-4U4HZM, The Forestry Commission is the government department responsible for the protection of Britain’s forests and woodlands CONTROL THE SHUTTER SPEED Do use speeds of 1/120sec combined with fast film, for that ‘frozen in time’ effect. Slower speeds will produce more blurring. ■ Now send us your pictures! Email a small JPEG to gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk with your name & a few words about the shoot, and we'll reply! to fold this booklet: 8 How This is side A. Turn over for side B Side A STEP 1: Detach sheet from rest of section 8 Side A 8 STEP 2: Fold this side in half horizontally STEP 3: Now fold around into a square SIDE B: ANCIENT ways you can improve your pet, zoo or wildlife photos ANCIENT MONUMENTS/ANIMALS 2 MONUMENTS SHUTTER SPEED ZOOM LENS INDEX: 2 PHOTOGRAPH ANIMALS SIDE A: HOW TO TRIPOD WHAT’S IN THIS ISSUE TOPICS COVERED > EQUIPMENT: three items for better results 6 FOLD ALONG THIS LINE SECOND DETACH HERE FILL THE FRAME Do always try to remove distractions. Use shallow depth of field to blur the background and the zoom to fill the frame. Britain’s neolithic past. We reveal the best places to snap a little bit of ancient history 01 a pile of moss-covered relics 5 Turn into spectacular symbols of 2 ■ Detailed maps of how to get there Make sure your camera offers enough in the way of manual control – you want to be able to widen the aperture for shallow depth of field, and vary the shutter speed to remove motion blur. 03 animals for fun (with 5 Shoot your camera)! We reveal nine Use the zoom to crop out distractions. Zoom your way past bars at the zoo, or use it to fill the frame with your pet. 02 ■ Tips ■ Equipment ■ Dos/don’ts If you are using a long lens, you’ll need to support the camera. See our reviews in issue 4 for our tripod recommendations. USE FAST ISO SETTINGS Do use ISOs of around 400-800 – this is so you can capture the animal without blurring. Dos and don’ts GETTING IT RIGHT: ANIMAL PHOTOGRAPHY . FOLD ALONG THIS LINE FIRST TEAROUT FACTSHEET NO.5 MARCH 2003 Getup&go Getup&go ANIMAL PHOTOGRAPHY 8 infested beast you end up with isn’t exactly what you had in mind. So zoos and wildlife parks have some advantages for the photographer these days: animals are looked after and may well be in better condition than the ‘real’ thing. Plus, setting up and taking the shots is easier – if the animal’s pose is wrong or the weather is wrong, simply wait until you get the shot you want. Given that animals never do what you want, when you want or how you want, how do you go about getting decent pictures of the furry blighters? One way is simply to visit a zoo or wildlife park. Not only are you guaranteed a selection of suitably exotic, fierce if slightly bored creatures, but they aren’t going to wonder off or start ripping up rivals just as you’re about to snap off that great shot. Alternatively, you can always stay home and photograph the dog. The secret here is knowing your animal and being prepared. Nothing is as dull as a photograph of the pet asleep in its basket because you weren’t ready for that cracking picture of it jumping out of the upstairs window. USE A HIGH ISO SETTING 3 Set your camera’s ISO setting to 400. Animals on the move produce blurring at lower ISO and shutter speeds. Set your shutter speed to 1/250sec. or 200 – and support the camera. Widen the aperture – say to around f/4. The advantage of blurring out the background is that it makes it harder to tell that you have been photographing at the zoo or park. This will produce the sharper images you want. Don’t worry about the results being slightly grainy, this should not be a problem if your aim is to produce standard sized prints. 4 TRY SHALLOW DEPTH OF FIELD If your camera supports it, try narrowing the depth of field so your subject stands out against a blurry background. Try a slower ISO setting – 100 USE THE ZOOM 2 The aim is to try to get good close-ups, while being careful that the cute monkey you’re trying to photograph doesn’t steal bits of the camera. Use your camera’s zoom to get in close to the action and fill the frame. This narrows the field of view and crops out distracting clutter. It also removes any items that suggest you are photographing at the zoo – like cage bars or signs – helping you get a natural look. ZOOS VERSUS SAFARIS 1 You may dream of capturing that lion powering across the African plains, but that’s outside the reach of most people’s budget. And the chances are, when you get the close-ups, the reality of the blood-caked, tsetse-fly 5 6 THINK OF IT AS A PORTRAIT The best way to get a cracking animal picture, is to use some of the same techniques you would apply if photographing a person. If you’re permitted, why not get an interesting expression by giving the animal a treat and capturing the results? Try to capture the animal in the middle of some action – maybe try to get a photograph during bathing time. And focus on the eyes. 7 your pet is likely to do something interesting. For example, it could be a cat getting ready to pounce, or a dog stealing something from the table. You will know your pet’s behaviour better than anyone, so be ready – images like this are the best. 8 TELL A STORY Keep your camera to hand and get ready to snap if IMAGES © PETER SMART USE THE FLASH A quick burst of fill-in flash on a dull day will help brighten colours and add life to the animals’ eyes. But you can also use the flash to photograph animals in display cases. The problem here is that most display cases are perspex and will reflect the flash back at you if you are not careful. To avoid this, move to one side and shoot at an angle. The light will be reflected by the perspex at an equivalent, but opposite angle. For example, if the animal is at 0 degrees and you are shooting at 45 degrees to the animal, the flash will be reflected at -45 degrees – that is, in the opposite direction and well away from your lens. GET THE ANGLE RIGHT As with portraits of babies and children, try to get down to eye level with your pet and photograph from that angle. If your pet is distracted by your close proximity, use the zoom so you can back off a little. 9 PHOTOGRAPHING FISH If you have an aquarium and want to snap off some pictures of the more spectacular specimens, you have two options. The first is to switch off the flash and hold the lens right up against the glass – the tank illumination should be enough if the glass has been cleaned. Alternatively, use the same technique as you do if you shoot animals in perspex cases at the zoo – use the flash but from an angle. Getup&go... routeplanner PULLOUT NO.5 Ancient monuments in Wiltshire and Somerset The best ancient monuments are in Wiltshire and Somerset, from landmarks like Stonehenge, to locations like Glastonbury Tor. Here’s where to go… TAKEN FROM LANDRANGER MAP 184 BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 21 2 1 STONEHENGE AGE 5,000 years Originally there were some 80 stones circling an inner ditch (the ‘henge’). You can find Stonehenge located at the junction of the A303 and the A344 but for such a world famous site, its tourist support facilities are very poor. ENTRANCE £4 to view the stones. Private access can be arranged before 9am – fill in a form at www.englishheritage.org.uk/Filestore/visits_and_events/pdf/private.pdf MORE INFO www.britainexpress.com/History/Stonehenge.htm 2 3 WEST KENNET LONG BARROW TAKEN FROM LANDRANGER MAP 173 2 2 SILBURY HILL AGE 4,000 years Silbury Hill is only a couple of miles from Avebury. Located between Marlborough and Beckhampton in Wiltshire, at 130 feet high it’s the largest man-made mound in Europe. Despite being excavated four times since 1776, no remains have been found. In fact, nobody knows what Silbury Hill was built for… ENTRANCE It’s illegal to climb the hill but there is a car park nearby from which you can take photos. MORE INFO www.britannia.com/ wonder/emsilbry.html BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 AGE 5,600 years The remains of an ancient ‘long barrow’ burial mound, West Kennet Long Barrow lies on Overton hill, between Marlborough and Beckhampton. Over 100 metres long, at the east entrance there are several huge standing stones. Walk past these around 10 metres into the ground, and you will come upon five stone-lined burial chambers. When first excavated, the remains of 46 people were found and legends say there’s a ghost of a dog that is supposed to haunt the site. ENTRANCE leave the car in the car park and climb half a mile to the long barrow. MORE INFO www.stonepages.com/england/westkennet.html 22 23 2 4 GLASTONBURY TOR AGE 2,000 years Glastonbury Tor rises 158 metres from the Somerset Levels, and dates from around 5AD, when it was most likely created as relief when the surrounding region flooded. In the 14th century, a Church was built at its summit – St Michael’s Tower is the only surviving part. Why not visit Glastonbury Abbey and Chalice Hill. ENTRANCE Access to the Tor is unrestricted, and you’ll find there are views of the surrounding Somerset Levels – ideal for creating a panorama. Park in Glastonbury and catch the park and rise to the Tor (April-Sept). MORE INFO www.nationaltrust.org.uk/scripts/ nthandbook.dll?ACTION=PROPERTY& PROPERTYID=346 BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 ontrary to popular belief, the history of Britain started bit before 1066. Television programmes like Time Team on Channel 4 have tapped into a desire to know a bit more about our heritage, and the popularity of ancient monuments at Stonehenge and Avebury have shown how much people enjoy visiting ancient monuments. There are so many outstanding megaliths, monuments and burial mounds, in and around Wiltshire that we’ve decided to focus on this area this month. C Getup&go to… UK ATHLETICS 8 ©Alan Brown BIRMINGHAM INDOOR ATHLETICS AIM FOR BIRMINGHAM By car: Take the A38 (M) from Junction 6 of the M6 then follow the signs. BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 8 HOW TO GET THERE 8 SPORT ON YOUR MARKS... WHAT IS IT? Missed out on tickets for Birmingham’s World Indoor Championships? Athletes will be competing for places at the WIC at the AAA Indoor Championships at the same venue on 1st – 2nd March. these move to outdoor tracks from April. Inner field events such as the javelin and shot are difficult to access, but track events and jumps are better sited, making them easier to capture with a 200mm lens from spectator seats. Once you have decided on the event, seek out the best spot to capture the highlights. Try the start and finish line for sprints; mid-track for hurdlers; and behind the pit so you can see the faces of competitors coming towards you for the jumping events. The repetitive nature of many events gives you plenty of opportunity to get it right – watch the OVER THE TOP LOCATION In this shot, the peak moment in the action has been captured Birmingham NIA, King Edward’s Road, Birmingham, B1 2AA. warm-ups to see which way athletes face at the critical moment, and position yourself accordingly. You’ll find grace and beauty, passion and humour in every event. Look for oddball poses and interesting juxtapositions between competitors and their surroundings, and don’t be afraid to get down low for more dynamism. WHEN IS IT OPEN? From 1st February for five weeks, 10am – 4pm. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? Tickets £2 to £4. WHAT ARE THE FACILITIES? Parking, food and drink available. INFO BEST RESULTS www.ticketmaster.co.uk Telephone 0121 200 2202 8 hotographing sport is about capturing the ‘critical moment’, whether it’s the peak of the action – a goal scored, the race won or a fleeting emotion on a competitor’s face. The secret to success is knowing your sport well enough to anticipate that ‘moment’, and being in the right place to record it. Big names may only grace events like the World Indoor Championships, held in Birmingham (14th – 16th March), but you’ll find rising stars at interclub league meets almost weekly around the country. Mostly held indoors during the winter, 8 Alan Brown takes to track and field in search of passion and athletic skill P DETAILS ESSENTIAL KIT SPLASH OF COLOUR A long lens and restricted colours make this a strong graphic image 8 8 HIGH JUMP SHOOTING STARS You'll often find home-grown talent at many of the smaller meets For best results, the peak of the action in the high jump and pole vault occurs as athletes clear the bar. At this point they hang for a split second, enabling you to freeze the action with slower shutter speeds. ATHLETICS INFORMATION [w] www.ukathletics.net, The official website of UK athletics with details of forthcoming meets 8 A monopod and a 400 ISO setting (800 for indoors) are essential. Forget about auto-focus unless you have fast predictive focusing. Instead, pre-focus on the spot where you think that moment will occur, and shoot as athletes hit this point. The shutter delay on many digital cameras may hinder this, but practice makes perfect. POST-SHOOT GET CREATIVE A little creative blur can lift an otherwise so-so sporting picture. Try saving your picture as a new layer, then applying a little linear blur (Filters) to this and blending it with the original layer. Experiment with the blending modes and percentages for the best effect, using the eraser where you want the sharper original layer to remain dominant. Getup&go to… MEGALITHS IN WILTSHIRE 8 CONTROL FLA Hide the sun behin Beware of looking may damage your eyes LANDSCAPE Pete Martin roams the megalithic landscape of ancient Wiltshire AVEBURY SHADOWS Early evening is perfect when shooting in the south-west quadrant at Avebury. Long shadows emphasise the contours Long Barrow and the mound known as Silbury hill (both pre-date Stonehenge and Avebury). West Kennet’s use as a burial place is well documented, but Silbury’s original purpose still isn’t known. All these massive structures are best photographed early or late in the day (and year), when the sun’s low angle brings both stones and the surrounding downlands to life. Early morning mists are particularly photogenic and you’ll find the stones clear of people – a perennial problem at Stonehenge, in particular. BEST RESULTS Low light throws surface detail into sharp relief, but can cause flare unless you hide the sun behind the stones or otherwise shade it – lens hoods are rarely useful at such times. We suggest you pay particular attention to the sky, which is likely to play a large part in pictures, especially at sunset. Using filters: enhance the blue with a polariser and use graduated filters to reduce any contrast. But remember that the more glass, the greater the chances of flare. 8 LENS HOODS PENTRE IFAN TOP There are many photogenic megalithic monuments scattered across most of Britain. This one is Pentre Ifan in midWales, captured in the early morning light 8 8 here are a thousand prehistoric monuments around the British Isles. Perhaps the largest concentration is in Wiltshire, of which Avebury and Stonehenge must surely be the most famous – and the most photographed. Dating back 4000 years, and sited in landscapes as evocative as the stones themselves, these potent reminders of our ancient heritage make strong and atmospheric images. At 427 metres in diameter, Avebury is reckoned to be the largest stone circle in the world, and partially encloses the village at its heart. It’s not as well known as nearby Stonehenge and many of the original stones have long since gone, but unlike that monolithic rock pile, you can wander freely among the stones at Avebury. The wide angle is likely to be your most useful lens at Avebury, enabling you to close in on single monoliths, such as the Barber Stone, while still showing their context within the huge ditch and bank that encircles the stones. By contrast, the power of Stonehenge is best captured with a telephoto lens from a distance, taking care to find locations that offer good separation between the stones. A short walk away you’ll find West Kennet T 8 Ancient inspirations BACKLIGHT BOTTOM Shade your lens from the sun when shooting with low backlighting to avoid flare MONUMENT INFORMATION [W] www.henge.org.uk Want to visit some ancient sites but are looking for something closer to home? Check out the list of English, Scottish and Welsh sites WILTSHIRE 8 AVOID CROWDS AVEBURY 8 IMAGES ©LAURIE CAMPBELL You’ll avoid the crowds if you go in the early morning for sunrise. Luckily the sheep add to the scene! AIM FOR MARLBOROUGH By car: Turn off the A4 onto the A4361, six miles west of Marlborough at West Kennet. MISTY MORNINGS Backlighting and an early morning mist have reduced this Avebury image to monochromatic tones 8 nd a stone to keep flare under control. into the sun with a long lens or you 8 ARE BASED ON ORDNANCE SURVEY MAPPING © CROWN COPYRIGHT, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: AM134/02 8 HOW TO GET THERE DEEP BLUE Use a polariser to deepen the colour of the sky and saturate it. This will add a couple of stops to the exposure so use a tripod with long lenses 8 DETAILS WHAT IS IT? 8 Like Stonehenge, 25 miles to the south, Avebury is a henge monument, meaning it is surrounded by a ditch and bank. The stone circle – there are several here – is just part of a larger complex that includes a ceremonial avenue of stones leading away to a former sacred site on Overton Hill. Many consider it a more attractive place to visit than Stonehenge. It’s managed by the National Trust and is freely accessible 365 days a year. LOW SUN Stonehenge is often closed when the sun is at its best. Go prepared with a high tripod and a short stepladder to enable you to shoot over the fence with a long lens LOCATION Avebury stone circle. HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? Museum £4, car park £1. WHAT ARE THE FACILITIES? National Trust shop, café and toilets open daily, plus a pub in the village. INFO www.megalithic.co.uk 8 POST-SHOOT DRAMATIC EFFECTS Consider turning suitable colour images into black and white ones for more dramatic, atmospheric images. Although you can simply desaturate the colour or use the Grayscale mode in your image editing program, you’ll get better results using Photoshop’s Channel Mixer (Image, Adjust) to control the transition of the various colour channels. CANON POWERSHOT G3 PERFORMANCE 2 SKIN TONES 7 POWER SWITCH The power switch/ record/playback dial has been separated from the exposure mode dial 1 5 6 7 EXPOSURE MODE DIAL You can now save two custom shooting modes, accessed via the exposure mode dial 7 LCD The flip-out swivelling LCD is the same as the outgoing G2’s. They’re useful, but not as much as you think thumb. If you have to hold the camera one-handed for any reason, you grip it that little bit tighter and your thumb squeezes the Menu button. Sharp as ever The G3 has some significant enhancements over the G2 in terms of features, of course, if not general If you use the optical finder you find that a big chunk of the image in the bottom lefthand corner is obscured by the lens barrel handling. And have Canon’s engineers been able to improve on the image quality, too? The G3’s images are certainly sharp, and maybe you might notice some difference next to shots taken on the G2. Amongst 4-megapixel cameras, few can match these results. It’s interesting that Canon hasn’t bothered to produce a 5-megapixel model and, given the quite small differences we’ve been able to detect between the G2/G3 and 5megapixel cameras, maybe Canon has a point. various alternative AE modes, and move quickly through the various shortcut ‘Func’ menus, but it’s too small, too free-moving and seems unnecessary. The new 4x zoom lens is a clear advantage, of course, but what’s this? If you use the optical finder you find that a big chunk of the image in the bottom left-hand corner is obscured by the lens barrel. Did nobody notice this when they designed it? The G3 shares an irritating design flaw with the G2, too, in that the Menu button falls directly under your right CANON POWERSHOT G3 FULL SPECIFICATIONS Sensor Lens Focus Exposure modes Metering Monitor AE compensation Flash Video output Movie recording WORTH A LOOK 2 4-megapixel, 1/1.8-inch 4.1MP CCD Canon f2.0-3.0 4x zoom Auto, manual, 5cm in macro mode Program AE, Aperture-priority, Shutter-priority, Manual, scene modes Evaluative, centre-weighted, spot, AF spot 1.8-inch TFT +/-2EV in 0.3EV increments Auto, on, off, slow, second curtain, red-eye NTSC or PAL 320 x 240 at 15fps with sound CANON POWERSHOT G2 £650/4MP CASIO QV-5700 £600/5MP Other features Image storage Batteries AC adaptor Weight Dimensions Transfer Software OS OLYMPUS C-5050 £700/5MP 1 Timelapse photography, focus bracketing Compact Flash Lithium-ion, BP-511 Yes 410g (without batteries or card) 121mm(w) x 73.9mm(h) x 69.9mm(d) USB ZoomBrowser EX, PhotoRecord, PhotoStitch, RAW image converter, Photoshop 5.0LE Windows 98/Me, 2000, XP. Mac OS8.6-9.2, OSX 10.1 or later NIKON COOLPIX £800/5MP BUTTONS A reshuffling of the controls has led to some ergonomic improvements over the G2 but no great changes overall We’re not so sure about the G3’s white balance control (see our Performance panel opposite), but its exposure accuracy, contrast, saturation and sharpness are all bang on. There aren’t many cameras, either, which offer an f2.0 lens. We’ve spent a good part of this review moaning about the PowerShot G3, but that’s only because most of the improvements it offers over the G2 have proved marginal indeed. They’re the kind of thing that look great on paper but which you’d actually use once in a blue moon – like the time-lapse feature and the G3’s focus bracketing (yes, really). What many users will be looking for is a camera that’s actually better designed, easier to use, more practical and with more accessible controls. Yet put the G3 side by side with the G2 and the older camera still feels better made and less cluttered. If there was no such camera as the PowerShot G2, we’d probably be full of praise for the G3. Its features and performance put it right at the front of the 4MP pack, and the fat lithium-ion cell and reduced power consumption make the G3 great for long expeditions, too. As a replacement for a modern classic, though, it’s a bit of a disappointment. Verdict white balance controls more accessible, via the navipad, but otherwise it’s as if the Canon engineers have just reshuffled the controls instead of coming up with anything new. The control wheel introduced to the top of the handgrip is especially bizarre. It lets you cycle through aperture or shutter values in the G3’s CON White balance control needs to do more to offset the cool morning light in this shot 2 OUTDOOR SHOTS 3 7 PRO The G3’s excellent exposure control and high sharpness means that portrait shots come out well A good camera, but overshadowed by its predecessor The PowerShot G3 has many new features, but it’s fiddlier and fussier than the old G2. At this price, too, it’s got some serious 5-megapixel rivals 5 6 PRO High sharpness, a wide maximum aperture and an extended zoom range CON Small controls cause a problem if you’re wearing gloves or you’ve got to grab a shot quickly 2 INDOOR SHOTS 5 6 PRO The anti-redeye mode works well and even close-up flash shots are well-exposed CON You shouldn’t have to resort to the menus to switch the flash to slow sync mode 2 IMAGE QUALITY 5 6 PRO Great exposure control, good contrast and saturation and smooth tones CON Small evolutionary improvements rather than any big step forward… 90 FEATURES 91 IMAGES BUILD 72 VALUE 73 1 1 1 1 81% FINAL SCORE DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 035 REVIEWS MULTIMEDIA DVD PICTURESHOW DIGITAL IMAGING SUITE Manufacturer Price Contact Website Ulead £34.99 +49 2131-512-5850 www.ulead.com WEBSITE WWW.FUTURENET.CO.UK DVD PictureShow Digital Imaging Suite Put a modern spin on the most ancient of family gatherings, using a DVD player, a digital camera, and the memories of good times had by all * VIEW A DEMO ONLINE Read the review and want to try DVD PictureShow for yourself? We’ve got a demo version on coverdisc 2… x WHAT’S NEW CONTROLS ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Image auto-slice Improved photo tools Label maker Powerful transition effects Captions over slides Batch collection of clips Timing control over slides Support for video clips 0 EXPERT TIP RICHARD COBBETT PC EXPERT CATALOGUING Make use of the catalogue. It’s easy to remember everything early on, but files quickly multiply. 036 here’s no doubt that the slideshow suffers from an image problem. People are naturally cautious of them, probably because most of us can remember an over-zealous neighbour, with his snaps of Skegness, subjecting our families to tortuous re-runs of his last holiday. But this is the digital age and now, with a fine collection of digital photos, you can create a DVD slideshow that’s not only Skegness-free, but high quality, complete with music and narration, and completely portable. Better still, anyone with a DVD player can watch it at their leisure. Before you make use of the DVD Pictureshow itself, it’s best to use some of the other applications bundled with it, to prepare your footage before you burn it to disc. In particular, Photo Explorer 8.0 is on hand to organise your ever-growing collection of snaps and clips into a more manageable format. By importing them and assigning them a keyword, you can quickly search for the exact image that you need – or alternatively, give each a rating and ensure that the cream floats to the top. At this time, you can take advantage of a number of tools for correcting colours, removing red-eye and otherwise correcting any imperfections – although Photo Explorer as a whole is no real match for the likes of Paint Shop Pro or Adobe Photoshop. T 2 DVD PICTURESHOW DIS: THE INTERFACE This imaging suite is extremely user-friendly and simple to navigate, as you can see below 02 01 Slideshow size As you add images and videos to your project, the bar fills up to warn you when you’re about to run out of space. 07 03 02 Source files 05 08 When editing a slideshow, the source files are on hand so you can keep an eye on the global picture. 04 03 Narration/Music Background music and narration are handled separately, playing over the top of a finished slideshow. 01 06 04 Timing By default, all slides appear for the same length of time. You can adjust this setting as needed, here. 05 Options All of the options that you have to play with spring up on the left as and when you need them. All are self-explanatory. 06 Simple stages Slideshows are put together in stages, zeroing in on exactly what you’ll need to do at any given time. 07 Control With the video and slideshow options, you have far more control than it initially seems. Follow the path, and you can’t go wrong. 08 Thumbnails The thumbnail views may be small, but never to the extent that you can’t see what you’re working on. Show time! Once you have the photos ready for action, it’s time to put on the show. You add the photos using a very straightforward drag-and-drop interface, and link them up with any of the 42 animated transitions on offer. Each slideshow can contain up to 100 photos, and with the ability to store up to 99 slideshows per disc, it takes a matter of minutes to split things up into a more manageable form. For more ambitious projects, you can import music and play it over the top, or sit down with a microphone and record your own narration. It couldn’t be easier to adjust the amount of time that each image is displayed on the screen according to how much you have to say – there’s no need to stretch stories out to several minutes DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE and no reason, bar mercy, to cut down anecdotes. Each function is given its own screen, stepping through the process one stage at a time, but never requiring any technical knowledge beyond roughly how much you can fit onto the disc. Straight to video Video clips can be plugged in just as easily, and everything made easily accessible to your viewer via a convenient DVD menu – enabling it to skip straight to the relevant parts. If you aren’t ready to dive into disc burning, all is not lost, as the suite can output results as HTML documents, ideal for uploading to the web. Having burned your masterpiece to a disc, the obvious finishing touch is to design some quality packaging to wrap it in. A built-in label-maker helps you to design the titular disc label itself, as well as a small thumbnail guide to the contents that you’ve copied across. It won’t, however, replace any CD labelling software that you already own. DVD Pictureshow is an excellent way of transferring your image collection into a format that anybody with a DVD player can enjoy. The added ability to load in music and narrative gives your photographs a dimension you can’t get from prints, and provided FINAL that your friends and family are SCORE suitably teched up, it’s the ideal way to share the memories. 90% REVIEWS CAMERA BAGS CRUMPLER DIGITS SPORTY GUY 1.28 Price: £27.50 Contact: www.crumpler.de This Australian bag is made out of the elegantly named ChickenTex, an artificial fibre that bears a striking resemblance to nylon. External dimensions of 140 x 170 x 100mm contain a main padded compartment of 100 x 140 x 50mm (if you’ve got an SLR or heftier old-school digital camera, the Crumpler range goes up to about twice this capacity). Made from solid rip-stop nylon, the outer material feels tough – even a little bit too stiff for comfort. Although it comes with a belt loop, the shoulder strap is more useful, with adjustable length and a strong Velcro quick-release fastening. The zippered front compartment features two small pockets and one slightly larger one, plus a Velcro-secured mesh pouch that claims to be anti-static, making it perfect for memory storage (although it suffers from having almost no padding). A nice innovation is the elasticated loop for preventing your battery pack from bashing anything FINAL else nearby – always a worry when expensive memory cards and heavy cells share a space. SCORE The Crumpler Digits Sporty Guy 1.2 is well constructed, but the fact that you can’t seal the main compartment means that it isn’t as weather-proof as other bags on test. 82% Smaller… LOWE D-RES 4 MEMORY CARD WALLET 7CASELOGIC DC40 Price: £8 Contact: www.lowepro.com Price: £10 Contact: www.casedirect.com If you’ve already got a camera bag from your film photography days, you just need a digital upgrade. Your first move should be to organise and protect your memory cards. The D-RES 4 memory card wallet can store two small card cases plus one large (PCMCIA-sized) card in its mesh pockets. An affordable and well-designed essential. The DC40 is the smallest camera bag on test, measuring just 100 x 135 x 70mm externally. Its internal dimensions aren’t a lot smaller, meaning its padding isn’t as extensive as the more expensive bags. The thin front padding is especially worrying, as this is prime territory for knocks and drops. The DC40 is constructed from an artificial leather material called Koskin that’s unlikely to fool many people, but does have the advantage of being water resistant and tough. A detachable shoulder strap and belt loop are included and – unsurprisingly at this price – all the fittings are made of plastic. There’s a small zip-fastened rear pouch, which is OK for cards but you wouldn’t want to store bulky batteries in it. The main compartment is also zip-fastened, with a foldover protective flap. A neat design touch is the internal flaps that prevent the front cover from folding all the way out, thus preventing your camera from slipping out if you open the bag too quickly. Caselogic is the only company on test to realise FINAL that you’ll be putting a bag anywhere else but on your body, with SCORE a plastic reinforced water-resistant panel sensibly protecting the base of the DC40. Larger versions of this bag are also available. And Larger… LOWE PRO DRES 300 BRIEFCASE 63% Price: £50 Contact: www.lowepro.com The D-RES 300 briefcase from Lowe Pro is designed especially for the itinerant digital photographer, with dedicated padded compartments for your laptop, digital camera, batteries and memory cards. Also tucked into its 1200D ballistic TXP water-resistant casing are plenty of spaces for notebooks, tickets and magazines. Carrying options for the D-RES 300 are DryFlo mesh handles or a detachable strap with non-slip shoulder pad. 038 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE CENTON DIGICASE SMALL8 Price: £10 Contact: www.jessops.co.uk This leather-style case has two compartments, protected by a fold-over flap with a plastic fastener. The shiny, fake leather feels very cheap – perfect for concealing an expensive camera but unlikely to wow your fellow snappers. A shoulder strap is provided but its 100 x 140 x 50mm size is just small enough to make the single belt loop a viable option. All the strap fittings are plastic and not especially tough. The main compartment is split into two and, as the divider isn’t removable, the largest camera this Digicase can accommodate is much smaller than its FINAL size might suggest – check the fitting before you buy. The Digicase’s front compartment has a slip-in SCORE pocket and another zippered mesh pocket for cards and batteries. Centon does offer a two-year warranty on its Digicase bags, which should be long enough if they’re as tough as it claims. 63% ; 5 NEXT MONTH WE RATE THE BEST POCKET HARD DRIVES SAMSONITE TREKKING DIGITAL LINE D-F/V18 Price: £21 Contact: www.samsonite.com The solid lines and ugly leather patches of the 285g D-F/V1 are unlikely to win any style awards, but its 130 x 155 x 100mm durable 600D polyester exterior conceals some great design features. Carrying options are good, with two belt loops, a central padded hand strap and an adjustable shoulder strap complete with non-slip padding. It’s worth noting that all the fittings are metal, which should aid longevity. A thin rear zip pocket doesn’t seem to have a lot of utility, but the main compartment opens towards the user. The main space (110 x 130 x 55mm) is fully padded, with an optional divider attached by a couple of Velcro strips. The lid doubles up as a mesh pocket with Velcro fastenings, which is ideal for keeping your cards out of harm’s way. Lift the front flap and Samsonite has stuck in an address FINAL label for those people who are naive enough to hope that someone discovering four hundred SCORE quid’s worth of portable electronics will track down their rightful owner. Build quality is good, although a couple of the zips felt somewhat flimsy. 85% 7CENTON DIGICASE MEDIUM Price: £13 Contact: www.jessops.co.uk The medium Digicase on test has a similar design to the small version, with two main compartments and a snapfastened fold-over flap. The shoulder strap provided is thin and comes with all-plastic fittings, and might not be up to extended real-world wear and tear. There’s also a single belt loop. Although the external dimensions of 120 x 160 x 58mm sound fairly generous, the main compartment is split in two – designed more for a stylecam and spare battery than a normal-sized camera. The compartment’s zip-fastened lip has a zip-fastened mesh pocket on its underside, which a good location for stashing your memory cards. The Centon digicases have some of the thinnest padding on test in their main compartments. That’s not necessarily a problem because it keeps the weight down, and internal space up. If it’s just a matter of surviving a fall from your waist, FINAL SCORE all the bags on test will be fine. If a longer fall or sharper impact is likely, opt for more substantial padding, and be prepared to lug about a larger, heavier bag. 65% CRUMPLER DIGITS SPORTY GUY 0.68 Price: £23 Contact: www.crumpler.de Our second Crumpler bag is smaller and less expensive that its 1.2 brother, but shares many of its features including its ChickenTex skin. The bag measures 110 x 150 x 80mm with an internal space of 80 x 120 x 40mm, making it suitable only for smaller digital cameras and stylecams. There is a removable shoulder strap, but the 0.6 is happiest worn on a belt, using a brace of cunning Velcro straps to attach firmly at waist level. The main compartment has a non-scratch microfibre lining to avoid damaging optical components, although there’s very little padding on the top fold-over flap. A front compartment has room for memory cards and a battery or two, but there’s no space for accessories. Build quality is excellent throughout – this is a tough little case. And it’s notable for having relatively few seams. No matter how good the stitching is (and the Crumpler’s is almost faultless), wear and tear FINAL generally concentrates on seams, so the fewer a bag has, the SCORE better. It’s a hefty price tag for such a small bag, but this is one bag that won’t fall to pieces in a hurry… Thanks to Jessops for the kind loan of the equipment for this feature. Check out its website at www.jessops.com 65% DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 039 DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS LAB TEST Labtest DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS P rinting your digital images at home is now as easy as investing in a good quality inkjet printer. This month we’ve rounded up six of the best on offer and put them through the Digital Camera Magazine labs. If you use a manufacturer’s inks with the recommended premium photo paper, even sub-£200 models can routinely deliver prints that look almost as good – and should last as long – as silver halide prints from a commercial laboratory. But the latest printers are aiming for more than just replacing trips to the shops, they’re now gunning for the PC on your desktop. All direct printing inkjets on test come with slots into which you can slip the memory card from your camera (and sometimes a cable from the camera itself), enabling you to print enprints, enlargements up to A4 size and panorama prints, without ever booting up your desktop PC. Even if you don’t often print directly from the card, these printers offer an excellent way of adding a decent memory card reader to your system without taking up another USB port or more desktop real estate. Inkjet printers have never been more affordable, with the £150 to £250 range offering particularly good value. Spend less than this and you could end up with a very slow model (some cheap models can take 20 seconds to produce a page of text and many minutes to output a photo). If you do any quantity of photo printing, your main expenses will be ink and good quality paper, so buying a budget printer won’t even save you much money in the long run. Printers above £150 should all deliver good quality photo prints and crisp monochrome pages. They should be able to accept a range of paper sizes from envelopes up to A4, and work with all major operating systems and memory cards. Beyond this, you’re generally paying for print speed, build quality and extra features such as roll paper holders, built-in image enhancers and bundled software. Inkjet printers at the top of this price range and above can handle larger paper sizes and often come with more than the standard four inks, for improved colour reproduction. Features to look out for The headline features of any printer are its resolution and print speed. Print speed is quoted in pages per minute (ppm) but never believe manufacturer’s figures – there are no reliable standards and the performance you get depends on the specification of your PC. See the results section at the end of this lab test for an assessment of the printers’ real-world speeds. Resolution is a more objective measurement, and 2,400 x 1,200dpi (dots per inch) is the minimum you should look for in a photo inkjet. Printers with 4800dpi+ vertical resolution will generally only deliver that resolution on the correct media (normally the most expensive available) and this is especially the case for the 5,760dpi figures quoted for the Epson printers. HP would have you believe that its PhotoRET IV technology gives it a major boost. PhotoRET is a layering system that puts down up to 30 dots of ink on top of each other to build up smooth variations in colour. Using less ink, it’s faster and cheaper than full resolution printing and gives impressive results, ON TEST PRINTERS CANON S530D Price: £250 EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 915 Price: £180 EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 925 Price: £220 HP PHOTOSMART 7350 Price: £200 LEXMARK Z65P Price: £150 SONY DPP-EX7 Price: £370 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 041 LAB TEST DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS TOP TIP Calibrate your monitor – print out a good colour image, open the same file in an image editor and adjust your monitor’s colour and contrast settings until they’re as identical as possible ? EXPLAINED CANON S530D DITHERING This is when the tiny ink dots making up a photographic image are visible to the naked eye. It looks worst when seen in solid colours and blacks. PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 915 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE £250 0800 616 417 www.canon.co.uk PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE £220 0800 289622 www.epson.co.uk A step up in terms of speed and build quality from the 915, the six-colour Epson Stylus Photo 925 has four dedicated slots for memory cards, an automatic roll paper cutter and a much improved LCD screen that makes direct printing as easy as it can be without actually seeing the image. Performance is solid rather than exciting, with technically proficient images nevertheless lacking the spark of the HP and the speed of the Canon photo printers on test. KEY FEATURE 1 KEY FEATURE 1 The control panel is a lot easier to use than it looks. The 915 has two ink cartridges – black and colour (which contains five inks for increased photo realism). The excellent 5cm mono LCD screen displays options clearly via a logical menu system. KEY FEATURE 2 KEY FEATURE 2 KEY FEATURE 2 Despite being the most expensive inkjet on test, the S530s comes with just a PCMCIA slot. A card with Compact Flash adaptor is supplied. Memory cards are inserted via the PCMCIA slot. Adaptors for Compact Flash, Smart Media, Secure Digital, Memory Stick and Multimedia card are supplied. The roll paper adaptor fits either side of the paper feeder and includes an automatic paper cutter and borderless printing. KEY FEATURE 1 5 6 PRO Good, fast printing. Cheap ink CON Single card slot 72% FINAL SCORE although you can always choose full resolution printing if you prefer. All but the Sony (whose maximum paper size is 6 x 4 inches) are A4 printers, and all but the Lexmark are capable of printing borderless prints. This gives you a huge range of paper size and printing options – the best place to select these is in the printer driver. The Epsons are notable for coming complete with roll paper holders. Roll paper is great for producing quantities of 6 x 4 inches (or a similar size) enprints and is the only way to output true panoramic prints, but it’s tricky to load and use, and can be very difficult to get flat afterwards. The Epson 925 comes complete with an automatic roll paper cutter. Paper handling is more important than you might think – you only have to have a couple of premium glossy sheets mangled and the cost starts to mount. The DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE £180 0800 289622 www.epson.co.uk It’s not unheard of to get six-colour printing at under £200, but add an LCD, 5600dpi-optimised resolution and compatibility with all the major memory cards, and Epson seems to be onto a budget winner. The 915 is never going to win prizes for build quality but it’s rare to find a roll paper holder on a printer at this price. Although installation is simple and the printer is easy to use, the print quality betrays its budget price tag, with only acceptable colour reproduction and very poor black and white printing. The S530D is the only printer on test to use separate cartridges for each of its four ink colours, plus a separate print head with a generous 256 black ink nozzle. This saves both time and money: the Canon prints at least twice as fast, and at half the cost of the other printers. It’s a shame the memory card slot is dependent on PCMCIA adaptors, because the Canon is excellent ergonomically, with a comprehensive LCD menu system, straightforward driver and some useful bundled software. This printer is a very safe choice. 042 PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 925 5 6 PRO High resolution CON Average image quality 57% FINAL SCORE Lexmark is the only printer to come with two separate paper trays – one for plain and one for speciality paper, although the HP does have an extra slot just for 6 x 4inch photo paper. The Lexmark and HP also have automatic paper sensors so that you can’t accidentally print with ‘plain’ settings on expensive photo paper. Although all the paper feeders (except the Sony) can take up to 100 sheets of paper, you should always feed glossy paper through one sheet at a time. All the printers on test except the Lexmark have some kind of built-in LCD. The Canon, Epsons and HP have small monochrome displays that help you navigate menus and check print settings. These are handy but aren’t in the same league as the Sony DPP-EX7. The DPP-EX7 comes with a 3.8-inch touch-sensitive colour LCD display where you can preview, enhance, zoom and crop images from the memory card before printing, making it a truly 5 6 PRO Superb colour printing. Good design CON Expensive ink 63% FINAL SCORE standalone device. Optional preview monitors are available for the Epsons (£80) and the Canon (£90), but without the DPP-EX7’s interactivity. Printing from a card The number and quality of slots that each printer offers vary widely. At the bottom of the pile are the Canon and the Epson 915. These come with a single PCMCIA slot, so you’ll need an adaptor to use any of the standard card formats. A Compact Flash adaptor is supplied, and ones for other formats cost £20-30. Next up is the DPP-EX7, which has a PCMCIA slot plus a dedicated slot for Memory Sticks. The Epson 925 has slots for Compact Flash, Microdrive, SmartMedia and Memory Stick but top of the heap are Lexmark and HP, with four slots that cover all of the above plus Multimedia Card and Secure Digital. HP PHOTOSMART 7350 LEXMARK Z65P 0 SONY DPP-EX7 EXPERT TIP MARK HARRIS PRINT EXPERT USING A DIGITAL PHOTO PRINTER PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE £200 0870 547 4747 www.hp.co.uk PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE The 7350 is a very well thought out printer, sporting four card slots, good connectivity, a paper sensor and a cartridge system that lets you swap the black tank for a second three-colour cartridge when you’re printing photos. But it’s in pure printing performance that the HP truly impresses. It excels at both colour and mono printing with solid tones, really bringing subjects to life. Direct printing options are more limited than others on test, but the only fly in the ointment is its expensive ink cartridges. An excellent choice. £150 01628 481 500 www.lexmark.co.uk PRICE CONTACT WEBSITE £370 08705 111 999 www.sony.co.uk Lexmark has traditionally offered you a lot of printer for your cash, and its flagship Z65P continues in the same vein. Four card slots accommodate all the major memory formats, including Microdrive, and the 4800dpi resolution is as good as any on test. A good driver and print monitor are ably assisted by the best software bundle on test – Adobe Elements 2.0. Although text printing is fast and reliable, the Z65P is let down by lacklustre photo printing and an inability to print without using your PC – it’s the only printer on test without an LCD. Two things about the Sony make it stand out from the other printers on test – a built-in touch-sensitive LCD screen, and a £370 price tag. Using the screen to enhance, crop and add graphics to your images is easy enough, but it’s much slower and more limited than PC-based image editors. The dye-sub process delivers by far the strongest and most reliable colour images on test – but only on 6 x 4 inch paper. If you need the best possible quality images without booting up your PC, the DPP-EX7 is worth the investment; for everyone else, a good inkjet is the logical choice. SOHO users won’t like the front feeding design – it takes up a lot of desk space compared with a vertical paper-feeder. KEY FEATURE 1 KEY FEATURE 1 Having two paper trays is a useful feature, especially as the main one has an optical paper sensor. The 3.8-inch colour LCD has a resolution of 320 x 240 pixels. Use the supplied stylus to select options. KEY FEATURE 2 KEY FEATURE 2 KEY FEATURE 2 Separate card slots for the varying memory cards saves on clumsy adaptors. Separate card slots for the varying memory cards saves on clumsy adaptors. There are two memory card slots – one for Sony’s Memory Sticks, the other for PCMCIA cards. KEY FEATURE 1 5 6 PRO Excellent features and build quality CON Average image quality 67% FINAL SCORE There are two ways you can use the memory card slots in the printers to output your photos. The simplest is to use the printer as a card reader. Just copy the files to your PC, then use an image editor to tweak them before sending them back to be printed. This gives you the flexibility and power of your PC, as well as the security of backing up your images. The Lexmark can only be used in this way. The second way is to leave your PC turned off and print using the controls on the printer alone (see the ‘Using a digital printer’ box). The options that each printer gives you vary, but they all let you print an index print, select media and print layout (though usually not as wide a selection as you get from your PC), plus DPOF (Digital Print Order Format) printing, where you choose in the digital camera what and how many images are printed. The Epsons and the Sony give you control over basic image parameters like 5 6 PRO Bargain software bundle. Best text printing CON Poor colour printing 54% FINAL SCORE brightness, colour and sharpness and all can add effects, from sepia toning to ‘vivid’ colour enhancements. If you want to crop your images blind, the Canon, Epson 925 and HP will let you, but only the Sony DPPEX7 actually previews the results. It also lets you zoom, rotate and add text or freehand paint (using the touch stylus). Printing the images generally takes a little longer than from your PC as the printer has to source the data from the memory card. Ink cartridges All photographs, whether printed professionally, at home or in magazines, rely on millions of tiny coloured dots to create the illusion of continuous colour tones. Inkjet printing is actually closest to colour magazine printing, using the same four colour inks – cyan, magenta, yellow and black (sometimes abbreviated to CMYK). When set at 5 6 64% PRO Amazing photo printing. Colour preview screen CON Limited paper range. Very expensive FINAL SCORE different distances from each other, these four colours can reproduce the entire spectrum. The Epson printers use six inks (extra cyan and magenta tones) to provide more accurate reproduction of skin tones. In this test, all but the Canon and Sony have two ink cartridges – one for black and one for the other colours. These cartridges have built-in print heads, so that when you change ink cartridges you’re also changing the print head. This has the advantage that you shouldn’t come across head-related problems like patchy printing or smeary colours. However, it means that you really can’t re-fill empty ink cartridges, and it also keeps cartridge prices high. With the HP, you can swap the black cartridge for a Photo Print cartridge containing lighter cyan, magenta and yellow inks for top quality photographic images (we tested it with this fitted). Printing directly from a memory card (and, in some cases, even straight from your digital camera) saves time booting up your PC and loading graphics software, but it does present some challenges. First, you must know which images you want to print – not as easy as it sounds if you’ve got 100-plus images on the card. As the filing systems in cameras and printers can differ, you can’t always make a note of the image number in playback mode – it’s safer to print an index print of thumbnails. It can be very hard to spot subtle differences between similar shots when they’re so small, though, and printing three or four index prints can take up all the time you saved by not using your PC! After you’ve chosen your image, you still have to make sure it prints as you’d like. Most printers let you select the layout of the image, and a few even let you crop or resize the image. Some printers do have built-in image enhancement options, giving you basic control over brightness, colour, sharpness and zoom, but these apply clumsily to the whole image and are no substitute for working on the picture in an image-editing package. Their biggest drawback is that you can’t see the effects until you’ve actually printed out the picture – and used all that expensive ink and paper. Direct printing is best saved until you understand your camera and printer well, and learn exactly how the image you see on the digital camera LCD will come out on your printer, or for low-res images you need immediately. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 043 LAB TEST DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS TOP TIP Every time your printer is turned on, it cleans the print head ready for use. This ensures great results from the word go but also uses up precious ink every time ? EXPLAINED DPOF Direct Print Order Format lets you use your digital camera to select what and how many images to print out. CANON S530D DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 915 EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 925 PRINT RESULTS PRINT RESULTS PRINT RESULTS Colour prints Despite a shaky start with the first colour test image – weak colours and grain – the Canon shares the crown for image quality with the HP Photosmart 7350. Colour prints The output from the 915 was a bit of a disappointment, especially considering that it’s a six-colour printer. The 915 is at its best when reproducing real-world images, with good levels of detail and faithful (if slightly flat) colours. Colour separation was good and the overall effect was acceptable. Colour prints The 925's sixcolour printing produced images with excellent levels of detail and smooth tones, although the colours were flat and a bit lifeless. The printer performed well with the tonal range test card, showing a good progression from rich black to strong, primary colours. Mono prints The second test image demonstrated excellent tonal discrimination, with almost the full spectrum clearly visible. Edges were very sharp and the greyscale was also impressive, with crisp tones and solid blacks. Text printing was superb – not up to laser quality but as good as inkjets get. Speed The S530D didn’t have to share the honours for print speed – its extra print nozzles zipped through our test files in short order, with even the largest file taking less than two and a half minutes to print. To give you an idea of just how fast it was, the S530D could have printed all its test files in the time it took its nearest rival to print just the large image! Mono prints Its monochrome print was the worst on test, packed with grain and dither, and suffering from an unpleasant yellow tint. Text printing was also poor – bold type wasn’t solid black and all the text had very blurry, jagged edges. Speed Print speed wasn’t bad at all. Although the largest colour printout took well over seven minutes, the black and white image and text pages came in at a respectable three and a half minutes and a minute and a half, respectively. Mono prints Despite these solid blacks, its monochrome performance left a lot to be desired. The 925 also sported a yellow tint with grain visible on the mono print, although it wasn't as bad as its little brother, the 915. The text pages again benefited from the 925's unbeatable blacks, but it was let down by hesitant edges giving rise to some blurring. Speed The Stylus Photo 925 was middle of the road, taking a hefty seven minutes to produce the largest photo and taking nearly two minutes to chug through the three text test pages. 3 IN DETAIL SHARED FEATURES All the printers on test connect via USB, but the cable is never supplied. All but the Lexmark have an LCD display and all have at least one slot for direct printing from memory cards. All can print DPOF JPEGs and index prints from memory cards, but the Sony printer can also print BMPs and the HP can print TIFFs. All have extendable sheet feeders that can store 100 sheets of plain paper up to A4 size. All came with driver software for PC and Mac. 044 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE The Canon S530D has four separate ink cartridges and a separate print head. This is a much more economical arrangement – cartridges are around a third of the price of others on test. It also allows the print head to be more sophisticated and faster than its disposable rivals. The Sony DPP-EX7 uses a completely different printing technology, called dye sublimation. Dye-sub printers use four coloured films to deposit pigments directly onto the paper and are excellent at producing smooth, continuous tones and un-dithered colour. Because the print is built up from four separate films, a dye-sub printer with 400dpi resolution (like the Sony) can produce prints as sharp as a 1,600dpi inkjet. Although dye-sub prints have proven longevity, it’s likely to remain a more expensive technology for the next few years. Ease of use Before you decide on a printer, make sure you’ve got enough room for it. All the printers on test are a similar size (except the diminutive Sony) but, by the time you’ve added paper feeders and output trays, they can take up a unexpected amount of your desk. The HP’s frontfeeding mechanism takes up more space than the others. Inkjets are noisier than laser printers, but there was little sonic difference between our test samples. For some reason, printers never come with interface cables – all the models on test need a USB cable. Buy a long one (around £10) for maximum flexibility in placement. The Canon and HP printers both come with an additional port for connecting and printing directly from your Canon or HP camera. The Epson 925 features an additional USB port for backing up your photos from the card to an external storage device (such as another digital camera) if you’ve got the right cabling. All the printers on test come with driver software for PCs and Macs and are simple enough to install, although the HP wizard is unnecessarily long-winded. The Canon requires you to perform a manual print head alignment the first time you use it, the others all set themselves up ; 3 HP PHOTOSMART 7350 LEXMARK Z65P SONY DPP-EX7 PRINT RESULTS PRINT RESULTS PRINT RESULTS Colour prints The 7350 benefited from its flexible ink cartridge capabilities – its six colour inks (no black) printing delivered first-class colour images as well as remarkable mono prints. The 7350 showed its class on the largest colour test card, with strong, vibrant colours, and little dither. Colour prints Despite having 4800dpi resolution, the Z65P had some problems with its photo reproduction. The colour prints showed noticeable horizontal banding, muddy colours and a slight yellow cast. While solid tones were generally good, blacks could have been a bit more consistent. Colour prints Testing a dyesub printer alongside inkjets is like comparing a greyhound with a labrador – it’s bound to be faster on the straights but there’s no way it’s fetching your slippers. As a dedicated photo printer you would never use the EX7 for printing text, so we omitted that test. As expected, the Sony produced wonderful photo images – fantastically vibrant, saturated colours without a hint of grain. Although the rock solid colours leapt off the paper, the Sony couldn’t quite match the fine tonal discrimination of the best inkjets, with similar shades blurring into each other. Mono prints It was in the black and white test image that the 7350 performed head and shoulders above the competition – excellent contrast, solid blacks and scarcely a hint of grain or dither. Text printing was acceptable, although some blurring at the edges could be seen. Speed Although it came a distant second to the Canon in print speed, the HP was no slouch, whipping out the photo images in between three and a half and six minutes. It was curiously reticent to print text, though, trailing the pack and taking an embarrassing two and a half minutes to work through the three pages. automatically. The printer drivers (accessed through Page Setup in the application you’re printing from) are mostly clear and helpful, although the Sony’s is basic, with no advanced settings or help options. The Canon driver is especially comprehensive, with plenty of intuitive graphics and useful drop-down menus. When printing, the Lexmark and Epson print monitors are good, showing ink levels and progress. The Lexmark even verbally informs you in a cheesy American accent when printing has started and finished. All the printers except the Sony come with additional software to make the most of print options (such as multiple images on a page or printing to labels) and at Mono prints The Lexmark performed well in our text test, though, with crisp lettering and substantial blacks. Speed The Lexmark was the slowest printer on test for photo printing, taking over nine minutes to produce the largest colour test card. Even the monochrome image required nearly five minutes. But text printing was nippy as well as good quality, and the Z65P finished seven seconds ahead of the Canon, taking just over half a minute to produce the three pages. least a basic image editor to enhance, crop and resize your photos. The Canon comes with extra packages to help you browse and organise your portfolio and to create panoramas, but the Lexmark’s bundle is by far the best, containing Adobe Elements 2.0 (PC/Mac) – the winner of our image editor lab test in issue three. This is a flexible, powerful and easy-to-use package that normally retails for around £70, making the £150 Z65P a real bargain. Test results All the printers we tested are capable of producing good quality images that will do justice to your digital NEXT MONTH WEB ALBUM SOFTWARE ? EXPLAINED PPM Although print speed is quoted in pages per minute (ppm), most of the printers take more than a minute to print photoquality images larger than 6 x 4 inches. It’s best not to trust the manufacturer's figures! Mono prints The mono image had by far the richest blacks on test, but did carry a faint blue colour cast. Speed Because of the nature of the dye-sub printing process, print time for all three images was very similar – around two to two and a half minutes per print. camera and photographic skills. This is especially true of the sort of real-world subjects that most photographers shoot – natural colours and skin tones found these printers at their strongest. It’s when you start demanding more of them – such as discriminating between similar shades, high contrast scenes and monochrome prints – that differences emerge. If pure image quality is your only consideration, you should look no further than the Sony DPP-EX7 dye-sub printer. Although it’s more than twice the price of some of the other models, it shows the benefits of its filmbased technology – absolutely no dither, very smooth tones and bright, saturated colours that are DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 045 LAB TEST DIRECT PHOTO PRINTERS TOP TIP If you print directly from a memory card, keep a note of which settings and visual effects (vivid, enhance and so on) you used and whether or not you liked them 1 SPECIFICATIONS AT-A-GLANCE DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE CANON S530D EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 915 HP PHOTOSMART 7350 Price £250 Telephone 0800 616 417 0800 289 622 0800 289 622 0870 547 4747 URL www.canon.co.uk www.epson.co.uk www.epson.co.uk www.hp.co.uk Print technology Bubblejet with separate print head Inkjet Micropiezo Inkjet Inkjet with PhotoRET IV Max vertical resolution DP1 2,400 5,760 5,760 4,800 CMYK CMYK PC PM CMYK PC PM CMYK PC PM Ink tanks 4 2 2 2 Cards accepted/adaptor PCMCIA (CF adaptor supplied) PCMCIA (CF adaptor supplied) CF MD SM MS CF MD SM MS SD MMC Direct printing – crop/zoom Y N Y Y Direct printing – enhance image Y Y Y Y Direct printing – add effects N Y Y Y Max print width 216mm borderless 216mm borderless 216mm borderless 216mm borderless Extra port Digital camera N USB USB LCD Mono Mono Mono Mono Size (mm) 430 x 301 x 188H 467 x 547 x 302H 492 x 290 x 228H 475 x 390 x 160H Software ZoomBrowser, PhotoRecord, Image Browser, PhotoStitch, EasyPhotoPrint PhotoQuicker, ImageFramer PhotoQuicker, ImageFramer Album printing, Photo Director Other Optional LCD preview monitor (£90) Roll paper holders, optional LCD preview monitor (£80) Roll paper holders and cutter. Optional LCD preview monitor (£80) Automatic paper sensor Features % 61% 61% 71% 68% Image quality 75% 50% 60% 75% Print speed % 90% 65% 55% 50% Overall % 72% 57% 63% 67% Inks C = Cyan M = Magenta Y = Yellow K = Black PC = Photo cyan PM = Photo Magenta £180 EPSON STYLUS PHOTO 925 indistinguishable (often better, in fact) than commercial silver halide prints. But the initial expenditure is matched by very high running costs – £1.50 for every 6 x 4-inch print is lot more than it would cost to have your images printed via an online service or on the high street and the range of paper sizes is very limited. The six-colour HP produced the best colour photo print, packed with vibrant colours, good contrast and very little dither, but the four-colour 2,400dpi Canon also did very well, with superb colour precision and lovely sharp output. The same two printers also made the best greyscale prints, combining crisp blacks with controlled grain. While the Epson Stylus Photo 925 showed reliable, technically accurate printing, it was let down by poor monochrome results. The sub-£200 models earned the lowest marks for image quality: the Lexmark suffered from noticeable horizontal banding on many prints and the Epson 915 tended towards weak colours and excessive grain and dither. While you’ll probably use your printer for photo printing, good text output is important, too. Best 046 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE £220 on test for plain paper printing were the Lexmark and the Canon, both of which had solid, sharp text without the blurring of other models (notably the Epson 915). Printing an A4 colour photo used to be a good excuse to go and make a cup of tea, and inkjet print speeds remain frustrating, except at high resolutions. The clear winners were the dye-sub Sony and the Canon S530D, which zipped through our test files in half the time of the other inkjets, thanks to its neat print head design. The remainder had very similar performance, taking around seven minutes for the largest file and four minutes for smaller images. Only the Lexmark bucked the trend, taking over nine minutes on the big picture – and then zipping through the text pages even faster than the Canon. We couldn’t test lightfastness of the resultant photo prints, but current opinion is that if you use only the recommended premium photo paper and inks for each printer, inkjet prints should last at least 15 years and probably a lot longer. We found no paper handling £200 problems (tram lines on prints, skewed images and so on) with any of the printers. Conclusion Surprisingly, there wasn’t a strong correlation between the number of inks or the quoted resolution and the final print quality. Far more important seemed to be build quality and clever design features, such as the Canon’s separate print head and the HP’s ability to swap its black cartridge for additional photo colour inks. If you do want to print directly from a memory card, the Sony with its colour LCD touchscreen is the only model that can truly be called standalone. The most flexible direct printers are the ones with LCDs and dedicated slots for the major formats – the HP and Epson 925. But direct printing has so many drawbacks (tiny index prints, not being able to see what you’re doing and the inevitable waste of expensive ink and paper) that these models should be seen more as a space-saving combination of card reader and printer than as an alternative to traditional desktop printing from your PC. HOW WE TESTED THE PRINTERS LEXMARK Z65P £150 SONY DPP-EX7 £370 01628 481 500 08705 111 999 www.lexmark.co.uk www.sony.co.uk Inkjet Dye sublimation 4,800 403 CMYK CMY 2 Dye sub roll CF MD SD SM MMC MS MS/PCMCIA N Y N Y N y 216mm 102mm borderless N N N Colour with preview 445 x 533 x 331H 242 x 267 x 87H Adobe Elements, Fotoscale None Second paper tray, automatic paper sensor Gloss/matt finish, colour touchscreen LCD 56% 61% 55% 73% 50% 53% 54% 64% e tested the printers using four identical test files – three standard test card files and one MS Word file consisting purely of text. The first colour JPEG test card replicated a typical photographic scene, containing a selection of natural skin tones and subtle variations in light tones and colours. It featured a high level of fine detail. The second TIFF also had plenty of detail, but we chose it for its graded colour boxes and series of black stripes. The colour boxes showed how good the printer was at depicting tiny differences in tone and brightness. The stripes – vertical and horizontal – tested printing accuracy: if they started to smear or blur together, it showed poor resolution. The third photo TIFF file was a greyscale test card, containing both a series of monochrome tone boxes and real-life scenes. This was designed to test the W printers’ black and white reproduction. All three photographic test files were printed at maximum resolution onto the manufacturer’s recommended glossy premium photographic paper using original inks. No paper was recommended by Lexmark, so we used Canon paper. The text page contained different font sizes and styles and was meant to replicate a standard real-world document. This was printed at standard resolution on 80gsm bright, white plain paper. The prints were assessed blind for colour accuracy, sharpness, grain and dithering. We also measured the time taken to produce each print. We then rated the features that each printer has – resolution, connectivity, number and type of card slots and so on. Finally, we combined these figures, weighting image quality at 40%, features at 40% and print speed at 20%, to arrive at an overall percentage rating for each printer. BLACK CARTRIDGE COST £s COLOUR CARTRIDGE COST £s VERDICT W hich printer you opt for will depend on two things: your budget and how much photoquality printing you intend to do. If you’re dipping a first toe into digital photography, the Lexmark Z65P (£150) is a tempting choice. Not a direct printer as such (you need a PC to print from a memory card), it nevertheless has slots for all the major formats, doubling as a flexible card reader. Although its photo printing isn’t great, it’s a whizz at text and comes bundled with Adobe Elements 2.0 (which sells for around £70). Spend an extra 50 quid and you can get the HP Photosmart 7350. Superb colour and mono printing, a clever swappable ink arrangement and good connectivity are only let down by expensive inks (up to £30 for a colour cart). This is a good choice if you don’t want to splash out too much and won’t be outputting colour photos every day. The overall winner is the most expensive (£250) of the inkjets to buy – and yet probably the cheapest overall thanks to its low running costs. The Canon S530D has modest 2,400 x 1,200dpi resolution and only a single PCMCIA slot, but produces reliable colour, mono and text prints, with superb tonal discrimination. Its separate print head means that ink cartridges are well under a tenner each and that print speed really is exceptional. If money is no object, the Sony DPP-EX7 at £370 delivers wonderfully rich, saturated colour. However, paying £1.50 for each 6 x 4-inch print – with no ability to print on larger paper or text – will deter all but the perfectionists. LARGE TEST CARD TIME DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 047 Trailblazers Travel the world, see interesting things and shoot them WINNER! OPERA IN BEIJING, CHINA MERVYN JONES “I enjoyed a trip on the Trans-Siberian and Trans-Mongolian train. I took a Fujifilm FinePix 4700 camera with me” 01 02 Photographed by: Keshan Location: Dubai Camera used: Canon Powershot S40 02 03 Photographed by: Sunil Gupta Location: Fisherman's Wharf, San Francisco, US Camera used: “I used a Fujifilm FinePix F602Z on auto settings after getting an AF lock on the seagull. The picture was cropped and light levels were corrected using Picture Publisher 8.” Trailblazers 03 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 049 06 04 204 Photographed by: Sally Pik Shan Yeung Location: Mitre Peak, Milford Sound, South Island, New Zealand Camera used: Canon Powershot A40 205 Photographed by: Fred Courtie Location: Montreal, Canada Camera used: Canon Powershot G2 07 206 Photographed by: Nigel Cloutt Location: Eden Project, Cornwall Camera used: Ricoh RDC-6000 207 Photographed by: Stephen Wilson Location: Temple at Karnak, Egypt Camera used: Canon Powershot A40 208 Photographed by: 05 050 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE Jatin Patel Location: Grand Canyon Camera used: Canon Ixus 300 08 09 209 Photographed by: John Marmon Location: Thailand Camera used: “I used a Nikon F90x and then the images were scanned onto Kodak Photo CDs. Now I also have a Nikon D100, which is great.” 210 Photographed by: Ian Bedford Location: Sunset at Pigeon Point, Tobago Camera used: Nikon Coolpix 775 10 211 Photographed by: Delmar L Hepperly Location: Philadelphia, US Camera used: “I have a Canon G2 and produce 32 x 42-inch fine art photographs on archival paper from France and process them on a $100 thousand machine called an ‘Iris’. I believe this is the first time this method has been used by a photographer.” 212 Photographed by: Nigel Hayden Location: Oslo, Norway Camera used: Canon Powershot A30 11 12 GET YOUR PICTURE FRAMED! Send them in and the best gets framed and returned. We’re looking for landmarks, unusual events or just something fabulously composed. Start planning that trip away! ■ Email us at gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk This month, you have mostly been to… 12 5 8 11 3 6 7 10 1 2 9 4 Trailblazers ilbl DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 051 YOUR PHOTOS THE STORM CHASER EMAIL US! Send in your life – see opposite! MEET WARREN FAIDLEY 01 Born in ‘Tornado Alley’, USA, Warren is the world’s only full-time storm chasing journalist and photographer. His breathtaking extreme weather images have appeared in National Geographic, Scientific American, Life, Time and USA Today. Warren’s film and video footage have also been used in Jurassic Park and Buffy The Vampire Slayer, as well as in videos by artists such as Sheryl Crow and Paul McCartney. In 1997, Warren became the first man ever to capture a tornado on 35mm film and acted as technical consultant for the blockbuster movie Twister. Day in the life 02 Tornadoes, hurricanes, lightning storms and hail – it’s all in day’s work for storm chaser, Warren Faidley hasing storms is a 24 hour a day, seven day a week occupation – you never know when the next one’s going to hit. For Warren this means plenty of preparation and a willingness to go whenever and wherever the storm takes him: he has separate crates containing the photo, measurement and tracking equipment he’ll need for each storm type. In spring you’ll find him chasing tornadoes in the central plains of Middle America. In summer he’ll have travelled west to cover local forest fires and lightning storms, and by autumn he’ll have moved east, capturing the hurricanes that batter the coast every season. Ninety per cent of Warren’s day can be spent simply waiting, studying internet weather sites C 052 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE and producing his own storm forecasts. Some days involve frantic chases across the plains in Archangel, his fully-loaded sports-utility vehicle, which contains his still, movie and video cameras plus the electronics, radios, computers and radar he needs to keep pace with the storm he’s tracking. The truck even has a rollcage, plus aluminium covers that prevent the windscreen from shattering when hit by 100mph hailstones. "I’ve had some pretty close shaves," he says "Once during Hurricane Andrew I made the mistake of sticking my hand out of the window to see how strong the wind was, only to have it cut to pieces by the glass flying through the air." He’s also been struck by lightning and had a twister form so close to him that it shook the truck. But, for the most part, Warren reckons his job is pretty safe: storms 20 miles across are easy to predict, he argues, and most of the time he’s in more danger of having a car smash with the legion of amateur storm chasers who career around in their own trucks, than he is of being caught off-guard by the weather. When it comes to capturing his images, Warren needs to work fast. He typically uses cameras that can shoot 20-30 frames per second and he needs masses of resolution – 90MB or above – if he’s to charge $10,000 a shot for iconic shots like the one used for the promo poster of Twister. It’s shots like that which keep him doing what he does – a regular day job in an office just wouldn’t suit Warren at all… 03 4 CONTACT US Now it’s over to you: we want your life in our hands (or on these pages anyway). If you have a visually interesting job that you think might make a good Dayinthelife, please email us today at: [e] editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk T BE INSPIRED! www.stormchaser.com 04 Dayinthelife a i h lif 01 Wild thing Warren used a long exposure to capture this majestic lightning storm from an Arizona mountain. 02 It’s a twister A twister hits the ground in Tornado Alley. Warren often does his own weather forecasting so he can tell where and when they’ll hit. 05 08 09 03 King of the road Warren usually works alone from his truck, dubbed Archangel, which is packed with storm monitoring and photography equipment. During the height of the season, however, he can assemble a full crew comprising 4-12 people. 04 Storm warning Lightning storms are often an early indication that a tornado is on its way. So too is baseball-sized hail, which has hit Warren’s truck so hard that it’s smashed the windscreen. 06 05 Fighting fire When he’s not shooting fires, Warren can be found putting them out – he’s a fully qualified firefighter. 06 Supercell Warren captured this majestic supercell tornado in Pampa, Texas in May 1994. The year before he captured seven storms in a single day. 07 10 07 Windy city Warren took shelter in a garage to capture this shot of Hurricane Andrew. 08 Lightning strikes Warren got so close to this lightning storm in Arizona that he was knocked to the ground by a lightning bolt. 09 Trail of destruction The aftermath of a tornado that struck a town in West Texas. Warren was there to capture the devastation. 10 Gimme shelter The summer heat of the American West gives rise to some spectacular lightning storms. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 053 Viewfinder We want your letters! Email us at letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk and we’ll print the best Star Letter PhotoImpact 8 winner Welcome… Another bulging postbag of brickbats and bouquets from you this month. Chief among your concerns was getting some of our cover software to work on your PCs. Both SmartPix Manager (issue 3) and Deneba Canvas 6 (issue 4) require serial numbers to work, which are either printed in the mag or can be obtained by registering with the appropriate website. We do explain this in our cover CD pages, but some of you obviously missed it. We’ll aim to make such caveats clearer in future. Aside from these niggles, most of the letters we get (thankfully) are pretty positive, but we welcome all your comments – it’s your magazine, after all. Be sure to keep sending in your photos for Trailblazers, Day In The Life and our letters page too. We love to see what you’ve been up to each month, but please make sure you include contact details and info about how, when and where you took your shots. Rob Mead Acting Editor Interact Digital Camera’s website forums offer a wide range of topics, advice and helpful tips for newcomers and experienced photographers alike. This month, we focused on landscape panoramas... Bruce Russell asks: “I’m new to digital photography, and want to stitch images 054 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE Rogue traders? Canon comparison? I’m just trying to find out whether you will be testing the Olympus Camedia C-5050 in the near future. I’m trying to decide between that and Canon’s PowerShot G3… Adam Waddington DCM You can find a review of the PowerShot G3 on page 34 of this issue where it gains an 81% rating – a little disappointing given the classic status of its predecessor, the PowerShot G2. We’re expecting great things from the Olympus too, so look out for the definitive review in issue six of DCM, on sale Thursday 13th March. What’s in a memory card? I’m thinking of buying a digital camera, but I’m confused about all the different flash memory formats that are out there. Some cameras come with SmartMedia, while others have Memory Stick or Secure Digital. Are they compatible? If not, how do I know that I won’t be stuck with a defunct format in the future – just as I was with Betamax? Edward Brandon together to make one long image. Can anyone advise me which software to use?” David Needham replied: “Photomerge in Photoshop Elements creates the panoramic look out of a number of photos. I’ve had varied results. It works best when you make sure all the photos are ‘level’ ie, on a tripod.” Alan Gallery added: “Make sure you expose We think we have uncovered a conspiracy, and would like your magazine to investigate. We were looking for some digital cameras for our school, and thought the spec on the HP Photosmart 850 was about right. We placed an order for three cameras through our usual HP dealer, SCC Direct in Birmingham, at an attractive price of £329.99 including VAT. We buy quite a bit of equipment through them as they are one of the biggest educational suppliers of HP gear. We received an email from SCC stating that they were not allowed to sell this camera as HP had signed an exclusive deal with Jessops and John Lewis. In return, Jessops and John Lewis promise not to discount the camera. So your mission, (if you choose to accept it) is to purchase a HP Photosmart 850 from a supplier other than the two mentioned. If you cannot, then surely HP are guilty of price fixing, and could face a hefty fine? Steve Boyd, Cheadle Hulme School DCM We contacted HP about this and a spokesperson confirmed that the HP PhotoSmart 850 is only available through Jessops and John Lewis. However, discounts for schools are available through Jessops educational division (0116 232 6520). As for price fixing, the 850 exclusive is exempt since a) such deals are typically only in force for a limited time and b) because HP sells other digital cameras in its range through competing high street and online outlets. This month’s Star Letter wins a copy of PhotoImpact 8. DCM You’re right Edward, there are a lot of different formats out there right now and many of them are totally incompatible with each other. But that’s not necessarily a problem. You can readily buy adaptors for your computer that will accept any of the current cards and many photo printers offer slots for on manual to maintain uniform exposures. Overlap [each image] by 10% or more for lenses of 50mm or more, and 20-25% for wide-angles.” Sam Goodman agreed, adding: “The only thing to add... is [for you to] get a spirit level to fit onto the camera so that your shots come out level.” memory cards too. Of all the formats, Memory Stick and Secure Digital (SD) have spread the furthest into the consumer electronics sphere, popping up in everything from PDAs to camcorders and phones, so they are the formats to go for if you want to share your cards with other devices. It’s probably worth Most of the other Forum posters agreed that Adobe PhotoShop or PhotoShop Elements was a good bet for stitching your images together, although Jack Pries also recommended MGI PhotoSuite 4.0 (Platinum Edition). Whatever the package you use, it sounds like Bruce will have plenty of fun editing his pictures. Inspired! Have our tutorials and ideas sparked something? Send in your examples and we’ll print the best every month, to gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Pop art steering clear of any cameras that use SmartMedia as these cards have been superseded by the newer x-D format too. The trouble with Canvas I am having trouble installing the cover disc software Deneba Canvas 6. In the installation setup a serial number is required before the program can be installed. Please could you tell me where I can get this number from or how to overcome this installation problem? Monica Pothecary DCM Sorry Steve, here’s your picture again… Sundown I was making coffee in the kitchen when I noticed the sky seemed to have bands of fire running across it (due to the sun about to appear over the horizon), so I ran for the camera. As there wouldn’t have been time to get anywhere more open (I’m half a mile from the coast!) before the light changed, it had to be done from the back garden – silhouettes it was! Steve Dooley DCM To get the serial number you need to register online at the Deneba website (www.deneba.com/cv6regukf). Once you’re successfully registered, the number will be emailed to you. This shot of my girlfriend Lisa was taken recently at Penarth Beach near Cardiff, Wales. She suddenly burst into a song from the Eighties so I took a snapshot. Underneath each layer is a further blended layer of a photo taken the same day of the sea at Penarth Beach. I wanted the photo to be a mix of psychedelic Eighties pop and the memory of a fantastic winter’s day at the beach. The finished image is a collection of four photos on one canvas. This image has been blended with the general blending selection of Darken, Multiply and Luminosity and further blended with the Hue and Saturation options. I have then played with both the Hue and Saturation palette and brightness/contrast tool. Darren Sheen This goes to show what can be achieved apps like Elements and Paint Shop Pro. Sunset oversight Dawn light I picked up issue four today and was really chuffed to see that you’d printed my picture in Viewfinder. I was, however, just a tiny bit peeved that you managed to credit it to Mark Bedding. Any chance you could reprint it with my name next to it? Cheers. Steve Dooley This photo was taken on my father’s London balcony, using a Nikon CoolPix 995. The height of the balcony and the trellis enclosing it give it a ‘secret garden’ feel. I took this shot early one morning in the soft dawn light, before the frost and the threads of spider web were lost. I like the way the different shades of grey in the background give it depth. Tom Powell Tell us what you want! Every issue, it’s our aim to improve the magazine. Write in to letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk He wanted… He wanted… Brian Kennedy is after a wedge.tif printer setup file we forgot to put on issue 3’s cover discs. Randy Kirihara wanted fewer camera reviews and more tests of printers, scanners, ink and paper. He got… The file is on our ftp site at ftp://futurenet.co.uk/pub./m axpc/digicam/testwedge.zip WRITE IN TODAY! He got… A direct photo printers group test on page 41 of this issue. This is a great, atmospheric picture Tom, especially as it’s been completely unenhanced by image editing apps. He wanted… Rod Macdonald wanted more Mac software to be included on our cover CDs. He got… All our CDs from issue 4 onwards now come with Mac versions of our giveaway software where possible. Every issue, we aim to improve some aspect of the magazine. Email your suggestions to letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk and the Editor, in his great wisdom, will decide what you deserve… Avalon harbour This is a picture of Avalon harbour on Catalina Island in California. Our friends are in one of the boats you can see in the harbour. We rented a little jeep and drove up to the highest viewpoint. I used my Sony Cyber-shot DSC-F707 to take the picture and then used Photoshop to remove the power lines and utility poles that got in the way of the picture. I actually took 130 pictures of Avalon, of which 45 are still on my computer. Danny Lesnick, San Francisco SECTION #02 YOUR IMAGES Section highlights… CREATIVE PROJECT PHOTO SURREALISM SEE PAGE 58 CREATIVE PROJECT PHOTO SURREALISM Barry Jackson invites you inside his imagination and demonstrates his unique style of image blending PAGE PHOTO CLINIC RESTORE AN OLD COLOUR PHOTO Ed Davis gives an old ’70s photo a new lease of life after years of light exposure have turned it orange PAGE PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS USING CHANNELS AND GRADIENTS Simon Danaher explores basic selection techniques and looks at using different transparencies PAGE PAINT SHOP PRO TUTORIAL CREATE NIGHT MOODS Joe Apice shows you how to add dramatic nighttime effects to photos taken in broad daylight PAGE 58 64 68 74 PHOTO CLINIC SEE PAGE 64 PAGE PAGE 68 74 Your images Making and creating better pictures Tutorials you can trust! f Our aim is to bring you creative ideas, expert tips and quick fixes you can use in your own work. Authoritative A leading professional in his/her field writes every tutorial. Value-added We try to include Contact our editorial team image files, and full or trial software so you can try the tutorial for yourself, delivering a complete package. Clear Our large page size means we can add extra elements, explanations and detail to each tutorial. # If you have a comment, suggestion, idea or submission you would like to make, please email us at editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Visit our website at digitalcameramagazine.co.uk PROJECT PHOTO SURREALISM YOUR GUIDE BARRY JACKSON Barry became hooked on digital photography last year. He soon realised that the combination of digital camera (Fujifilm FinePix 6900 Zoom), computer and Photoshop were the perfect tools to create his own particular style of photo surrealism contact@etherealme.com PORTFOLIO BARRY JACKSON WEBSITE WWW.ETHEREALME.COM Combining images to create a surreal portrait Digital photo artist Barry Jackson returns to guide you through the quick and easy creation of another eggstraordinarily surreal image T PROJECT KEY DETAILS 2 ON OUR DISC ■ IMAGE FILES All the elements you need to recreate ‘The Egg man’ are on our disc 1. 2 SKILL LEVEL 6 2 1 TIME TO COMPLETE 2.5 HOURS here have been many arguments over the years about whether digital or traditional film is the best photographic medium. The decision depends, among other things, on how the individual photographer uses their chosen medium. One of the main reasons why I use digital photography is the speed at which it enables me to work. In this tutorial I’ll take you step by step through the formation of the image, ‘The Egg man’, which will take less than three hours to complete. Shooting the elements The man in the image is a friend of mine, Andrew, who kindly agreed to model for this image. I photographed him against the only plain background I could find during a five-minute break from his work. I A THE HEAD Taken inside under tungsten light, the FinePix 6900 Zoom digital camera made a good job of capturing the correct colours. The metal screen in the background had rivets in it but these were easy to remove using Photoshop . 058 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE originally planned to replace the background but after viewing the images on my computer I decided to keep it because I liked the subtle green colour next to the pale blue shirt. The egg and spoon pictures were taken against a white background under natural daylight from a nearby window. It was important to keep the backgrounds uncluttered in order to make it easy to isolate the elements. All the photographs used to make up the final image were taken with a Fujifilm FinePix 6900 Zoom with the image quality set to fine. The images were then transferred to my computer, ready for the really creative process to begin. All the files needed to recreate this image are included on cover disc 1, so why not give this project a go – it’s a lot easier than you might think… B THE EGG This picture was taken against a background of plain white paper under natural daylight. The egg was perfectly boiled with a nice, runny yoke dribbling down the front of the egg. 3 TOOL SCHOOL MAGNETIC LASSO TOOL This useful tool enables you to roughly draw around a subject while the Lasso automatically defines and sticks to the edge of the subject creating a selection. C THE SPOON The spoon was also taken against the same white background with the FinePix 6900 Zoom. All the images were taken from the same angle so that there were no conflicts with perspective. Everything you need to create this image is on your CD All All the images images, filters filters and plug-ins you you need to to cre create this image are are on your your co cover CD. CD. All All images images are are © Barry Barry Jackson. Jackson. 2 CDA/tutorials/ HEAD EGG SPOON man.psd egg.psd spoon.psd PROJECT PHOTO SURREALISM TOP TIP To quickly rename a layer, double click on the name of the layer you want to rename in the Layers palette and enter the new name STAGE 1 2 IN FOCUS Using the Magic Wand tool ISOLATING THE EGG 03 Start by removing the egg image from its background. 0 SELECT THE BACKGROUND As the background is mainly the same colour, we can use the Magic Wand tool to select the background. Click on the Magic Wand tool (W), set the tolerance to 30 and click on the background. EXPERT TIP BARRY JACKSON PHOTOSHOP EXPERT DISABLING THE LAYER MASK To turn off a Layer mask, hold down the shift key while clicking on the mask icon. Repeat this process to turn the mask on again. 01 OPEN THE IMAGES 02 ADJUST THE COLOUR 04 REMOVE THE BACKGROUND SHIFT AND ALT KEYS Hold down the shift key as you click with the Magic Wand to add to a selection or hold down the alt key to remove from a selection. TOLERANCE VALUES Adjust the tolerance value to increase or decrease the range. of a selection. Values between 0-255 can be entered; a value of 255 selects every pixel in the image. MAGIC WAND TOOL Use the Magic Wand tool to create a selection around pixels with a similar colour and brightness. Open up the Man and Egg images in Photoshop – these can be found under tutorials on cover disc 1. Concentrate on the egg by adjusting the colours, select the Curves palette by clicking Image8Adjustments8Curves (Ctrl + M). Select the left eyedropper at the bottom-right of the palette and then click on the darkest part of the picture – the shadow between the egg and the egg cup. Now select the right eyedropper, click on the background and click OK to apply the adjustment. ? EXPLAINED INVERSE Selecting the inverse option enables you to reverse the selection. BLEND MODES The blend modes are a range of options that control the way the pixels in the base layer are affected by other layers. 060 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE To soften the selection, edge-click Select8Feather (Alt + Ctrl + D) and set the feather radius to 1 pixel. Click OK to apply it and hit the delete key to remove the background. Inverse the selection by clicking Select8Inverse (Shft + Ctrl + I). 05 LAYER THE IMAGES Use the Move tool (V) to drag the selection onto the Man image, click on Layer8Layer properties, name the layer ‘Egg’, and click OK to apply the name. Reduce the layer opacity to 50% and position the egg over the man’s head. 06 RESIZE THE EGG From the Edit menu, select Edit8Free transform (Ctrl + T) and then squeeze the egg to fit the top of the man’s head. When you’re happy with the results, double-click to apply the changes. 4 …PAINT SHOP PRO DISCOVER BLEND MODES IN… STAGE 2 …PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS Found in the Layers palette. Learn more about PSP Blend modes at www.jasc.com/tutorials/nieuwenstein/layers4.asp …PHOTOIMPACT Exactly the same as Photoshop Blend modes. Find out more at www.arraich.com/ps7_pperfectBlend1.htm Called Merge Modes. Find more info at www.fortunecity. com%2fwestwood%2farmani%2f268%2fpi4tut14/ 2 BLEND THE LAYERS Use a layer mask and the gradient tool to blend the layers together. 0 EXPERT TIP BARRY JACKSON PHOTOSHOP EXPERT BACKGROUNDS When photographing objects for inclusion in a composite image, always try to use a plain background because this will make it much easier to isolate the image later. 07 USE THE ERASER While the egg layer is still semi-transparent, use the Eraser tool (E) to remove the unwanted areas of the egg covering the man’s eyes and the spoon. When this is done, return the layer opacity to 100%. 08 DUPLICATE THE EGG LAYER In the Layers palette, drag the egg layer onto the new layer icon (second right at the bottom of the Layers palette). This will make a duplicate copy of the ‘Egg copy’. Click on the eye icon to turn this layer off – we’ll return to it later. 09 ADD A LAYER MASK 11 BLEND WITH SOFT LIGHT 12 OPEN THE SPOON IMAGE Now blend the egg with the man’s head, return to the original egg layer and select Layers8Add layer mask8Reveal. This will add a mask to the layer that we can adjust. IN FOCUS Adjusting the Layer mask 10 USE THE GRADIENT TOOL Use the Linear gradient tool (G) to drag from the top of the egg down to the man’s eyebrows. This will create a gradual blend between the two layers. TOOLS ON THE LAYER MASK The eraser, airbrush and gradient tool can all be used on the Layer mask. REVEAL OR HIDE AREAS Use a Layer mask to hide or reveal areas of the layer without affecting the pixels of the layer. MASK ICON The mask icon next to the eye icon indicates that the Layer mask is active. Turn on the ‘Egg copy’ layer and select Soft Light from the drop-down Blend8Modes menu at the top of the Layers palette. Use the eraser to remove the shell areas but leave the inside of the egg and yoke dribbling down the front of the egg. 3 IN DETAIL LAYER MASK The Layer mask controls how much of a particular layer appears in the overall image. Black masked areas are hidden; white areas show through. Open the spoon image from the cover CD, select Image8Image size and click on the drop-down arrow next to the width box. Select percent, set the width to 50%, and click OK to apply the change. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 061 PROJECT PHOTO SURREALISM TOP TIP Only sharpen your image at the end of the creative process because the use of other filters can enhance small marks created by sharpening STAGE 3 2 IN FOCUS Using the Clone Stamp tool ADD YOKE TO THE SPOON 15 Add some runny egg yoke to the empty spoon. TIDY THE BACKGROUND Return to the background layer and use the Clone Stamp tool (S) to remove the rivets in the background, choose a brush with a soft edge and a diameter larger than the rivet, select a sample point close to each rivet for best results. 13 SELECT THE YOKE 14 POSITION THE YOKE 16 CARRY ON CLONING CLONE STAMP The Clone Stamp can be used in all the available blending modes. REDUCED OPACITY Reduce the opacity of the Clone Stamp to produce a subtler clone effect. ALIGNMENT With Aligned selected, the distance between the sample point and the Clone Stamp remains constant. Turn this off and the sample point will stay in its original position. Use the Magnetic lasso tool (L) to carefully draw around the yoke on the end of the spoon, copy (Ctrl + C) and paste (Ctrl + V) or drag onto the layered image. Name the layer ‘Yoke’ and position it on top of the other layers. ? EXPLAINED CLONE STAMP TOOL The Cone Stamp tool enables you to sample pixels from one part of the image and place them anywhere else within the image. Position the yoke over the end of the empty spoon and then use the Eraser tool (E) to tidy up any rough edges. The yoke should be roughly the right size for the spoon. Use the Edit8Free transform tool (as in step 6) to make any size adjustments. 0 EXPERT TIP BARRY JACKSON PHOTOSHOP EXPERT MOVE TOOL As well as using the Move tool to drag one image from its window onto another open window you can drag layers straight from the Layers palette. 062 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE With the Clone Stamp tool still selected, remove the blue area at the bottom righthand corner of the background, zoom in and use a hardedged brush when cloning close to the man’s shirt. 17 FLATTEN THE IMAGE It’s now time to merge all the layers together. Select Layer8Flatten image. Be sure you are happy with the results of each layer before flattening because once this is done any adjustments made will affect the whole image. 18 ADJUST THE CONTRAST Now the image is flattened, colour and contrast adjustments can be made to the whole image. Generally, the colours in this image are fine, but the contrast could be stronger. To adjust this, select Image8Adjustments8Auto contrast (Alt + Shft + Ctrl + L). 4 LEARN MORE ABOUT PHOTOSHOP LIGHTING EFFECTS STAGE 4 2 Learn more from three great tutorials from our sister magazine, Computer Arts, at www.computerarts.co.uk/tutorials/type/tutorial.asp?id=20705 IN FOCUS Using lighting effects ADD A HALO EFFECT 21 We will now use the Lighting Effects filter to add a halo effect to the man’s head. OMNI LIGHT Select the Omni light type from the drop-down menu and position it over the top of the man’s head in the preview pane. Adjust the size and position of the light by dragging the handles. Try experimenting with the various styles of lighting. 19 DUPLICATE THE BACKGROUND 20 LIGHTING EFFECTS 22 BLEND WITH SOFT LIGHT LIGHTING STYLE Pick a lighting style – there are lots to choose from so experiment with different styles. MAKE ADJUSTMENTS Choose between spotlight, directional or Omni light types and use the sliders to adjust intensity and focus. COLOUR OF LIGHTING Choose the lighting colour here. To give the impression of light emitting from the man’s head, use the Lighting Effect. First duplicate the background using Right click8Duplicate background or by dragging the background layer onto it to create a new layer icon at the bottom of the Layers palette. With the original background layer active select Filter8Render8Lighting Effects. This will bring up the Lighting Effects palette, which enables us to choose from a good range of lighting filters. 0 EXPERT TIP BARRY JACKSON LAYER STYLES POSITIONING LAYERS If you find it difficult to position layers absolutely try using the arrow keys to nudge the layer one pixel at a time. When you’re happy with the lighting effect, click OK to apply it, return to the background copy layer and select Soft Light from the Blending modes drop-down menu – this will place a light glow around and behind the man’s head. 23 UNSHARP MASK Flatten the image and apply the Unsharp Mask filter using Filter8Sharpen8Unsharp Mask to sharpen the image. This filter enables us to control the amount of sharpening needed. For best results, use lower settings and apply the filter two or three times. 24 THE END RESULT We now have our end result – a slightly disturbing but equally amusing image of a man dipping a spoon into the top of his open head. Try capturing that within three hours on film! DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 063 PHOTO CLINIC RESTORATION YOUR GUIDE ED DAVIS Ed Davis is a London-based advertising and corporate photographer with many years experience of studio and location photography. He specialises in image manipulation, and delivers creative solutions that combine photography and digital technology. He is a member of NAPP (National Association of Photoshop Professionals) Equipment used: a scanner and Adobe Photoshop 7 picdesk.dcm@futurenet.co.uk WEBSITE WWW.ED-DAVIS-PHOTOGRAPHY.CO.UK Colouring a faded photo Over time, sunlight and chemical reactions can fade old prints. One reader’s photo from the 1970s has turned into a lifeless, orangy-brown mess, so we challenged Ed Davis to bring it back to life… M ost of us have boxes of faded photographs stashed away, hardly recognisable images of our youth. This month we were sent a print of three nattily-dressed friends standing in the kitchen at a party. The patterned shirts and ties, kaftan and generous facial hair left us in little doubt that this shot was taken in the early 70s. CLINIC CHALLENGE US 2 THE READER PAUL DUNFORD Paul had tried a few times to bring a bit of realistic colour into this picture. He has more from the same batch of pictures to restore… 2 CHALLENGE LEVEL 5 2 2 1 BEFORE 14 The damage in this picture is so extensive, and the colours have been so badly bleached and faded that it’s impossible to decipher the original colours. Looking at the man on the left-hand side, it’s hard to tell if his jacket is supposed to be brown, dark green or dark blue. The colours have bleached out, detail is diffused and contrast is flat TIME TO REPAIR HOURS Groovy baby 02 01 AFTER When undertaking a restoration project like this, try to ensure that the final image looks as natural as possible. You may have to make an educated guess, taking into consideration the colour and styles of clothes that were worn at the time. Hopefully this picture will bring back some happy memories for Paul… The colours have been revived, putting the life back in the party! 03 NOW SEND YOURS! Contact us via email with a 100K JPEG attached and, if we like it, we’ll get in touch! Email us today at: picdesk.dcm@futurenet.co.uk 8 04 Photo Clinic 064 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE In Paul Dunford’s 70s party picture, the colours have bleached out, leaving an orange cast that needs to be removed; the detail is diffused and needs to be sharpened; the contrast is flat and lifeless; plus the colours need to be enhanced. 02 TOTAL COLOUR FADING 01 FADED EDGES 03 BLEMISHES Solution: Even out the faded edges of the photograph using Layer masks. Solution: Use the Clone tool to get rid of any small blemishes, then use the Copy and Paste technique in order Solution: Remove the overall red tint, re-balance and recolour the image using the Curves palette so that the image appears more natural and gives the subjects a more realistic look. to remove the pull cord, which cuts through the face of the man on the right-hand side. 04 VISIBLE PAPER TEXTURE Solution: The texture of paper that was used to print the image had become visible during scanning (this is a common problem that occurs when original prints are scanned). Reduce this distinct surface texture using Layers and Filters. 4 USING MULTIPLE LAYERS You can rename each layer by right-clicking the mouse on the layer you wish to rename. Select Layer Properties in the dialog box and rename the layer STAGE 1 REMOVING FADED AREAS 2 The image has faded around the edges and needs to be evened out first. 01 MULTIPLE LAYERS 04 CREATE A MASK 07 WHITEN THE SHIRT Copy the background layer twice using Layer8Duplicate Layer (short cut, right-click on the layer in the Layers palette and select Duplicate Layer) and repeat the same procedure. You now have two layers. The Gradient mask goes from left to right, and white to black. The white area on the image will be visible and the black area will be masked. STAGE 2 02 ADD A MASK 05 CHANGE BLENDING MODES 08 DARKEN THE JACKET To remove the faded areas, click on the Add Layer mask icon at the bottom of the Layers palette. This will place a Mask option on the layer. A mask is used to separate areas of the image when working on them. Once the balance is correct, the layers are merged to form one image. To blend the layers together change the Blending option at the top of the Layers palette to Multiply. The image is now a blend of the three layers. Flatten the three layers into one using Layers8Flatten Image. 03 ADD GRADIENTS 06 SELECT THE RIGHT BLEND 09 A CLEARER IMAGE Click inside the Layers mask. On the tool bar click on the Gradient tool (short cut, G), make sure the Linear Gradient is active and choose the gradient that will affect the foreground and background. Take the cursor to the left-hand side of the image, click and drag to about two-thirds of the way across and release. In Photoshop 7 there are 24 Blending modes. Each Blending mode affects the image differently. The Multiply mode works well when dealing with faded or underexposed photographs. In this case, it recovers the lost information in the image. 2 BALANCE THE COLOURS The image now looks even but the colour is still far from correct. The overall red tint is still apparent. To bring back the original colour of the photograph, each section of colour is treated independently. Open the Curves Dialogue box using Image8 Adjustments8Curves (short cut, Ctrl + M). Click on the third eyedropper (Highlights), select an area of the photo that should be white and click on it. The red changes to a more neutral tonal range. Click on the Shadow eyedropper and click on an area that should be black, such as the dinner jacket of the man on the right-hand side. The image darkens, the overall red tint disappears and suddenly the photograph looks more natural. The orange haze effect has been removed and the people are defined so they stand out from the background. The next steps are to make the skin tone more natural, balance the background colour and finetune the colour of the clothing. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 065 PHOTO CLINIC RESTORATION ONE-CLICK FIX To change a colour photograph into back and white, go to the option bar, click Image8Adjustment8Desaturate (short cut, Shift + Ctrl + U). The colour photograph will now be black and white 0 EXPERT TIP ED DAVIS PHOTOSHOP SHOW TOOL TIPS To find out about tools and what the symbols and icons mean, make sure the Show Tool Tips box is ticked in the preferences using Edit8Preferences8General. 10 COLOUR REFERENCE 13 THE SKIN TONES 16 COPY AND PASTE… Next, remove the colour cast from individual items. We do not have enough information about the colour of the clothes but balancing the skin tone is a good place to start because it changes the colours of the clothes accordingly and gives us a good base to work with. The main colour in the flesh tones is red – in this case too much red. Open the Selective Colour pallet using Image8Adjustments8Selective Colour. Move the sliders to reduce the amount of red and check the colour change by clicking the preview selector on and off. STAGE 3 11 ON THE RIGHT PATH 14 REPEAT UNTIL DONE 17 … UNTIL DONE From the tool bar, select the Lasso tool (short cut, L). Make a selection around the skin of the subject – the face, neck and hands. Click on Paths in the same palette as the Layers, move the cursor to the bottom of the palette, click on the icon that is third from the right and make a work path from the selection. The different paths created now appear on the Paths palette. Each item can be adjusted separately. Right-click on a path using Click8Make Selection, leave the Feather Radius at 1 pixel and click OK. Open the Selective Colour palette and adjust the sliders to remove the relevant colour. 12 MULTIPLE CORRECTIONS 15 FINAL TOUCHES 18 CLEAN UP THE REST Creating paths enables you to save complex selections and go back to them at several stages during retouching to make multiple corrections. Make selections and create paths for each of the areas to be adjusted – jackets, shirts, ties, hair, faces, skin tone and background. The photograph was taken in the early 70s. Select the shirt (see image 14) and make a guess at the brightness of the pink shirt. Click the Levels palette using Image8Adjustments8Levels (short cut, Ctrl + L). Move the slider on the right over to the left, and the shirt will brighten to your taste. 2 REMOVE THE PULL CORD AND BLEMISHES The pull cord hangs across the man’s face and should be removed using copy and paste. Cover up the white patches along the right edge in the same way. Then use the Clone tool to remove smaller imperfections. Click on the Lasso tool (short cut, L), make a selection around the part of the image that needs to be covered and move the selection over an area that is similar in tonal range and colour. Click Edit8Copy (short cut, Ctrl + C) then Edit8Paste (short cut, Ctrl + V). Now move the new pasted section over the pull cord. 066 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE The pull cord can’t be covered in one operation. The same method will have to be applied several times to blend the new pasted areas correctly – each time matching the new piece with its surroundings. Click the Clone tool in the tool bar (short cut, S), pick a soft-edge brush from the Brush pallet on the Options bar and a circle will appear representing a brush size. Click and drag the mouse to the area you want to cover, release the mouse and click on the blemish. 4 MORE TOOL OPTIONS STAGE 4 To find out more about Blending modes there are tutorials at http://photoshopgurus.info/beginners/ ps-blend_modes.shtml 2 REDUCE THE PAPER TEXTURE In the 60s and 70s, photographic paper was available with a distinct surface texture sometimes referred to as satin finish. This photograph was printed on coarse quality paper. 19 TAKE A CLOSER LOOK Enlarge a section of the image to see the original pattern on the photographic paper. On the tool bar, click Zoom (short cut, Z), click on the image – it will magnify every time you click. The pattern will become visible all over. 20 CHOOSE A PATH The next step is to reduce the pattern. Go back to the paths we created earlier, click on the Paths palette tab. Right-click on the path that covers the area you want to work on, click Make Selection to select the area. A filter can now be applied. 21 WHICH FILTER TO USE 23 GROOVY MAN! 24 BACK TO BLACK AND WHITE The linear texture is impossible to remove but it can be reduced. Apply the Motion Blur filter. The angle and amount of blur can be adjusted. Click Filter 8Blur8Motion Blur then alter the angle and amount until the selected area loses the grain. The image softens but the detail remains intact. IN FOCUS DIFFERENT EFFECTS Invoke the psychedelic era. In the Curves palette, move the graph up and down to form a wave pattern with peaks and troughs using Image8Adjustment8Curves (short cut, Ctrl + M). The result is random and unusual. @ SEND YOURS! We want your faded, damaged pictures today! Send them in, we’ll fix them up for free, show everyone how we did it and send them back restored! The sort of pictures we’re after need to be decent photos which have become damaged – unfortunately we can’t make badly composed/shot photos good. ■ Contact us via email, with a small JPEG of the photo attached, and if it’s right for the mag, we’ll get in touch. How’s that for a bargain? Email the following address: @ picdesk.dcm@futurenet.co.uk 22 DIFFERENT EFFECTS Once the retouching is finished, the tonal range can be changed. Keep it as it was originally, turn it to black and white or create a funky background – the choice is yours! DEFINITION In the final picture, the subjects are defined so they stand out from the background. We can now clearly see that they are standing in the kitchen BACK TO THE PAST The net curtains and the hot water heater are also recognisable. The photograph looks almost as fresh as the day it was taken To create a black and white print, open Image in the Option bar, click Image8Adjustment8 Hue/Saturation (short cut, Ctrl + U), move the saturation slider to the left and the colour will be removed. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 067 TUTORIAL BASIC SELECTING TECHNIQUES YOUR GUIDE SIMON DANAHER Simon Danaher is a digital artist specialising in Photoshop, compositing and 3D. He is also a consultant, trainer and author. Simon has been working professionally in the graphics industry for over six years, and is currently writing his second book on professional graphics techniques letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk PORTFOLIO SIMON DANAHER Basic selecting techniques in Photoshop Elements Selections are a vital part of the editing process in Photoshop and can seriously trip you up if they’re done badly. Here we look at the basics of selections in Photoshop, how they work and how to make the most of them L ast issue we looked at basic selecting skills in Photoshop and this month we will be pushing things a little further with some intermediate selection skills. As we’ve seen, making selections is key to success in Photoshop. It’s such a simple thing yet it presents a minefield of potential disasters if not done correctly. In this tutorial we will look at partially transparent selections, gradient selections and more. A partially TUTORIAL KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL BOOSTER 5 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 30 MINS CHANNELS 2 ? EXPLAINED CHANNEL A special ‘layer’ in the Channel palette that stores greyscale pixels. These can be used to make selections and masks and can be saved as alpha channels in certain file formats. 068 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 01 transparent selection is one that only partially protects pixels. This means that rather than a filter being applied to the selected pixels with 100% intensity, the effect is only partially applied. The great thing with these kinds of selections is that the degree of transparency can vary over the selected area, and in order to do this Photoshop has a very simple relationship between pixel brightness and selection. We’ve seen how you can use Quickmask mode to paint a selection using black or white, where black equals no selection and white is fully selected. In fact, you can use any shade of grey, and the percentage of brightness you choose will directly reflect the transparency of the selection. Use 50% grey and the selection will be 50% transparent, for example. The key is to understand that pixels and selections are interchangeable and where this is most evident is in the Channels palette. You can view a selected shape as pixels, by converting it from a selection into a channel - this then enables you to make adjustments to it and store the shape for future use CREATE A NEW DOCUMENT The first thing we must do is make our selection. Create a new document in Photoshop, say 1,024 x 768 pixels with a white background. Now we’ve talked about the Quickmask function before. You can create a custom selection by enabling Quickmask mode (the q key), filing it with black and painting in it with white using the Brush tool. 02 APPLY A NOISE FILTER We can leave Quickmask mode, and there’s our selection. Apply a filter such as Noise through it and the filter is constrained to where we painted. Simple. Notice, though, that the edges of the effect fade out smoothly. Because we used a soft edged brush the selection has a soft edge – we are already creating a partially transparent selection without realising it. 03 TURN A SELECTION INTO A CHANNEL We can see what the selection looks like by converting it into a channel: the transparency values in the selection are converted to white, black or grey pixels. With your selection still active click on the Channels palette and click the ‘Save Selection as Channel’ button. Click on the newly created channel to view it. The selection has now been converted into pixels. ; 5 0 NEXT MONTH FILTERS AND HOW TO USE THEM EXPERT TIP SIMON DANAHER PHOTOSHOP EXPERT LAYER MASKS A selection can also be saved as a layer mask, just like a channel. You can load any channel or layer mask as a selection by commandclicking on it. 04 STORE AND REUSE As well as showing its true pixels, converting your selections into channels is also a convenient way of storing them for re-use in the future. (To convert a channel back into a selection later on, you simply select it and click the ‘Load Channel As Selection’ button at the bottom of the Channels palette). GRADIENTS 01 OPEN THE BABY PICTURE 04 LIGHTEN THE BACKGROUND 05 HARDEN UP THE EDGES With the selection converted to a channel (so they are now represented as pixels), you can use Photoshop’s tools and filters to modify it. For example, applying Levels to the channels you can drag the black and white input sliders inwards to harden up the edges. Don’t forget to drop the active selection (command-d) beforehand though. 06 STYALIZE YOUR IMAGE Now we can modify the edges, perhaps making them grainy and rough by applying the Styalize8Torn Edges filter. Once you’re happy with the look you can load the channel as a selection (see step 4) and use it any way you see fit – to make a colour adjustment or to apply a filter through on an image layer. Making gradient selections is an essential skill, and it’s quite easy to do. The steps below show you how to use the gradient tool Open the file Baby.jpg from the CD. What we want to do here is focus more strongly on the mother and baby – particularly the mother’s loving gaze. A gradient selection is very useful here because enables us to modify the image in a specific but seamless manner. Load this channel as a selection (click at the bottom of the channels palette). Back in the Layers palette click the background layer to select it (the rubylith disappears) and run Levels (command-l). Now you can adjust the gamma slider to make the mother and baby lighter than the background. 02 ADD A NEW CHANNEL 05 DARKEN THE BACKGROUND In the Channels palette add a new channel and choose the gradient tool. Now select the new channel, then click the eye icon of the RGB channel. This displays the channel and the RGB layers together – the channel will display as a red rubylith just like in Quickmask mode. Alternatively you can make the background, darker. In order to do this we must flip the selection so that the mother and baby are protected by the selection. Typing command-shift-i will invert the selection, and then you can run Levels and reduce the white output slider. 03 USE THE GRADIENT TOOL 06 GUASSIAN BLUR In the Gradient tool options bar select the Reflected gradient type, then use the tool to drag diagonally from the centre of the image to the top left hand corner. The gradient you draw onto the image should end up looking similar to the one shown above. You don’t have to use Levels to get this blurred effect – any Photoshop filter or adjustment will do. Here we’ve used Gaussian blur to blur through the gradient selection so that the look of the background is softened. See the final file, Blurred.jpg for the finished effect. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 069 TUTORIAL WHITE BALANCE CORRECTION POST-SHOOT YOUR GUIDE TIM DALY Tim has written several books on photography including The Digital Photography Handbook, The Digital Printing Handbook and The Desktop Photographer, and he continues to write for The British Journal of Photography and AG. His photographs have been exhibited across Europe tim@photocollege.co.uk PORTFOLIO TIM DALY WEBSITE WWW.PHOTOCOLLEGE.CO.UK Solving white balance errors in Photoshop Elements Colour casts can be caused by many different circumstances, but one of the most exasperating results from an incorrect use of the white balance command in your digital camera T he human eye is completely self-correcting when presented with artificial light, but cameras are only designed to operate within the colourless spectrum of natural daylight. This is why you sometimes get strange coloured photos when shooting under fluorescent tubes or domestic tungsten lighting, unless the white balance is properly set. A digital sensor in both digital and traditional cameras provides invisible colour correction and compensates for any imbalances in the visual spectrum. On more advanced digital SLRs, the white balance function can be used to tackle a wider range of problems and can be TUTORIAL KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL BOOSTER 5 2 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 5 MINS PER IMAGE NEXT MONTH Solving flash errors NEUTRAL BASE 01 SPOT THE COLOUR CAST Shot in natural light, this image should be a neutral grey, but has turned out much warmer than expected. With neutral coloured images, it’s easy to see colour casts compared to spotting them in more saturated colour areas. Do an Enhance8Adjust Color8Color Variations command. 070 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE programmed to match a precise lighting condition, measured in colour temperature on the Kelvin scale (K). Colour controls in Elements There are four ways of correcting image colour imbalance in Photoshop Elements: the Auto Colour Correction, the Colour Cast Correction tool, the Colour Variations and the (least used) Levels command. Like all tools in Elements and the full blown Photoshop, these four controls appear to offer the same end result, but will vary in their success depending on the condition of the original image. The Auto Colour Correction offers a one-stop command, with no dialog box and no tools to vary the results. This works best on images which have a mild colour cast, but proves much less reliable on bigger problems. The Colour Cast Correction tool offers a better chance to solve complex casts by using a dropper tool to set new colour. The Color Variation dialog is the easiest to use by far and the best place to start. It offers three colour correctors and a useful lighten and darken function without needing to move onto another dialog box. The fastest method and the most reliable, after some practice, however, is the hidden mid-tone dropper control in the Levels dialog box. The Color Variations command is easy to use and works well if the original colour can easily be identified as a neutral shade 02 SET UP THE DIALOG BOX Best results are achieved by applying colour corrections to the Midtone areas. Don’t overdo the amount of correction and have the Colour Intensity Amount slider set halfway as shown. Click into either of the six colour buttons and watch the After preview image, top right, change. 03 THE CORRECTED IMAGE Now neutral without being too cold, the final result shows off details and delicate colours absent in the original. The same Color Variations command can be used creatively to warm up images taken with a flash or cool down those shot under an evening light. AUTO CORRECTION 01 ORIGINAL WITH A BLUISH CAST 04 ORIGINAL WITH A MAGENTA CAST This image of sand was shot under bright sunlight, but with the wrong white balance setting. Although much colder and bluer than anticipated, this slight kind of colour imbalance is easy to solve. This image was shot in daylight with the white balance set to correct fluorescent lighting by mistake. Domestic and tube lighting gives off a green light, so magenta is used to compensate. Casts are easier to spot in mid–tone grey areas. USING LEVELS This can provide a one-click fix; but sometimes you’ll need to make more detailed adjustments 02 USE AUTO COLOUR CORRECTION 05 APPLY THE ADJUSTMENT The first step worth taking is to make an Enhance8Auto Colour Correction command. It’s essential to make sure that you haven’t made a selection before applying this command, or the results will apply to a smaller area and not the entire image. Do Enhance8Adjust Color8Color Cast to bring the dialog box into play. This prompts you to click into the image using a tiny dropper tool, onto a white, black or grey area. You’ll need to make several attempts before it’s fully corrected though. 03 THE CORRECTED ORIGINAL 06 NEUTRAL COLOUR ORIGINAL You’ll see pretty quickly whether this quick fix control has solved the problem. The original bluish cast is now removed, leaving a warmer end result. If unsuccessful, reverse out with an Edit8Undo command and try the next method. After clicking the highlighted areas, this is the result. It’s important to remember that even a slight repositioning of your dropper tool will result in a completely different colour change, but keep on clicking until you find the right balance. The Levels command works with a mid-tone dropper that takes a neutral patch and adjusts colour accordingly 0 EXPERT TIP TIM DALY PHOTOSHOP EXPERT SHOOTING IN DIFFERENT COLOUR SPACES 01 YELLOW STARTING POINT Even though this image is mainly coloured green, the bottom, left-hand area of pavement is yellow rather than a neutral gray. Make an Enhance8Adjust Brightness/Contrast8Levels command to start the correction process. 02 USE THE MID-TONE DROPPER Once open, click on the middle dropper tool, in the bottom right hand corner of the dialog. Next position this in the most neutral mid tone area of the image and click. This command will completely colour correct your image. 03 THE END RESULT Now fully corrected, the same image separates out different colours much better than the original and has lost its former yellow cast. If the process didn’t work first time, keep clicking the mid tone dropper in a new area until it’s corrected. The sRGB colour space is a universal colour palette used in most digital cameras, but better cameras can be set to shoot in the Adobe RGB (1998) space, which draws upon a larger colour range. Professional image editing software like Adobe Photoshop enables you to manage images produced under different colour spaces and minimise the visible damage. If your digital images constantly lack colour or brightness, then it’s worth experimenting with the colour space of your digital camera. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 071 NEW SERIES GET STARTED WITH PAINT SHOP PRO YOUR GUIDE JOE APICE Joe has been a keen amateur photographer for over 20 years and trains others in basic camera techniques. His work has been exhibited in local galleries and he’s an avid user of Paint Shop Pro and Photoshop joseph.apice@verizon.net PORTFOLIO JOE APICE WEBSITE HTTP://APICE.HOMESTEAD.COM/INDEX.HTML Fixing dark photos with Paint Shop Pro 7 If your photos are on the dark side, and you want to bring back the original brightness and detail, Joe Apice shows you how, using PSP7 and a little common sense TIPS GUIDE KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL LEVEL 8 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 30 MINSPERIMAGE NEXT MONTH Making people look younger H alf the battle when trying to improve an image is recognising what’s wrong with it; the other half is knowing how to resolve the problem. Although photo-editing software has helped many photographers correct their mistakes, we must keep in mind that Paint Shop Pro – like so many other image-editing programs – is also designed to enhance your photos. These programs are not designed simply to replace the skill that goes into taking a good picture. Dark photos result when the amount of light reaching the image sensor on your camera is insufficient. With automatic cameras, this situation most often occurs on sunny days, when the camera’s built-in exposure metre is fooled by complex lighting conditions, such as when there’s a mixture of bright sky and shadows. There are two ways to fix this problem: at the camera level, when you can adjust your exposure to compensate for the lighting situation; and at the imageediting level, when you can use the photo-editing tools that we’ll be discussing in this tutorial. It’s important to remember that there are several tools that can be used to fix dark photographs using Paint Shop Pro. These tools include the Histogram, DESIGN FEATURES 7TOOL SCHOOL TOOL PALETTE The Freehand Selection tool and the Magic Wand are found in the Tool Palette. the Curves command, the Levels command and the Layer Blend mode. This month we will use some of the simpler tools, and show you how to get some really professional looking results. Identify the light and dark areas in the image, determine what details you want to bring out and select a staring point that will set the tone for the image ? EXPLAINED AUTO EXPOSURE LOCK If your camera has an Auto Exposure Lock (AEL), you can adjust the exposure by moving in close to your subject and taking a metre reading. Use the AEL button to lock the exposure, move back and recompose your picture, then press the shutter release. If your camera is not equipped with an AEL feature, the simplest way to highlight shadows is to use your camera’s built-in flash as fill light. The light from the flash will fill the shadow areas without affecting your background. See your camera manual for details on how to use these features. 072 8 01 PREVIEW THE RAW IMAGE In this example, the camera’s exposure metre has been fooled by the complex lighting conditions of the scene. The bright sky and light coloured trousers of the boy’s uniform have caused underexposure. As a result, the trees in the background have lost detail, the grass has turned an ugly colour and there’s a shadow over the boy’s face, caused by the baseball cap. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 8 02 MAKE THE FIRST SELECTION Blue skies add a natural colour balance to photographs, so we want to enhance the colours here. The sky selection is made with the Magic Wand tool with the tolerance set to 15. We can capture the entire sky in one click of the mouse. This selection will also serve as the starting point for our subsequent selections. 03 THE SKY IS BLUE The Color Balance tool offers control over the colour mixture and provides an ample amount of colour saturation. Select the Color Balance tool by choosing Colors8Adjust8Color Balance on the Main Menu bar. Keep the settings in the dialog box at their default values and slide the Yellow – Blue balance slider all the way to the right to enrich the blue. 4 AUTO COMMANDS IN MORE DETAIL PRO RESULTS The Auto Color Balance and Auto Contrast commands are not available in earlier versions of PSP. To achieve similar results with the earlier versions of Paint Shop Pro, use Colors 8Adjust8Color Balance and Colors8 Adjust8Brightness Contrast Natural and pleasing results can be obtained with a little effort and some basic tools in Paint Shop Pro * WEB LINKS TUTORIAL WEBSITE http://psp7tutorials.homestead. com/index.html 04 INVERT THE SELECTION 07 LAWN CARE With the sky selection still in place, choose Selections8 Invert. This will enable us to work on the remaining areas of the image to bring out the details in the trees, grass and on the boy. You can feather the selection to blend the colours. Choose Selections8 Modify8Feather and set the feather value to 3. On the Main menu bar, choose Effects8 Enhance Photo8Manual Color Correction. In the preview window, drag a rectangular selection as shown to include the source colour. Next, select Grasses for the category, and then click the arrow in the Preset Colors box to bring up the colours. 05 BALANCE THE LIGHT 08 BRING OUT THE BOY’S FEATURES On the Main Menu bar, select Colors8Adjust8 Levels. Click the Reset button in the lower right-hand side of the panel to bring the sliders to their default position. Next, move the middle slider to the left until the details in the trees begin to show – a setting of 1.74 achieves the desired results. With the Freehand Selection tool, select the area around the boy’s face down to just below the neckline. We also want to feather the selection using the Selections8 Modify8Feather command and setting the feather value to 3 pixels. Feathering the selection helps to smooth out the colour transitions. 06 MAKE THE GRASS SELECTION 09 ADD COLOUR TO THE FACE We can now begin to see the textures and shadows of the branches and leaves. We want the colours in the grass to be more vibrant because the grass acts as a natural contrast against the boy’s uniform. First, select the entire grass area around the boy as shown using the Freehand Selection tool. Add a colour tint to the boy’s face to help even out the tone when we adjust the contrast. On the Main Menu bar, select Effects8Enhance Photo8Auto Color Balance. In the dialog box, move the slider to the left until the Temperature value is 5541. Maintain the other settings at their default position. 0 EXPERT TIP JOE APICE PAINT SHOP PRO EXPERT HISTOGRAMS 10 HIGHLIGHTS AND SHADOWS The Auto Contrast command helps to balance the highlights and shadows in the boy’s face. Select Effects8Enhance Photo8Automatic Contrast Enhancement. In the dialog box, set the Bias to Neutral and the Strength and Appearance to Normal. 11 LOOKING SHARP Sharpen the image using the Unsharp mask. On the Main Menu bar, select Effects8 Sharpen8Unsharp Mask. In the dialog box, adjust the Strength setting between 50 and 100 until you achieve the desired results. Here, a setting of 100 works well. 12 THE END RESULTS PSP will help you create an image that will rival those of pro photographers. For best results, preview your photo, make accurate selections of the areas you want to change and make the changes gradually using the tools that give you the best control. You can use the Histogram to determine if there is enough detail in an image to make corrections possible, and what lightness corrections need to be made. You can open the Histogram window by clicking the Histogram icon on the standard toolbar. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 073 NEW SERIES GET STARTED WITH PAINT SHOP PRO YOUR GUIDE JOE APICE Joe has been a keen amateur photographer for over 20 years and trains others in basic camera techniques. His work has been exhibited in local galleries and he’s an avid user of Paint Shop Pro and Photoshop joseph.apice@verizon.net PORTFOLIO JOE APICE WEBSITE http://apice.homestead.com/index.html Creating night moods in your photos If you have a photo that lacks mood, or maybe you just want to see it in a different light, Joe Apice shows you how to create a bit more atmosphere using just a few basic tools available in Paint Shop Pro 7 TIPS GUIDE KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL LEVEL 8 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 30 MINSPERIMAGE NEXT MONTH Making people look younger T 7TOOL SCHOOL he time of day that you decide to take a picture is as important as the picture itself – it determines the mood of your final image. Photos taken early in the morning or late in the day will produce long shadows and warm light and they are the ideal times for landscape and scenic photography. Night-time, when the moon is full, is another great time to create atmosphere in your photos. Pictures of dark streets and alleyways taken during the night give an eerie feeling of suspense and drama – almost as if someone is lurking in the shadows. Light gives life to photographs, and capturing the exact moment when the light is right requires a lot of planning and a lot more patience. On holiday, the day is filled with many activities and often we don’t have time to set up our cameras and wait for that special moment. So what can we do? Well, with a little practice, we can achieve the same results with Paint Shop Pro. For example, if you want to photograph a scene, but it’s midday and the light is not dramatic enough, try to imagine what the scene would look like during the late afternoon, early evening or at night. Angle your shot to include key elements that will help you when you alter the image. Clouds are always GET STARTED Divide the image into parts, and identify the key elements in the scene that will play a role in the manipulation of the image 8 TOOL PALETTE The Lasso tool, the Magic Wand and the Paintbrush tool are found in the Tool Palette. good for adding dramatic effects. Objects such as street lights lend themselves well for night photos. Other things such as waterways, streams and water puddles can be manipulated to reflect areas of the scene and bring a feeling of depth to the image. 8 3 IN DETAIL COLOUR AND CONTRAST The Auto Color Balance and Auto Contrast commands are not available in earlier versions of PSP. To achieve similar results with the earlier versions, use Colors8 Adjust8Color Balance and Colors8Adjust8Brightness Contrast. 074 01 PREVIEW THE IMAGE The image of this Venetian waterway was shot at about 11am. Notice how the brilliant light from the midday sun has lit the entire scene. There appears to be a lot of detail but the image lacks mood, which is often typical of photos taken at this time of day. The elements that will play the key role in the transition from day to night are the clouds, street lights and water. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 02 MAKE THE SKY SELECTION Select the sky using the Magic Wand. In the Tool Option Palette, set the Magic Wand tolerance to 15 and the Feather value to 0. Hold down the Shift key and click the Magic Wand pointer at the empty sky and then at the cloud patterns until the entire sky is selected. Save the selection using the Selections8Save to Disk command and name it ‘Sky and Clouds’. 03 SELECT THE WATERWAY Use the Lasso tool in Freehand mode to select the waterway. In the Tool Option Palette, set the Feather value to 0 and trace around the edges of the water as shown. Hold down the shift key when making selections that are not contiguous. Save the completed selection to disk using the Selections8Save to Disk command and name it ‘Waterway’. 4 FURTHER INFORMATION ADDING EFFECTS Manufacturers such as B&W, Heliopan, Hoya and Tiffen produce a variety of high quality filters that create moods when used in color photographs. They include Orange filters, Neutral Density filters, Sepia filters and Fantasy Color filters Apply transitional effects to the image. These include darkening the shadow areas, adding contrast and detail and turning on the street lights * WEB LINKS TUTORIAL WEBSITE http://psp7tutorials.homestead. com/index.html 04 DARKEN THE SKY 07 CREATE MOONLIGHT IN THE SKY Load the Sky and Clouds selection back onto the image using the Selections8Load from Disk command. Bring up the Curves adjustment tool by selecting Colors8Adjust8Curves from the Main menu bar. In the Curves dialog box click the mouse pointer on the centre of the grid and drag the line down as shown. Load the Sky selection onto the image by choosing Selections8Load from Disk8Sky and Clouds. Select the Paint Brush tool and, in the Tool Option Palette, choose a large brush size – around 150 – and set the Opacity and Step values to 20. Make the foreground colour black and brush the colour into the selected area. 05 DARKEN THE BUILDINGS AND WATER 08 ACCENTUATE THE SHADOWS BELOW On the Main menu bar choose Selections 8Invert to select the rest of the image and then bring up the Curves adjustment tool by choosing Colors8Adjust8Curves. Drag the line from the centre of the grid as shown or enter a value of 155 in the Input box and 100 in the Output box. Apply the same technique to the buildings and the water with a higher opacity level. With the sky selection in place, choose Selections8Invert on the Main menu bar. Select the Paint Brush tool with the Opacity value set to 45. Keep the same brush size and apply black to the selected area as shown. 06 ADD CONTRAST TO THE WATER 09 ILLUMINATING THE STREET LIGHTS Load the Waterway selection back onto the image by choosing Selections8Load from Disk8Waterway. Select Effects8Enhance Photo8Automatic Contrast Enhancement from the main menu. Set the Bias to Darkest, the Strength to Normal and the Appearance to Bold to bring out the details and reflections in the water. On the Main menu bar, select Effects8 Illumination Effects8Sunburst. Place the crosshairs in the left-hand preview panel directly over the street light. Set the Light Spot Brightness to 30; Circle Brightness to 0; Rays Density to 20; and Rays Brightness to 50. Keep the colour white or bright yellow. 0 EXPERT TIP JOE APICE PAINTSHOP PRO EXPERT CURSORS 10 SHAPE THE LIGHT FALL To produce the effect of light being shed onto the pavement and water, a selection is made to approximate where the light would fall. The selection is feathered with a value of 60 – this diffuses the effect and produces a more natural appearance. 11 BRIGHTEN THE SELECTED AREA On the Main menu bar select Colors8 Adjust8Curves. In the Curves dialog box, first click the reset button, then click the line at the centre of the grid and drag it upwards at a diagonal until the Input box reads 92 and the Output box reads 157, as shown. 12 THE FINAL TOUCHES Create the illusion of light to some of the windows and stars. Add the window light by using the paintbrush tool set to 50% opacity and a dark yellow colour. Add the stars by using the Paint Brush tool with a brush size of 1 and the opacity set to 100. When making tight selections, set up your Tool Preferences to show precise cursors. You can change the cursor type by clicking the Cursor and Tablet Options tab in the Tool Option Palette. Press and hold the Shift key to add to your selection; press and hold the Ctrl key to subtract from your selection. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 075 TIPS DENEBA CANVAS 6 YOUR GUIDE NICK MERRITT Nick has edited, managed and launched some of the UK’s leading technology magazines, and has been writing about and using computers for longer than he wants to admit editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk WEBSITE www.futurenet.co.uk 16 ways to edit an image in Deneba Canvas 6 It's powerful, versatile and ideal for image editing, drawing, painting and web page creation. And it was on last's month's coverdisc! Now discover how to make the most of it TIPS GUIDE KEY DETAILS 2 ON OUR DISC Trial of Canvas 8 (Mac and PC). For full version of Canvas 6, call Back Issues on 0870 444 8470 2 SKILL BOOSTER 7 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 1.5 HOURS W hen we initially did the deal to get Canvas 6 on our CD, we did not realise just what a flexible and powerful program it was. We thought it was mostly a vector drawing program but while this is true, that’s only a small fraction of its abilities. Of most interest to digital photographers are the image editing and website creating features. In fact, the image editor built into Canvas is good enough for most photo-orientated image purposes, with image correction tools, support for Photoshop plug-ins and effects filters, the ability to cut out and alter images and support for layers. If you missed Paint Shop Pro with issue 1, this will go along way to filling in that gap. Anyway, that’s the hard sell – now for the tips. NEXT MONTH 20 Picture Window tips 01 Flatten an image As in Photoshop, if you have built up a number of Iayers or a stack of paint objects on a single layer and you wish to flatten (merge) your work into one single paint object, then there is no specific command for this. What you must do instead is select all the paint objects you wish to merge and click Image8Area8Render to render them into a new, single paint object. This will not destroy your original paint objects; rather it will create a brand new paint object from them and the originals will remain unharmed. 02 Transferring a selection Sometimes you will copy a paint object then create a selection on one of the copies and realise you need to use the same selection on the other copy. There is no command or provision for loading a selection from one paint object to another but there is a provision for attaching and detaching a channel mask. Rather than create a new selection from scratch and risk a mismatch, simply save the selection as a new channel. Then open the Channels palette and drag the new channel downward into the channel mask slot. Next click Object8Transparency8Detach Mask. Select the other paint object and click Object8Transparency8 Attach Mask. In the Channels palette, drag the mask from the channel mask slot upward into the alpha channels area. You can now place the paint object into edit mode and click Image8Select8Load, and the selection will be available to load. 03 Applying global changes to spot colours Sometimes you will want to change a spot colour after it appears in many places throughout the document. Canvas does not maintain links to the objects using inks, 2 IMAGE EDITING WITH CANVAS 6 Access the various controls via this simple-to-use interface 01 File Open and save files in the usual way. Use for paintings, images and so on 02 Edit Calibrate your colours here, or set up gamut warnings 03 Object Use this to control layers and create/remove paths 04 Effects Transform and Free Transform tools let you repair converging verticals. Blend colours or add shadows 05 Image Choose Greyscale, RGB, CMYK or Lab colours. Crop/trim images, change resolution. Adjust contrast and balance. 076 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 01 02 03 04 05 MIKE’S SKETCHPAD Useful selection of tips for later versions of Canvas. See www.sketchpad.net DENEBA HOMEPAGE Discover the hidden features and read some more tutorials at www.deneba.com MORE TECHNIQUES Advanced Canvas techniques - http://graphicssoft.about.com/cs/canvastools 4 THREE USEFUL WEBSITES PHOTOIMPACT 04 LAYERS AND OBJECT STACKS TOOLBAR It’s easy to lose track of the which layer you’re working on so keep track of your selections Here’s a quick guide to the tools mentioned on these pages. You can alter the overall view via the Tile With... option under Window. Each layer has its own stack. When you issue commands such as Bring to front, Send to back, shuffle down and shuffle up, the commands affect only objects on the current layer. When you begin to work with multiple layers, you need to bear in mind the effects of duplicating and moving objects between layers. There can be little or no change to the screen display, but there may be major changes to your composition. 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 Working with Objects Imagine you select and copy an object with Edit8Duplicate. The duplicate object is in a stack of two objects on layer 2. There are some important points to be made here: a) The duplicate is placed directly on top of its original. If you want to select the original then you need a means to select objects that lie directly beneath other objects. b) Immediately after duplicating the original object it becomes unselected and the duplicate is now selected so you need to be aware of which object you are working with (there is no change to the screen display). Click the Send To Layers button on the toolbar or click Object8Arrange8Send To Layers. A palette will appear. Choose layer 1 and click Select. You are only seeing the duplicate object mentioned above. Everything above and below is hidden while it’s selected. If you deselect all objects, the original object will be showing again. so changing them will not affect the objects to which they are applied. Instead of changing each object individually, use the Find command for this purpose. First edit or create the new colour you wish to use. Then click Edit8Find and choose either the fill or pen attribute. A list of all the colours used throughout the document will appear. Choose the colour you wish to replace from the list and click Select. Canvas will select all the objects having the fill or pen ink chosen. Once the objects have been selected, simply click the ink you wish to replace it with in the Inks palette. 05 Store layers in default order The default order in which layers are added and numbered are from bottom to top. Layer 1 will be on the bottom followed by layer 2, then layer 3 on the top, etc. Images and their layers can be saved as individual Canvas files which themselves can be reused and placed into other Canvas documents. When this is done, Canvas will place the layers in the default order whether they were saved that way or not. For example, if you create an image with the layers numbered 1, 2 and 3 from the top down rather than from the bottom up, Canvas will rearrange the layers into the default order when the image is placed into another Canvas document. To prevent this from happening, always store layered images using the Selection tool Crop/Draw/Lasoo Add text Draw a rectangle Draw a curved path Draw an oval Zoom Opacity slider Strokes/brushes Pen ink tools Flood fill Manage your layers via the Document Layout palette under the Layout menu default numbers and order to prevent confusion. You’ll be glad you did. 06 Moving a Selection Marquee In Canvas there is no tool to move a Selection Marquee as such. But you can float a selection and make it transparent. Here’s how. Make your initial selection then click Image8Select8Float (that floats a copy of what’s under it without disturbing the original pixels). Then here’s the trick... pull up the Channels palette and set the Floating Opacity value down to zero if you want. Now you can see what’s under it while you move it around. You can even use the arrow keys to nudge the marquee a pixel at a time. 07 Prepare GIF and JPEG images for the Net Start by selecting all the objects for the image you want to export as JPEG. Click File8Save As. In the Save As dialog in the lower left corner there are two things to check. First, click the Save Selection radio button, then choose JPEG from the ‘Save as type’ pull down. Then enter a filename. When done, click Save. Next you will see the Render Image dialog. Choose RGB Color for the mode and uncheck the Anti-Alias and Mask check boxes. Click OK when done. In the Export JPEG dialog, choose 100% quality. When you click OK Canvas 6 will generate the file. 08 Work with Layers 1 In Canvas you can edit three kinds of documents – illustration, publication and presentation documents. Illustration documents contain sheets and each sheet is composed of layers. Publications contain pages and each page is composed of layers. Presentations are a series of slides and each slide is composed of layers. 09 Managing Layers Layers are managed in the Document Layout palette, found under the Layout menu item. Click the plus sign next to the sheet to reveal the default layer (below left). On the bottom left side of the palette is a button to add a new sheet. Click layer 1 to activate it (below right). Notice that the button on the lower left side changes to New Layer. 3 IN DETAIL TOOLS Right-click on a tool for more options – for example, the tool to the right of the selection tool on the toolbar contains some 21 tools, including crop, draw, erase, lasso, airbrush, magic wand, eyedropper and many more. Very impressive. 10 Adding a layer Click the New Layer button (below left). Upon doing so, Canvas adds a new layer and assigns it a number. Also notice that adding the new layer also activates it (highlighted grey). To activate a layer simply click the layer in the palette. You can always tell which layer is the current (active) layer by looking at the Document Layout palette. The active layer is always highlighted. 11 Dragging layers To rearrange the layers place the mouse pointer on a 8 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 077 TIPS DENEBA CANVAS 6 ONE-CLICK FIX Click visibilty bullets to hide layers (you can only hide layers that are not activated) 8 ? EXPLAINED CONTEXT MENU The context menu can be used for both selecting and editing. When you need to edit an object in the stack, use the Edit menu item to avoid double-clicking the mouse. Doing so would run the risk of inadvertently repositioning the object or activating a paint tool. colour you wish to find and select it for replacement. Next click Select. All objects filled with the chosen ink will be selected. You are just a click away from assigning a new fill ink. layer then drag and drop the layer on its new location. While dragging, the pointer turns into a grabber hand. 12 Hiding layers You can also hide layers from view. Notice the eye icon near the top of the palette. This is the visibility column. Clicking the bullet in the visibility column toggles the layer visibility on and off. You cannot hide the current layer. To hide a layer, you must first activate another layer. Hiding layers is a means to select objects that lie directly under other objects. In the Preferences palette is a setting for allowing objects to be selected across visible layers. Hiding layers prevents the selection and editing of objects. 13 Using the Find command One of the most powerful ways to select objects is with the “Find” command. Canvas enables you to select objects based on their attributes. In the example below, you can globally select and replace fill inks with the find command: Click Edit8Find, then in the palette, select the 14 Creating new colours In Deneba Canvas the Inks palette is the control centre for the creation and management of colours. You can load, append, save and clear new sets of colours, gradients, textures, symbols and hatches as well as modify existing sets. Start by clicking the triangle on the left of side of the Inks palette to reveal the Colour manager. Using the RGB Bars, create a new colour. You will see a sample of the colour in the preview box. Next drag the new colour from the preview box into the colour inks grid with all the other colours. 15 Use the Preferences Modify the preferences by clicking File8Preferences. First, in the General tab check ‘Select across visible 16 BRIGHTENING AN IMAGE Use the Levels and Curves commands built into Canvas to enhance your images 8 0 EXPERT TIP NICK MERRIT MANAGING EDITOR EDIT MODES 01 GO INTO EDIT MODE 02 Click with any painting tool to place it in edit mode. The first adjustment will be to the brightness values across the entire image. Click Image8Adjust8Curves. layers’. This comes in handy when you have to select and align objects across layers. The Drawing tab enables you to duplicate an object and paste it directly in front of the original. For this set the x and y coordinates to zero in the ‘When duplicating objects offset’ section. Note: you can also use Edit8Replicate using one copy with an offset of zero and leave the default of 10 pixels in this preference. Next click the Painting tab and check ‘Anti-aliased Canvas objects’ as well as ‘Anti-aliased clipboard’ to make sure selections and text objects will be antialiased as a rule. Next click the Display tab and select the ‘No preview’ radio button so transparent pixels in bitmap objects display by themselves with a checkerboard pattern. There are some situations where anti-aliasing would be undesirable and where using hard-edges would actually work better. During image editing anti-aliasing can leave unwanted halos (artifacts) around selections. Be sure to remember to clean these up after moving or cutting a selection. 8 CLICK TWO POINTS We want to lighten the highlights more than the shadows. Click two points on the diagonal line as shown below. The red circle on the left is for the shadows and the one on the right is for the highlights. 03 DRAG THE POINTS Drag the left and right points upwards. The right point is dragged higher than the left point to lighten highlights more than shadows.The brass areas look good but the dial still has some shadows. Use the Edit menu item when editing an item in the stack to avoid double clicking. PAINT OBJECTS 8 To edit an unselected paint object at the top of the stack directly under the mouse pointer, click on the object with any paint tool. This will put the object into edit mode. 8 CONTEXT MENU The context menu can be used for both selecting and editing. When you need to edit an object in the stack, use the Edit menu item to avoid double-clicking the mouse. Doing so would run the risk of inadvertently repositioning the object or activating a paint tool. 078 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 04 MAKE A SELECTION To make adjustments to part of an image you need to make a selection. Select the Oval Marquee tool and with Windows Ctrl-Drag a selection from the centre of the dial outwards (with Mac begin dragging before pressing Control). 05 ADJUST THE SIZE If the selection is too big or too small you can adjust its size by clicking Image8Select8 Modify and choose either Expand or Contract. When you are satisfied with the selection marquee, click Image 8Adjust8Brightness/Contrast. 06 FINISHED RESULTS Click the Preview check box and drag the contrast slider to the right to increase the contrast slightly. This will brighten the highlights and darken the shadows and will tend to make the muddy areas disappear. 4 TUTORIAL USING ELEMENTS WHY YOU’LL LOVE THIS TECHNIQUE This is a technique few people think to pursue, so you’ll add a totally fresh dimension to your work. You can make the subject of a shot a lot more ambiguous, and perhaps use the result to inspire other kinds of artwork. Who knows, maybe you’ll inspire someone else to experiment in this way too? YOUR GUIDE SIMON DANAHER Simon is a digital artist specialising in Photoshop, compositing and 3D. He has been working professionally in the graphics industry for over six years, and is writing a book on professional graphics techniques letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk BEFORE & AFTER POSITIVE TO NEGATIVE Negative images Creating black and white negatives and effects is something you might not have tried before. You’d be amazed how great pictures can take on a new dimension with this technique TUTORIAL KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL BOOSTER 5 2 reating negative images is very simple in Elements and can be used to create some striking variations of your favourite pictures. Given the right subject matter a negative can be artistically interesting in its own right. But as there is always more than one way to skin a cat in Photoshop and Elements we'll have a look at the different possibilities on offer. C One of the great things, though, is that Elements gives you a huge amount of scope for experimentation. The trick is to not get too carried away and to always keep in mind roughly the effect you want to achieve. We'll look at making an interesting negative black and white image from a colour one but also explore some different effects using the same techniques. TIME TO COMPLETE 20 MINUTES 2 0 EXPERT TIP SIMON DANAHER LAYERS BLENDING MODES 01 CONVERT TO GRAYSCALE 05 BLEND MODES Open the file rocker.jpg. There are a few ways to create a black and white negative of it. Firstly use the Image8Mode8Grayscale command. Now you can no longer use any kind of colour in the file. 02 REDUCE SATURATION 06 DUPLICATE LAYERS Another way to do this is to keep the image in RGB mode but add a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer. By reducing the Saturation sliders to -100% all colour is removed. This will look slightly different to the first one. 03 DESTRUCT CREATIVELY 07 OVERLAY MODE To destructively create a negative of the image you can select the background layer and type command-i. This inverts the values of the pixels on the layer creating the negative of the image. 04 INVERT ADJUSTMENT 08 CREATE A SKETCH Finally, you can use the Invert Adjustment layer. Like all adjustment layers it doesn’t affect the actual pixels on the layers below, it acts more like a filter that changes how they look – in this case inverts them. Difference and Exclusion blending modes are very closely related; always try them both as one usually suits an effect better than the other. ? EXPLAINED GRAYSCALE Tan image made up of only shades of gray, with no colour. Inverted adjustment enables us to try different blending modes. Here we've set the Invert layer to Difference mode. This creates an effect like Solarization – parts of the image are inverted and others are not. Duplicating the Invert layer creates a slightly wild effect caused by the interaction of the two Difference blending modes applied to the Invert adjustment layers. The effect looks really digitally affected though. Changing the lower of the two Invert adjustment layers to Overlay mode produces something altogether more moody and interesting. The girl's profile is plunged into shadow, creating a silhouette on the window. Going further we have created a sketch-like look to the image by adding yet another Invert adjustment layer, set to the Exclusion blending mode, then increased the contrast using a Levels Adjustment layer. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 079 SECTION #03 YOUR CAMERA Section highlights… TECHNIQUE CHOOSING DYNAMIC SUBJECTS Some objects naturally produce striking photographs, and the right composition makes all the difference PAGE TECHNIQUE BLACK & WHITE PHOTOGRAPHY Tim Daly shows you the kind of pictures that benefit from a stylish monochrome conversion, post-shoot PAGE Q&A ALL YOUR CAMERA QUESTIONS ANSWERED A plethora of technical questions for long time digital photographer Aidan O’Rourke to tackle PAGE 84 87 90 TECHNIQUE CHOSSING DYNAMIC SUBJECTS SEE PAGE 84 PAGE PAGE 87 PAGE 88 90 Your camera Expert guides to taking better pictures Tutorials you can trust! f Our mission is to ensure that our tutorials bring you creative ideas, expert techniques, tips and quick fixes you can use in your own work. Authoritative A leading professional in their field writes every tutorial. Value added Where possible, we Contact our tutorials team include image files, and full or trial software so you can try the tutorial for yourself, delivering a complete package. Clear Our large page size means we can add extra elements, explanations and detail to each tutorial. # If you have a comment, suggestion, idea or submission you would like to make, please email us at the following addresses: editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk. Visit our website at digitalcameramagazine.co.uk for more details TECHNIQUE USING YOUR CAMERA YOUR GUIDE TIM DALY Tim has written several books on photography including The Digital Photography Handbook, The Digital Printing Handbook and The Desktop Photographer, and he continues to write for The British Journal of Photography and AG. His photographs have been exhibited across Europe tim@photocollege.co.uk PORTFOLIO TIM DALY WEBSITE WWW.PHOTOCOLLEGE.CO.UK Shooting graphic elements There are many compositional techniques you can employ to make your photo pack a bigger visual punch. Tim Daly explains how to further increase your success rate by looking for dynamic subjects ABOVE Shiny metal car bodies give great reflections and can be arranged into dynamic compositions. This image was shot from a low viewpoint with a wide-angle lens to emphasise the car lights RIGHT With diagonals forced into the corners of the picture frame, this image looks much more dynamic 084 G raphic elements such as lines, squares, arrows and lettering, combined with primary colours, form the essential ingredients for attention-grabbing photographs. It’s no coincidence that road signs and symbols use clean colours and bold shapes to get their message across safely and without delay. Geometric shapes exist all around us, but you have to emphasise them with tight cropping and adventurous viewpoints. The great American street photographers, Robert Frank and Lee Friedlander, produced images based on the signs and symbols of urban life in the 1950s and 1960s. Out on street level, and faced with so many choices about which parts of the scene to include, DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE both photographers made careful compositional judgements into memorable images. Diagonals and lines We live in a world where straight lines predominate with straight-edged vertical buildings and straight lines on the pavement. Diagonal lines are rarer and much more likely to grab our attention when captured in a photographic composition. When out on location, try to organise diagonal lines in your viewfinder by moving your own shooting position – either by shooting from slightly above or by raising one side of the camera higher than the other. This will have the effect of pushing lines and shapes towards the corner of your 4 FURTHER INSPIRATION Use your software Crop tool to re-design your images and you may find that they look stronger as squares or in the panoramic format. In complex compositions, you may even discover that you can pull out two separate images from one original image file LEFT At close range, primary colours can make an appealing image, even out of seemingly throwaway objects example, the fast-disappearing worlds of traditional railways and docks are crammed full of fantastic graphic signs and details that evoke the golden age of engineering. Close-up details of ironwork, rivets and complex mechanics can offer worthy photographic subjects when shot in natural light. With seemingly ordinary subjects, your first attempts can be less than perfect because you haven’t been adventurous enough with your viewfinder crop. Don’t be afraid to omit important bits of a subject if it makes a stronger design. You can improve the composition of your images at a later stage by using the Crop tool in your image-editing program. How much information do you really need in order to identify a shape or subject? Much less than you think. Close-up photographs can make a kind of visual puzzle where it can take a little while to identify the source of the subject. Close-up textures taken from man-made objects – particularly bright colours – can form a good project or series. Why not visit a scrap heap, fairground or classic car event? These examples can provide plenty of unusual photo opportunities. viewfinder frame, producing visually stronger results. Armed with the luxury of an LCD playback, you can easily compare different crops or experiments while still out on location. If your camera has a zoom lens, try using it at its wide-angle setting for a more distorted, but dynamic picture. When shooting with a wide angle, lines and shapes become flexible – especially at close quarters – so you can make a more interesting image. Professional studio and industrial photographers often use a wide-angle lens to create graphic images of seemingly uninteresting products and industrial equipment. Primary colours Primary colours are visually striking and always make great photographs – especially if shot under bright sunlight. When combined with primaries, complex and interlocking graphic shapes demand all the photographer’s attention and skill in order to juggle the conflicting elements to make a strong image. Like a jigsaw, brightly coloured graphic images are broken into many colour compartments and can need several attempts before the right composition is found. Always shoot around your subject until you’ve found the right angle of view and composition – even a slight repositioning of the camera to the left or right can give a radically different result. Signs and symbols Style and design If you’re excited by the design and look of a finely-tuned vehicle, then photography is the perfect way to pay homage. Badges, logos, engines and body details can all be captured in graphic single frames to glorify the unique style of the shape. If you want to get in close, it’s a good idea to use a wide-angle lens because it will ; 5 NEXT MONTH SHOOTING A PHOTO DOCUMENTARY create exciting, distorted shapes and enable you to force together seemingly unconnected parts into a much more striking image. Headlights, wheels and shiny tubular elements make great photographic details that can really emphasise the style of the period. Rather than use a macro lens at close range, better results will be achieved using a super wide-angle setting or wide-angle lens adaptor close up. There’s always the danger that at such close range you’ll spot your own reflection in a shiny surface or metallic detail, but this can be removed with the Clone Stamp tool in most digital image-editing applications. Vintage style With many vintage and classic car associations meeting on a regular basis, access to stylish machines has never been easier. A great idea for making graphic shots of cars is to complement them with a style that reflects the period. When taking this kind of picture, select an appropriate background behind your subject, making sure all modern elements are kept out of the picture frame. Telegraph poles, television aerials and street signs date an image, and may ruin the effect you want to achieve. After shooting your source material, consider mimicking the look and feel of a vintage photograph by digitally toning the image a rich sepia or light blue using the Colorize command in Photoshop’s Hue/Saturation dialog box. Tilting your camera There’s no golden rule stating that verticals always have to be kept vertical. Tilting your camera is a good technique to use for creating a dynamic diagonal. 3 IN DETAIL CONSTRUCTION SITE If you’re stuck for ideas, check out the photographic work of Alexander Rodchenko. Part of the Russian Constructivist art movement, Rodchenko’s photographs are shot from the most unusual viewpoints like a bird’s eye view and a worm’s eye view. His best images distort portraits into curious shapes because of the very low viewpoint he used, and the way he represented ordinary people as statue-like hero figures. Even the most mundane subject can make a worthy shot when it’s turned into an abstract or simple colour study. Many subjects have their own unique symbols that can make a fascinating documentary project. For LEFT Close-up shots of signs and symbols like this number on the side of a fishing boast can add detail to a larger photo essay DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 085 TECHNIQUE USING YOUR CAMERA * WEB LINKS LEE FRIEDLANDER www.masters-ofphotography.com/F/friedlander/f riedlander5.htm Check out the master of American street photography and view his complex compositions. ALEXANDER RODCHENKO www.masters-ofphotography.com/R/rodchenko/r odchenko4.html The great Russian photographer and artist made a virtue out of shooting his photographs from the most inventive angles of view. WILLIAM KLEIN www.masters-ofphotography.com/K/klein/ klein2.html Where other photographers looked for inanimate shapes to base their designs on, Klein used the hurly burly of people in the city for his stunning work. @ SEND ’EM IN! @ Try out the techniques in this article then send us your photos. We’ll print the best each month. Email us at the following address: gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk 086 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE RIGHT Natural subjects can benefit too from the same kind of approach as, as this carefully organised study of textured rocks shows Simply lower one of your hands and hold the camera until you’ve got a line running from one corner of your frame to the other. Although it’s possible to reproduce the same effect with the Rotate tool in your software application, you can end up discarding a large quantity of the original pixels, leaving less data available to print out. When focusing on subjects above your eye level, try tilting your camera to rearrange lines and shapes until you’ve made a stronger composition. You can pull one side of the camera towards you to create an exaggerated perspective that will be more dynamic when shot with a wider lens. When making this kind of adjustment, don’t forget that you may need to set a new point of focus. Architectural subjects Contemporary architecture is another great subject to photograph. Try out some graphic picture-making techniques in conjunction with your zoom lens fixed on its telephoto setting. Designed on paper by architectural designers, most new buildings offer a stunning mixture of lines, shapes and colours waiting to be interpreted and arranged by your camera lens. For far-off buildings – or those too high to reach – try using your zoom lens on its longest telephoto setting. This will help to crop out any unwanted elements that cause a visual distraction. This creates interesting effects because of foreshortening – where the actual physical distance between objects appears reduced. Used in the built-up surroundings of a busy modern city, foreshortening can really emphasise the fight between different structures for dominance. When shooting this kind of subject, try to find a viewpoint well above ground level, so you can shoot across the city rooftops to capture a greater sense of distance. Wide-angle lenses in this situation push your nearest subjects much further away in the viewfinder and make them seem smaller and less significant. Viewfinder cropping Many digital compact cameras are fitted with a rangefinder window on the side of the camera body, to help you compose your photograph. Set slightly to one side, the rangefinder window can show more of a subject than you will end up with when it’s printed out. Be wary of framing your photograph too tightly to the edges of your viewfinder, as peripheral details may not be recorded. It’s much better to step back a bit or set your lens to a slightly wider angle and leave a visible space at the edges. With non-viewfinder cameras such as digital SLRs and those with a camcorder-type LCD viewfinder, less cropping mistakes are made out in the field. ABOVE A telephoto lens is the perfect tool to use for comparing different subjects in the same shot. This example contrasts an older building with a shiny modern office block LEFT With one side at close range, a tilting composition can lead your attention from the near edge to the far edge of the picture TECHNIQUE USING YOUR CAMERA Seeing the world in monochrome Don’t despair about lack of colour and strong sunlight during the cold winter months – get out and shoot some moody black and white photos instead. Tim Daly shows you how… ABOVE A low contrast treatment can make an image look historic, and can be used to emphasise gentler subjects FAR RIGHT Monochrome is an ideal way to record a gritty documentary subject and focuses attention on reallife situations S hooting with black and white film has long been established as the all-time favourite with traditional photographers. In the digital era, monochrome photography has even more potential. Conventional back and white photography has developed over the past century and a half as a craft skill rather than just a technical picture-taking process. At the darkroom stage, photographers can reinterpret an original negative in many different styles. Contrast, tone and colour tints can be applied to an image to enhance flat lighting and bring out lurking textures that wouldn’t be revealed in a machine-processed print. Apart from the real skill in the post-production of stylish black and white photography, you have to be able to spot potential monochrome images when strong colours are largely absent. When natural light is dull and your subject colours don’t exactly sing out loud, a monochrome interpretation can add warmth and punchy contrast to the most mundane situations. Although many digital compacts offer an additional sepia shooting option, this is really just a crude RGB image with a brown tint attached. A better option is to shoot using normal RGB colour mode, followed by a conversion process in your image-editing application. With a comprehensive assortment of tools for converting colour to black and white, it’s not necessary to start with a monochrome original. Even if you’re shooting conventional film and using a film scanner to convert negative into digital files, it’s better to shoot colour negative rather than panchromatic black and white film stock. In addition to having the option to print in colour or monochrome, starting with a colour film or digital original gives you the valuable asset of original colour values that you can remix and rebalance before conversion takes place. Pictorial and realist photographic techniques There are two opposing black and white photographic styles that have developed into popular ways to work. The pictorial style is based on seeing the innate beauty in the world around us and converting this into visually DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 087 LEFT A pictorial treatment works best with a landscape subject such as this composition, which contrasts different and subtle textures pictorial and make a virtue out of subtle and delicate image tones. The realist style is based on seeing things as they are, and not dressed up to look better or more palatable for the viewer. In a style often used by newspaper photojournalists and based on clear, contrasty and graphic statements, hard-hitting black and white images don’t pull any punches, and can look stylish in their own, unique way. Yet you don’t need to live near an awesome landscape or the gritty reality of an inner city to apply these styles to your own work. Looking for subjects attractive images. Pictorial photographers have been around since the birth of the medium in 1839 and take great effort to find rare subjects, events or scenes that can be captured and preserved before they disappear. Most great landscape images are 3 IN DETAIL PRINTING BLACK AND WHITE Although most inkjet printers offer the option to print in black ink only, much better results can be made using all your ink colours in colour printing mode. Using a single ink colour, your printer will have its resolution cut to a quarter or a sixth of its full potential and will give you speckly and coarse contrast results. Although it can be difficult to make a monochrome print that is castfree using colour inks, slight colour casts are easily removed using the colour control slider in your colour printing software. For a really special kind of printing, consider using one of the Lyson Small Gamut inksets – cleverly designed cartridges that are charged with neutral monochrome or toned inks for top-quality black and white output. Check them out at www.lyson.com 088 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE Where colour photography is a chocolate box of different visual treats, black and white is about light and its stunning effects. Many photographic situations don’t present the photographer with a rich and varied selection of colour and, at worse, they are insipid and uninspiring. With a black and white conversion in your imageediting application, undesirable colours can be removed and replaced with a punchier tonal range for a better visual effect. Colour can easily date a photograph to a particular year or time of the year, but this can be removed by a simple change to monochrome for a more timeless and classic feel. It’s very hard to visualise a black and white photograph while shooting on location, but you’ll get great quality results if you concentrate on some or all of the following essential elements. Subtle contrast subjects The difference in shades of grey arranged between the black shadow and white highlight point is called contrast in traditional photography, and brightness in digital imaging. Pixel brightness can be made darker and lighter simply, and this enables the user to separate and enhance different areas of the image to create a totally different visual balance. Unlike straight colour photography, where little tonal manipulation can occur without looking invented, black and white interpretation can be highly individualistic. With a good mixture of pure black and white and a full range of greys in between, an image with a subtle contrast presents a seamless jump from highlights to shadows. Software controls like Levels and Curves are ideal for putting proper black and white points into a low contrast image, and can be used to shift the balance of the midtone greys. In addition to correcting low and high contrast images, software tools can give the user an opportunity to express their creative ideas through the printed end-product. Subtle contrast with a colour BELOW Bland colour images can easily be made more interesting after a straightforward conversion from RGB to Grayscale mode 4 FURTHER INSPIRATION Famed for his portrayal of the indigenous European people, Josef Koudelka’s B&W approach is unique. With a strong belief in the power of photography to bring attention to social injustice worldwide, Sebastiao Salgado produces timeless B&W shots. (Find more info at www.masters-of-photography.com) ; 5 NEXT MONTH BETTER TRAVEL PHOTOGRAPHY TOP The Duotone dialog box offers the opportunity to exercise infinite control over monochrome image tone using Curves RIGHT This image was toned using Photoshop’s Duotone image mode and shows a delicate mix of different colours change to enhance your images can be produced using Photoshop’s versatile Duotone mode, where up to four colours can be assigned to precise tonal sectors in an image. Once loaded and manipulated into shape, duotone images can rival the most skillfully toned photographic print ever made in the darkroom. Best of all, you don’t need to be an expert using Curves to control contrast because Photoshop comes armed with loads of premixed duotone colour recipes. You can apply the colours directly to your images by pressing the Load button in the Duotone dialog box. High contrast subjects When strong whites and blacks are present with very few accompanying grey tones, the result is said to be high contrast. Best suited to strong shaped subjects, high contrast effects enhance lines, edges and textures and are the way to get a bit of realism into your work. The end result of a high contrast print is usually a strong, graphic image that attracts attention. As a by-product of the process, finer details found in mid-tone grey areas disappear, so this kind of style is best used when you don’t require a delicate image. High contrast subjects are usually found under bright sunlight, but excessively high contrast can be challenging to print out on a desktop inkjet because darker grey areas fill in and reproduce as black. This style is a good way to shoot a photo story out on location, particularly if it’s based on a strong issue or theme and is an excellent way to shoot portraits in the natural light. Low contrast With no black or white, the low contrast image is derived from an expanded range of greys and can be an expressive and atmospheric way to interpret a subject. With a softness associated with vintage photographic processes such as platinum and carbon tissue, the low contrast image can be very effective on portraits and flower subjects. Spotting potential images for the vintage treatment can be tricky at first, but keep a close eye on background details, such as telegraph poles, street signs and parked cars, as these will date a picture. When shooting standard RGB colour mode images with your digital camera, you’ll need to change the tonal range of your image after uploading it to your computer by using the ABOVE Three ways to convert from RGB to monochrome are as follows: mode change to Grayscale is shown second from the left; change to Lab mode third from the left, and a Channel mixer conversion at the far right Output scale in your Levels dialog box. By pulling both highlight and shadow points towards the centre, you’ll make the darkest areas of the image dark grey instead of black and change any white highlights into a flatter, light grey. Converting to black and white After shooting your colour originals, Photoshop offers three ways to make the conversion from colour to monochrome, but only one involves the seemingly obvious Grayscale mode. After switching your mode from RGB to Grayscale, your results will always look flat and lack any vibrancy that was present before the change. Once changed to Grayscale mode (incidentally, producing identical results to making a Desaturate command within the RGB mode), there are no colourediting tools available for you to use. For a punchier conversion, try converting your RGB colour image into the little-used Lab mode. In Lab mode, colour and image lightness is kept separate in three different channels: one for lightness and two for colour. Open the Channels palette and drag both colour channels into the wastebasket, leaving a brighter monochrome lightness channel image that can be converted back to RGB for colour editing. The third and most versatile way to make a conversion is to use the Channel Mixer command – found in both Photoshop and Paint Shop Pro – to alter the balance of image colours before making a monochrome end product. The Channel Mixer offers you the chance to make image colours lighter and darker than they were in the original, much in the same way as black and white photographers use deep colour filters to make blue skies appear black, and green foliage to appear white. @ SEND ’EM IN! Try out the techniques in this article then send us your photos. We’ll print the best each month. Email us at the following address: @ gallery.dcm@futurenet.co.uk DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 089 PHOTO HELP Q&A YOUR GUIDE AIDAN O’ROURKE Aidan O’Rourke is a freelance photographer who’s worked with digital imaging and photography since 1994. He created ‘Eyewitness in Manchester’ (part of Manchester Online, the Manchester Evening News website), the largest online source of photo and info about Manchester. See the URL opposite for more details on Aidan’s digital photography seminars around the country help.dcm@futurenet.co.uk (camera queries only) WEBSITE www.aidan.co.uk/seminars All your camera questions answered Send all your technical questions to Aidan at help.dcm@futurenet.co.uk and he’ll do his best to help… 2 2 QUESTIONS ANSWERED CAMERA USE USING A CARD READER MACRO PHOTOGRAPHY INSTALLING PLUG-INS MEMORY CARD SIZES IMAGE EDITING REMOVING RED EYE IMAGE MANAGEMENT MAKING A PANORAMA SHARING IMAGES CONVERGING VERTICALS PRINTERS PRINTER PROBLEMS MEDIA BOOKS WEBSITE 090 090 092 093 090 091 092 092 093 093 093 091, 093 Photo Help 090 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE ADVANTAGES OF USING A CARD READER USING A CARD READER CAMERA USE ■ BEGINNER I have a FujiFilm FinePix 4800. Q What advantage is there to be gained from using a card reader? I just plug the cradle into my PC and the pictures go straight in – the cradle is plugged into the mains so I can’t see any advantage in having one. Roy Turrell I can think of many situations when you might be glad of a card reader: 1) When your camera battery is low, and you don’t want to use any more power while you are transferring your pictures. 2) When your battery is dead, and you don’t have another to hand. 3) When you’re using a borrowed camera, and you don’t have the compatible USB cable. 4) When you’ve lost your precious USB cable, and your supplier doesn’t have any in stock. 5) When you’re using several memory cards, and you wish to download from them one after the other without having to open and close the camera. 6) When you’d like to continue photographing with the camera while downloading – only a card reader enables you to do this. A The card reader has saved my bacon on many occasions and, considering some of them cost less than £30, they are excellent value for money. I’d recommend you buy one and keep it in reserve. 2 INFORMATION ABOUT MACRO CAPABILITIES CAMERA USE ■■ INTERMEDIATE I am looking for a generalpurpose camera and can spend up to £400. I want to do macro photography, but I can’t find any information about how close I can focus with any of the digital cameras, in any of the camera reviews I’ve read. I usually fill the full viewfinder with about 2-10mm objects, but sometimes they are as large as 40mm. Max D Freier Q The information regarding the macro capabilities of digital camera lenses should be listed in the technical specifications. Just go to the camera manufacturer’s website or other resource, and download the specs, which are often in PDF format. Study them carefully – it’s an essential part of choosing a camera. If the camera has macro capabilities, it should be mentioned there – it might not be mentioned in a camera review. I recommend the Nikon Coolpix range of cameras, which have excellent macro capability, with an ability to focus on a subject as little as a couple of centimetres away. Macro photographs give us a marvellous view of small objects, whether they be flowers, jewels, coins or other subjects. You’ll see truly amazing details revealed that wouldn’t easily be visible to the naked eye. The Nikon macro facility is one of the best, but you’ll also find it on other cameras – keep your eyes peeled! 2 REMOVING RED EYE IMAGE EDITING ■■ INTERMEDIATE Unfortunately I missed the first issue of Digital Camera Magazine, which had an article about how to remove red eye in photos. Is it possible to use Photoshop 5.5 to remove red eye? If not, can you recommend any other software program that I can use? Darren Q A The Macro setting enables you to see things that are normally too small for the naked eye to see. In this case, I positioned the Nikon Coolpix camera close up to my laptop screen, revealing the luminous red, green and blue strips 8 ONLINE PHOTO RESOURCE REVIEW www.ephotozine.com Content www.ephotozine.com is an online digital photography magazine, which offers news, reviews, forums, tutorials and lots more. It’s aimed at people Red eye is a recurring problem. There are different types of red eye and various methods to fix it. In fact, a whole book could be written on the subject. Many imageediting packages offer ‘quick fix’ redeye correction, which works by automatically selecting the area of red and desaturating it to grey. The results often look unnatural because there is still a glow visible in the eyes. To fix red eye properly, you have to spend a little more time. I have two main methods of fixing red eye (see the box opposite). They can be used in any photo-editing program that uses Layers, including Photoshop versions 5 to 7 and Paint Shop Pro. A 2 interested in digital photography, at all levels of expertise and experience. The website is the brainchild of highly experienced editor and journalist Peter Bargh. The reviews are friendly in tone, readable and informative. It’s an online ‘zine’ with a personal touch. 2 TWO WAYS TO ZAP RED EYE The essential task is to turn the red area of the pupil to black, while preserving the light reflection PERFECTIONIST First draw a circular area over the reddened pupil. To give precise control over size, use the circular Marquee tool, holding the Shift key down to constrain it to a circle. It should be about the same size as, or slightly larger than, the affected pupil. Using the Paint Brush or Paint Bucket, tools fill the circle with black. The eye now looks much better, but we have hidden the catch light. How can we restore it? You can try painting one of your own but it will not look convincing – try it! Instead, select the catch light from the background layer using the Magic Wand, which should be set to antialiased. The Marquee encloses the white area, plus neighbouring pixels. Now paste in the selected area, creating a third layer – it’s satisfying to see the catch light appear and the eye look natural again. Gain extra pleasure by toggling between the ‘before’ and ‘after’ states using the Layer ‘on’ and ‘off’ button! Paint around the edge of the pupil using a sample taken from the neighbouring colour. Make a new layer set to Colour and paint using the Brush tool. Select the remaining red area and using Image8Adjust8 Hue/Saturation, desaturate it to grey. Make the pupil look natural by reducing the opacity to 80%, allowing a little of the desaturated iris colour to show through. Finally, a small amount needs to be shaved off the top of the pupil in line with the upper eyelid. PHOTO-MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE IMAGE MANAGEMENT ■■ INTERMEDIATE I’m interested in organising my photos before I’ve got too many to keep track of them. I want to be able to catalogue them in at least six different ways: category, subject, location, quality, source, nature of modification, as well as using EXIF information. Dennis Waite Q There are many photoorganisation programs that enable you to sort and browse through your photographs. They all perform basically the same task, which is to display thumbnail versions of the photographs, giving you an overview of your collection. You can enter extra information, enabling you to classify and search for specific photos more easily. One of the most impressive is iPhoto, bundled free with Macintosh computers. Photoshop 7 includes an image browser, which enables you to access EXIF information. On more thing: before going onto invest time and money in a photomanagement program, think carefully about filenames. A QUICK-FIX ? EXPLAINED INTERPOLATION Open the file and duplicate the layer, so you have two copies of the photo, one on top of the other. Desaturate the background layer using Image8Adjust8Hue/Saturation to remove colour from the picture, including the red in the eyes. Go back to the upper layer and, using the Delete tool with the brush set approximately to the size of the pupil, make one or two clicks to reveal the desaturated or grey version underneath. Make a 'hole' with the Eraser brush using just a click or two. Go down to the background layer and use the Levels control (Image8 Adjustments8Levels) to darken it. Drag the slider until the grey has turned nearly to black. The whole layer has been darkened, but we can only see the pupil through the ‘hole’ we’ve made in the upper layer. Interpolation takes place when picture information from individual pixels is reprocessed and recombined to make a larger or smaller image – that is, one with larger or smaller pixel dimensions than the original. On some digital cameras, the picture information is interpolated upwards to create an image with larger pixel dimensions. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 091 PHOTO HELP Q&A EMAIL AIDAN! Send your digital photography queries to Aidan at help.dcm@futurenet.co.uk This email address is for technical problems only. See page 3 page for other problems V TECH FOCUS THE FUJIFILM 3RD GENERATION SUPER CCD What is it? FujiFilm’s 3rd Generation Super CCD (charge coupled device) takes digital camera technology further by radically altering and improving the design, layout and functionality of the conventional CCD. This is the third incarnation of the product since it was launched in 1999. The Super CCD delivers a choice of resolutions – 1m, 3m and 6m (1,280 x 960, 2,048 x 1,536 and 2,880 x 1,920, respectively), and performs exceptionally well at low light conditions. It also delivers VGA size full motion video. How it works: Those ingenious designers at FujiFilm did a total rethink of the existing CCD, and decided to rotate the entire array of photo sensors by 45 degrees. Using this arrangement, and by making them octagonal, more of them can be packed into the same area, providing more detail. The Super CCD’s processing technology takes the output from this diagonallyaligned array of sensors and interpolates it into a digital image with pixels arranged in the standard way, horizontally and vertically. The Super CCD can achieve great low light results by using the output of sensors grouped into four. Four sensors in theory gives you four times the amount of light. The ‘four into one’ low-light feature – up to 1600 ASA – is used with the 1,280 x 960 (1M pixels) picture size. There is noticeable noise, but the results are usable. Clear and vibrant 640 x 480 video is achieved in a similar way. 2 INSTALLING PLUG-IN FILTER EFFECTS CAMERA USE ■ BEGINNER Please can you explain how to install and use plug-in filters and effects. I understand that many of these are produced for Photoshop and Photoshop Elements. I often see them referred to, but it’s often assumed that we all know how to use plug-ins – I feel fairly sure this is not the case! Roland Williams Q Plug-in filters add extra A functionality to a basic program, extending its capabilities. They are often written by independent developers and DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 2 JOINING PICTURES TO MAKE A PANORAMA IMAGE EDITING ■■ INTERMEDIATE I would like to make panoramic pictures by joining several pictures together. Is it possible to do it manually? Paul Marquez Q There are many software packages available for making panoramas, but often I prefer to join together the images myself. Place the photos you wish to join together on two separate layers so they overlap, then carefully delete the upper layer to reveal other one underneath. I’ve taken an example – two images that have been joined together in the box below. A 2 SHARING IMAGES VIA THE WEB CAMERA USE ■■■ BEGINNER/INTERMEDIATE People often send me huge image attachments that take ages to download. Is there Q anything I can do to prevent them? Bernard Longley This can be quite a problem. Many people unwittingly send me enormous image files that would tie up my phone line for half an hour or more. I have discovered an easy way to ‘zap’ the offending attachments before they even reach my in-box – using my Internet Service Provider’s webmail service. There are different names for it but, basically, you can view your incoming messages online before downloading them, and if there are any you’d rather not receive – particularly those with over-sized attachments – you can delete them. If you have broadband, then those huge and unwanted image attachments will download quickly A 2 JOINING PHOTOS TO MAKE PANORAMAS Photos captured on the FujiFIlm FinePix F601 with Super CCD (See the portfolio photo on page 88, which consists of ten images joined together) Here are the two pictures we are about to join together. Note the similar areas at the neighbouring edges of the two photos. Before we join any photos to make a panorama, we need to rotate them so the horizon is absolutely horizontal in both pictures. Use Edit8 Transform8Rotate. Use a guideline to check the horizon is true. You can drag it down from the Ruler area at the top. The correct rotation in this case is -1.5 degrees. The other photo also needs rotating – by -3.4 degrees. After increasing the canvas size of the left-hand picture, drag the right-hand picture onto it using the Move tool. Now the two pictures are in one file, overlapping, placed on two separate layers. It’s important to try to line up the areas to be deleted. Nudge the upper layer side to side and up and down, switching the layer off and on to check the position. We can now start to erase the upper layer using the Delete tool set to airbrush. To disguise the join, erase along the inside of the cloud. Make the erased upper layer fully visible by switching off the background layer underneath. The lower left-hand edge still needs to be erased. Set the erase tool to a smaller size to avoid ‘ghosting’. Delete down over the plane fuselage and over the apron, revealing the lower layer. Use of the delete tool to disguise the join. Use the Levels to tweak the upper picture until the colours along the join are the same. Select ‘Merge layers’ to combine the two pictures onto the background layer. Crop the photo to cut away the uneven edges left after the rotation. There, finished! Who would have guessed that this photo consists of two pictures joined together? Does it do what they say it does? We’ve been trying out FujiFilm’s FinePix F601 camera over the past few weeks. The Super CCD really does produce vibrant and sharp images in low light, with superb colour and detail. You can see examples of my photographs in the December Dusk Views update of my website (Eyewitness in Manchester www.manchesteronline.co.uk/ ewm). FujiFilm’s PDF file explaining how the Super CCD works can be found at www.steves-digicams.com /2002_reviews/fuji_f601z.html 092 are ‘bolted’ onto the main program, like modules. Installing them is easy. Photoshop and Elements have a subdirectory named plug-ins – simply copy the plug-in module and place it in the plug-ins folder. When the program launches, the plug-in will then be available to the program under the Filters drop-down menu. 4 FURTHER INFORMATION Jaggies is the common name for pixels that are visible along diagonal lines. They are caused by lower resolution images being displayed too large, causing the pixels to be visible to the naked eye 8 MANUFACTURER SITE www.panasonic.co.uk Content: The website of the Japanese company is a suite of websites all of similar design, with attractive Flashpowered animated menus. Of special interest to those of and, if you’re not careful, your email folder will become clogged with hundreds of megabytes of unwanted data. Exercise caution, and if you don’t want it, zap it! 2 DEALING WITH PRINTER PROBLEMS PRINTER ■ BEGINNER I have a problem with my Epson 890. It has started printing my photos in a pale blue colour with dark pink in shadows and black areas as normal. I have checked all settings, cleaned the head and reinstalled the print driver. Please can you help me work out what is wrong. David Horton Q The number of images a memory card can store depends on its size. If each photo is about 1MB, then a 64MB card should be able to store around 60 pictures, and a 256MB card should be able to store around 250 shots. If the file size is larger, then you’ll only be able to store about half this number. On a trip like this you can easily take a thousand or more photos, so you’d need ten 256MB cards, costing about the same as a laptop computer. And that’s one possibility I’d suggest – get a laptop computer and download the images as you go along… A 2 HOW TO SORT CONVERGING VERTICALS IMAGE EDITING Inkjet printers have reached a remarkable state of sophistication and cost a fraction of what they used to a few years ago. But, like all items of hardware, they are still prone to malfunction. Buying a new cartridge can solve many printing problems, but sometimes the problem lies elsewhere – possibly inside the machine. If the printer is under warranty, the manufacturer should be able to help. A 2 WHAT SIZE MEMORY CARD TO TAKE ON HOLIDAY CAMERA USE ■ BEGINNER I’m going to South America this year on a nature trek holiday. I want to be able to take reasonable pictures of scenery and wildlife. I have approximately £800 to spend on a digital camera and I have been provisionally looking at the Minolta Dimage 7i. I will not be able to download pictures until I get home, and What size memory card will I need, and can you recommend a zoom lens attachment that may be useful? Karen Jones Q us interested in digital photography are the mini-sites on the SD memory card, which as the site explains, is not just for storing photos from digital cameras, and on Panasonic’s highly desirable range of Lumix digital cameras, produced in association with Leica. This photo of a floodlit building taken at night sent by Martin Sheehan has converging verticals – correcting the perspective in Photoshop may improve it ■■ INTERMEDIATE I’ve taken photos of buildings at wide angle and have noticed that they are guilty of ‘converging verticals’ or ‘triangles’. Is there a tool in Photoshop 5.5 that can help me to sort these out so that the building looks straight on the edges and less like a triangle? I’ve enclosed the picture (above right) Martin Sheehan Q I dealt previously with the problem of converging verticals in issue one, so I won’t go into it in detail here. Suffice to say that the easiest way to correct them in Photoshop is by using either the Perspective or Distort functions under the Transform menu. It’s an intuitive ‘drag and click’ method that’s easy and fun to use. However, there is another way, using the excellent plug-in utility ‘Panorama Tools’, which I introduced in last month’s Q&A section. You can find it on the Digital Photography Review (dpreview) website at www.dpreview.com. It is possible to download and install the tools, which enable you to carry out perspective corrections on all kinds of photos by entering numerical values. ; READ ON CAPTURING THE IMAGE – YOUR GUIDE TO CREATING DIGITAL IMAGES Published by Rotovision Price £14.95 Written by Joe Farace Buy from www.rotovision.com A This photo was taken in the desert in Abu Dhabi in 2000. If you take a laptop computer with you on your travels, you can download and edit photographs on the spot Verdict A useful and attractively laid out paperback about digital photography, focusing primarily on image capture. Plenty of technical info and author opinion. The images are in standard stock photography style, which is less than inspiring. In digital photography manuals we’d prefer to see author-produced photographs in a wide variety of styles. Nevertheless, an accomplished piece of work from a very experienced writer. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 093 SECTION #04 USING YOUR PC THE WINDOWS PAINT PROGRAM SEE PAGE 96 PAGE Section highlights… PAGE 96 YOUR PC 98 USING YOUR PC THE WINDOWS PAINT PROGRAM Bundled free with Windows, Paint is perfect for viewing photos or making minor tweaks to them PAGE ONLINE TUTORIAL WORKING THE NET In the last of this series, Matthew Richards gives an overview of your online options and resources PAGE PRINT TECHNIQUES COLOUR SETTINGS IN PHOTOSHOP Using your colour management tools will give you quality colour prints. Tim Daly shows you how PAGE PAGE 100 PC & Internet Using a PC to make the most of your digital photos Tutorials you can trust! f Our aim is to bring you creative ideas, expert tips and quick fixes you can use in your own work. Authoritative A leading professional in his/her field writes every tutorial. Value-added We try to include Contact our Reviews team image files, and full or trial software so you can try the tutorial for yourself, delivering a complete package. Clear Our large page size means we can add extra elements, explanations and detail to each tutorial. # If you have a comment about our reviews, or a product you would like us to test, please email us at editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk. Visit our website at digitalcameramagazine.co.uk for reader verdicts 96 98 100 TUTORIAL USING YOUR PC YOUR GUIDE JOE CASSELS Joe Cassels writes regular tutorials for a wide range of computer magazines. He is an enthusiastic digital photographer with a track record of helping many people get more from their PCs joe@cassels.org.uk PORTFOLIO JOE CASSELS Simple PC fixes using the Paint program You can still make small changes to digital pictures even if you don’t own dedicated picture-editing software. Joe Cassels takes you through the process TUTORIAL KEY DETAILS 2 SKILL LEVEL 2 2 TIME TO COMPLETE 20 MINUTES T he ideal way to manage your photos and pictures is to use an image editor like Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro. These professional programs enable you to alter the colour balance, contrast and brightness of pictures, as well as providing plenty of effects and filters. However, If all you want to do is look at some holiday snaps and perform some simple editing before printing or emailing them to a friend or relative, you don’t need any extra software at all. Paint, the default program bundled with Windows, will handle it all admirably and for the nifty sum of no extra pounds. If you’ve used Paint before, you may well have been deceived by its simplicity. Earlier versions only handled bitmap images, which made it unsuitable for handling digital photographs, but the version of Paint that comes with Windows XP can cope with most common picture files. You can also undo your last three actions instead of simply the previous one. There is little in the way of dedicated photo-editing tools, but you can still achieve some simple effects with a little careful planning. For example, there’s no tool to automatically shrink or enlarge an image, but you can use the stretch and skew options to reduce an image by There’s no resize tool in Paint, but you can stretch your image positively or negatively RESIZE AN IMAGE 8 01 STRETCH AND SKEW This picture won’t fit into the Paint Window, even at full screen. We need to reduce its size, but Paint doesn’t have a dedicated tool for doing that. However, all is not lost as we can try to unstretch it, using the Stretch/Skew utility that comes with Paint. 096 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE the same amount both horizontally and vertically which does roughly the same job. You can also crop in Paint, by selecting the part of the image you want to keep and copying it to the clipboard. All you need to do is start a new image and paste the section onto the empty canvas. You can even get around the flash photographer’s nightmare of red eye, by carefully replacing the red pixels with a colour taken from any normal looking part of the eye, using the dropper tool. If you have a strict budget, and don’t want to do complicated editing, Paint may be all you need. 02 8 STRETCH IT BACKWARDS Click Image8Stretch/Skew. Keep the Skew amounts at zero degrees, as we don’t want to distort the image. Entering any number below 100% in both the Horizontal and Vertical Stretch boxes will result in a smaller image with the same aspect ratio as the original. 03 THE FINISHED PICTURE Click OK. Here we’ve reduced the image to half its original size, using the Stretch/skew facility and we can see the full picture. The picture quality hasn’t suffered in the process and this is a much better size for working in Paint, as before you could only see the full image by printing it out. CROPPING WITH PAINT Some nifty cut-and-paste action is needed to achieve a crop in this picture 0 EXPERT TIP JOE CASSELS PHOTO ARCHIVING NAMING FILES Always save your photo under a different filename by clicking File Save As…, as soon as you open it. This way, you can preserve a copy of your original photo before you make any changes to it. If you mess up any of your alterations, you can go back to a pristine original very easily. 01 OPEN THE PHOTO 02 Launch Paint by choosing Start8All Programs8Accessories8Paint. Open your chosen picture by clicking File8Open and browsing to it. Switch to thumbnail view so you can find the image you want more quickly. Click Open. LOCATE THE SUBJECT 03 Use Paint’s scroll bars to move the item of interest to the centre of the screen. Larger photos may not fit completely within the Paint window and you can’t zoom out, so careful positioning is important. MAKE A SELECTION Click on the rectangular selection tool from the toolbox on the left of the screen. Make sure the lower, ‘selection without background’ option is highlighted. Click and drag a rectangle around the area you want to crop to. ? EXPLAINED RED EYE 04 COPY THE SELECTION 05 Once you are happy with the part of the picture you selected, click Edit8Copy. This puts your cropped area onto the clipboard. This way you can preserve the original image if you change your mind later on. DEMON EYES CREATE A NEW IMAGE 06 Click File8New. You will be prompted to save changes to your image. Select No, so your original image is preserved prior to any changes you made. You are presented with a blank canvas onto which you can paste the selection. PASTE CROPPED IMAGE This term describes the effect of a photographic flash reflecting off a person or animal’s retina, making their eyes appear to glow red. Using a flash not directly aimed at the subject can avoid red eye, as can careful lighting. However, you can remove red eye from a digital photograph using an imageediting program. Select Edit8Paste so your selection reappears. Save this with a different filename to your initial picture. Experiment with different cropping areas to find the best composition. Save each image with a different filename. Remove red eye the Paint way 8 8 * WEB LINKS Microsoft www.microsoft.com/windowsxp /default.asp Information for beginners and professionals, downloadable software and technical support. 01 THE EYES HAVE IT Launch Paint and open the picture involved. This girl in the middle is the one suffering from demonic eyes so we’ll need to edit this area of the picture. Choose View8Zoom8Large Size and use the scroll bars to position the eyes centrally in the window before you start work on them. 02 AN EYE FOR AN EYE Select the dropper tool from the Toolbox and use it to pick up the colour from the normal-looking eye. You may need to use a different picture to reference the colour if both eyes look red. Your reference photo must have the same subject and similar lighting. 03 OUT DAMNED SPOT Now switch to the pencil tool and carefully replace the red pixels with the normal eye colour. Choose View8Zoom8Normal size to check the result. If you're happy with the result, save the picture; if not, close and open the picture file without saving the changes to start again. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 097 TUTORIAL MAKE THE INTERNET WORK FOR YOU YOUR GUIDE MATTHEW RICHARDS Matthew Richards reviews digital cameras for worldwide specialist press, as well as being a keen photographer, using both conventional 35mm outfits and digital systems. His main areas of interest are sport, landscape and people photography matthew.richards1@ukonline.co.uk PORTFOLIO MATTHEW RICHARDS Working the net Whatever you want out of the internet, we guarantee you’ll get more than you bargained for. Matthew Richards gives you the lowdown on getting online, sharing your photos, choosing your print options and showcasing photos on your own website… T he internet has something to offer everyone, from an experienced digital photographer who’s never beren online, to someone taking the leap from traditional photography to digital, and still finding their feet. In fact, the internet has so much to offer, that sometimes it’s difficult to know where to start. Over the last few issues of Digital Camera Magazine, we’ve been looking at various ways of getting more out of the net, from online communities and ordering prints, to web hosting and creating a full-on website. This month, in the last of the series, we’re going to focus on exactly what kind of facilities to look for, depending on precisely what you want to do online. For more detail and information on any particular area, order a relevant back issue of the magazine. A full list of what we’ve covered in each issue of the magazine is shown opposite, in the right-hand side bar. For now though, let’s take a look at what options are open to you and why * WEB LINKS BonusPrint www.bonusprint.com MSN www.msn.co.uk MSN Photos http://photos.msn.co.uk IncrediMail www.incredimail.com IMS Web Dwarf www.virtualmechanics.com Easily.co.uk www.easily.co.uk Photobox www.photobox.co.uk WS-FTP Pro www.ipswitch.com 7DayShop www.7dayshop.com Google www.google.co.uk 098 you’d even want to get online in the first place. In the digital age, the internet is no longer one of life’s optional extras, especially if you’re into digital photography. There are many different ways you can share your photos online but the practicality and advantages of the net go much further than that. For example, the web is an unparalleled source of information on all the latest digital photography gadgets and gear – complete with top opportunities for bargain buys. Just compare some of the prices for memory cards and other photographic accessories at a website like www.7dayshop.com with even the best High Street prices and you’ll see what we mean. Tricks of the trade Then there’s all the help, advice, tips and tricks you can get from online forums. Rather than having to phone around trying to get an answer to a particular question, MAKING THE MOST OF MSN 8 8 01 SIGN UP, SIGN IN Multiple sign-in facilities in MSN 8 mean that everyone in the family can have their own log-on and customised set of features. In true multimedia style, everyone can also have their own sign-in photo. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE all you need to do is to post your question in a forum online and you shouldn’t have to wait long for the answers to come flooding in. There are plenty to choose from – we’d recommend going to www.google.co.uk and searching for ‘digital photography forum’ to get quick access to plenty of general forums as well as quite a few specialised ones, like www.ukdiving.co.uk/ ukdiving/photoforum for digital underwater photography. How much does it cost? The good news is that getting online can be surprisingly inexpensive. Unlike playing games or watching DVD movies, photo editing software and access to the Internet doesn’t demand huge specs from your PC. As a rule of thumb, if your PC is good enough to download photos from your camera, then it’s good enough to use for internet access. And if your PC doesn’t already have a built-in modem, you can buy an internal modem for as At £6.99, the new MSN 8 has plenty of online advantages, especially for digital photographers 8 02 MSN PHOTO PLUS Sign up for MSN 8 and you get automatic access to MSN Photo Plus, for sharing your shots online and creating your own communities. There are also some slick tools for uploading your photos, plus plenty of tips and tricks on offer. 03 PICTURE IT! As an MSN 8 subscriber, you also get a free copy of Microsoft Picture It! Express 7. Despite the ‘express’ tag, it’s a surprisingly fully featured image-editing package with plenty of useful, yet easy-to-use tools to make your shots look their best. 4 FURTHER INSPIRATION If you've got lots of high-res photos to send it might be better to invest in a CD-RW drive tha send them online. Buying recordable CDs in bulk you can get a good deal – around 20p to 25p per disc 3 BACK ISSUES AS SEEN IN DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE… Over the last few months Digital Camera Magazine has run a complete series on internet photography. You can order issue 2, 3 or 4 of the magazine by phoning our Customer Services department on 0780 444 8470. Issue 1, however, has completely sold out. We apologise for any inconvenience caused. ABOVE BonusPrint adds a raft of digital services to its conventional printing processes, via the company’s website RIGHT Moving up a gear from the free space offered by your ISP, Easily.co.uk has a wide range of web hosting packages to choose from little as £20, or an external one (easier to fit as you don’t have to delve under the covers of your PC) for around £50. As for online running costs, most ISPs (Internet Service Providers) offer a local rate dial-up number. This works out at around 4p per minute during peak rates, 5p in the evenings and a penny per minute at the weekends – less if you make the internet your ‘best friend’ or at least list it as one of your ‘family and friends’ numbers. Alternatively, you can sign up with an ISP like Freeserve, BTopenworld, Supanet or Virgin for unmetered access. This typically costs around £15 per month and lets you spend as long as you like online without paying dial-up time. All you need to do is to keep a record of how many minutes per week you’re typically online to see which works out to be the best deal for you. Phone a friend When it comes to sharing digital photos on the internet, the most straightforward method is to email your shots to friends, family or colleagues. You’ll get an email address as part of the sign-up process with whichever ISP you choose, so you can use that to send your photos to chosen recipients across the connected world, without the need to build any websites or carry out any other time-consuming tasks. The only thing you really need to be careful of when emailing photos to friends is that you keep the file sizes down. With modern, multi-megapixel cameras, it’s common for single images to be a couple of MB or more in size. This can take your recipients five to ten minutes to download and will clog up their email software, which they might not thank you for. Check out last month’s issue for full details on how to optimise your photos but, in short, it’s best to reduce the physical size in pixels, and apply as much JPEG compression as you can (without adversely affecting image quality too much) before you email your images to others. If you’re looking for an email program that really enables you to make the most of multimedia opportunities, including digital photos, we’d recommend SO LD OU T Online photo communities IncrediMail, which you can download and use for free, from www.incredimail.com Quality printing Naturally, you don’t get something for nothing. Even with the speed and convenience of emailing your photos, there are times when it’s good to have ‘proper’ photos on proper photo paper to pass round among friends or hang on the wall. Photo inkjet printers are remarkably good nowadays, especially ones with sixcolour ink processing. These most commonly add photo magenta and photo cyan to the normal four-colour cyan, magenta, yellow and black process, to more accurately bring out the full range of colours captured in your digital photos. Going pro However, for truly professional-looking results, you can’t beat professional printing. The internet can help here as well, with Fujifilm, Jessops, BonusPrint and others providing online services for getting your photos printed online. Better still, many services offer a free trial once you sign up. This means you can get a few photos printed for free before deciding which company you want to go with, or whether you’re going to stick to printing your own photos at home, instead of ordering online and waiting for them to turn up in the post. See issue two for full information on the benefits of online If your PC is good enough to download photos from your camera, then it’s good enough to use for internet access print services. To go the whole hog, there’s no substitute for having your own gallery of shots online and there are basically two ways of going about this. The first and easiest way is to sign up to an online photo community, as described in issue one of Digital Camera Magazine. Here, all the web page creation is done for you, so all you have to do is to upload the photos you want to share. Two of the most popular services in the UK are MSN Photos, at http://photos.msn.co.uk and Photobox, at www.photobox.co.uk. Ordering prints online Create a website Better still, you could create your own website to showcase your photos in exactly the way you want. This is a lot easier than you might imagine. Web creation software can be cheap to buy and easy to use, as we highlighted in issue three of the magazine. Indeed, some programs, like IMS Web Dwarf are completely free to download and use – you can grab your copy at www.virtualmechanics.com. Your ISP almost certainly gives you a few MB of free space for hosting your own website, which is the place to start. If you want more space, independent of your ISP, we’d suggest you check out the services offered by Easily.co.uk at www.easily.co.uk. To upload all the files contained in your site to your online web space, you can’t beat using a proper FTP (File Transfer Protocol). We’d suggest WS_FTP Pro, which costs around £30 to buy, but you can download a free trial version for 30 days’ use at www.ipswitch.com. We hope we’ve given you a flavour of the many and varied services and options that you can make use of online. All that’s left is for you to try the ones that suit you and see just how well they work. Once you do, you’ll never look back. Creating your own website Optimising your photos for online use ? EXPLAINED UPLOAD The process of transferring data, stored in files, from your PC to a ‘server’ computer connected to the internet, from where other net users can access this data. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 099 TECHNIQUE 4 COLOUR MANAGEMENT FURTHER INFORMATION Try these useful guides for professional colour calibration of your workspace. Go to WWW.adobe.com/support/techguides/ color/main.htm YOUR GUIDE TIM DALY Tim has written several books on photography including The Digital Photography Handbook, The Digital Printing Handbook and The Desktop Photographer, and he continues to write for The British Journal of Photography and AG. His photographs have been exhibited across Europe tim@photocollege.co.uk PORTFOLIO TIM DALY WEBSITE WWW.PHOTOCOLLEGE.CO.UK Colour settings in Photoshop Once you’ve set up your monitor properly, you should spend a little extra time deciding how Photoshop’s colour management tools will work for you 0 C olour management seems like a tremendously technical concept for most keen photographers, but it’s not complex and it’s there to help you keep your images in topclass condition. The main problem is that digital image colours rarely look the same when an image file is swapped between hardware devices. There are several subtle variations in the universal RGB colour mode such as sRGB, Adobe RGB (1998) and ColorMatch RGB. These are sometimes referred to as a workspace, and have their own unique colour palettes which can alter significantly when viewed in a software application under a different workspace. To counteract this, there are tools installed inside professional hardware and software to manage the transition. For example, you can choose to colour manage your monitor, input devices and output devices so that consistent colours are maintained. EXPERT TIP TIM DALY COLOUR PROFILES BUYING CUSTOM PROFILES For many professional photographers, custom profiles based on the idiosyncrasies of a particular output device can be made or bought direct from specialist services, like the USbased Cone Editions. For a price, this company will make a bespoke output profile for your workstation if you print out and return their preset colour chart. Once analysed, the chart will be form the basis of a personal profile which will adjust your colour images to fit a target paper and printer combination. Setting up the colour workspace Some workspaces have a smaller colour palette than others, such as the sRGB space, so the best option is to use the largest and most universally recognised * WEB LINKS Many hardware and software manufacturers offer online advice on how to cope with colour management problems as follows: SOLUTIONS workspace such as the Adobe RGB (1998). This workspace is the best for accurate colour printing and will not cause colours to change. Photoshop can be set to work with Adobe RGB (1998) as its default workspace by making the following command Photoshop8Color Settings. When the dialog appears, pick the Custom option from the Settings pop-up menu found at the top. Next, click in the RGB pop-up and select Adobe RGB (1998) from the list, as shown. Colour management engines The conversion process can be managed by a tiny piece of software called the Colour Management Module or Engine, sometimes referred to as CMM or CME. Both ColorSync and the Adobe (ACE) are management tools and both come with Photoshop, with the latter being the best option to use. When opening images that have been captured in another workspace, you can configure your CME to deal with the problem in a number of different ways called policies. Most common is to convert images from a smaller space into your current but larger workspace. The second option is to preserve the integrity of the image’s workspace, useful if you are only viewing rather than editing. To set up these policies make the same Photoshop8Color Settings command as before, but click the Advanced Mode checkbox, found at the top left of the dialog box. Next, choose Convert to Working RGB from the RGB pop-up in the Color Management Policies section. Profile mismatch reminder While still in the Color Settings dialog, you can also set up Photoshop to prompt you with a visual reminder each time an image file is about to be opened or pasted from another source image – useful when a potentially damaging conversion is about to occur. It gives you the chance to decide what to do before the image is opened. In the Color Management Policies section, tick all options as shown. Tagging your documents Once opened, worked on and ready for saving, the final part of the colour management workflow can be made. You can choose to save your images with your workspace colour profile by doing a File8Save As command. At the bottom of the dialog box, tick the Embed Color profile option, as shown. You can deal with image files from different hardware/software formats by configuring your machine to anticipate them, or by managing them through special ‘policies’ CONE STUDIO www.inkjetmall.com Delve into the useful tips on colour management, especially useful for older versions of Photoshop. COLORSYNC http://www.apple.com/colorsync/ Read about theory behind the Colorsync colour management tools. EPSON http://www.photoexpert.epson.co .uk/UK/EXPERTISE/how_to_icc_pa ge1.htm Learn how to use printer colour profiles with your Epson printer 100 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 01 SET UP THE COLOUR WORKSPACE You can set a default workspace on your workstation that all files will recognise. 02 COLOUR MANAGEMENT ENGINES These enable you to set up ‘policies’ which deal with foreign file formats on arrival. 03 PROFILE MISMATCH REMINDER This pre-empts any nasty surprises by warning you when your colours will be affected. SECTION #05 RETAILERS 5 steps to safe shopping To prevent or handle the unlikely event of receiving faulty or damaged goods, why not follow our checklist below – you’ll reduce whatever slight chance there is of problems: 1 2 CHOOSE YOUR SITE OR RETAILER 3 NEVER PAY IN CASH 4 KEEP A RECORD 5 DON’T USE A DEBIT CARD Overleaf, you’ll find pages of camera retailers who offer competing prices and levels of service. Give them a look: USE A CREDIT CARD If you are buying goods worth more than £100 in total, use a credit card. This is because in the event of any problems, you are entitled to claim against the credit card company as well as the seller (you won’t get your money back twice but the company is there to claim against if the seller has gone bust.) You might also get extra insurance, so check with your credit firm. If you can’t pay by credit card, use a cheque or postal order instead. Don’t send cash through the mail, even by registered post. Apart from the risk of theft, you can’t stop payment if you need to, and it’s impossible to prove how much you sent. Keep records if you’re paying by credit card over the phone. Print off web pages after you have entered your details on them. Keep notes of exact times and the name of the person who took your order, if you’re paying by phone. Always keep your receipts. Many debit cards don’t have the protection or insurance options afforded to credit cards, so avoid using one. Dealerbank 18 pages of the UK’s camera retailers Contact our team # We can’t make guarantees on quality of service from our advertisers, but if you do have problem – or have had praiseworthy service – we’d like to know. Email us at letters.dcm@futurenet.co.uk To advertise in our Dealerbank section contact our sales team on 01225 442244 or email dcamclassifieds@futurenet.co.uk On your discs > Two CDs every month! Here’s what we’ve lined up for you this issue… This March… W Picture Window Pro 3.5 DEMO SOFTWARE FREE SOFTWARE Color Mechanic 1.1 ColorCastFX 1.0 OTHER Digital Photo Librarian Virtual Tours Dup Detector 3.0 Tutorial files Futuris Imager 2.6 Camera test shots Image Enhance 3.22 Camera database iMprinter 2.0 Manufacturer web links JPEG Comment Editor 1.0 edition of the magazine this month. And finally, make sure you visit our website at www.digitalcameramagazine.co.uk for more tutorials, camera reviews, plus you can get the opportunity to chat to thousands of other digital photography enthusiasts. DISC B Picture-shark 1.0 FULL SOFTWARE RGB Lights 1.0 Multiple Image VCW VicMan Photo Resizer .NET Editor 7.0 Multiple Unzipper Jeremy Ford Senior New Media Editor Jeremy.ford@futurenet.co.uk (demo) PLUG-INS FotoPrinter 3.0 SE Digital ROC Plug-in 1.1.1 EmbossWorks Deluxe ■ Don’t forget issue 6 which will include a choice of CD or DVD. Why not subscribe every month and save yourself some money? Turn to page 80 for more details… VIRTUAL TOURS Builder FULL SOFTWARE Picture Window 2.5 We’re giving away a plethora of free software, plug-ins and demos this month – the cream of all this booty being Picture Window 2.5 for your digital darkroom elcome once more to this month’s disc pages. We try to keep things interesting for you each month so you’ll find the full version of Picture Window 2.5 on disc A. It provides you with a suite of tools developed for digital photography adjustments and enhancements – a digital darkroom if you will. Follow our tutorial to help you get started and you’ll also find excellent help information built into the software too. Last issue we told you that this month we’d be giving you the option of a DVD and CD version of Digital Camera Magazine. Unfortunately this plan has been delayed until next issue. Apologies to anybody scouring the shop shelves for the DVD DISC A Our virtual tour enables you to get a proper feel for the five digital cameras we’ve reviewed this issue DEMO SOFTWARE Flexify ParcSoft PhotoBase 3.0 MasterBlaster Deluxe Canvas 8 Mezzy Deluxe DVD Picture Show 1.0 nik Color Efex FamiliaBuilder 3.0.2 Photo Abstract Set Lightbox 2.0 PhotoKit 1.0 Panoweaver Simplifier 1.0 Professional 3.0 SwapShop Deluxe Photo2VCD Professional 1.63 OTHER PHOTORECOVERY 3.0 Reader gallery True Screen Saver How to run your CD Simply place the CD in your PC’s CD drive. The interface will run automatically. Please read the user agreement carefully – if you accept the terms, click ‘I agree’. Then use the menu bar at the top of the screen to browse your disc’s contents. Enjoy – any problems, please see below: Reader support 01 FLY AROUND Use the pink arrows to the left and right of each camera image to spin the camera around. Rollover the outside arrows to autorotate the camera in that direction or click the inside arrows to manually rotate the camera to the position you want. 120 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 02 DETAIL SHOTS We’ve provided nine detailed images of each digital camera so you can have a really thorough look at each of them. Zoom into the required close-up shot by simply clicking the relevant thumbnail image or pressing the number key shown below each one. 03 TEST SHOTS We’ve taken test shots in four different lighting situations to enable you to view the image quality of the individual cameras. These include a detail picture, a skin shot, plus indoor and outdoor shots. See a large version of each shot by clicking the thumbnail or pressing the number key displayed below each image. We are careful to thoroughly test each CD but in the event of a problem, please call our reader support team on 01225 822743. In the event of your disc being physically damaged, please see the back of the disc case for details of how to get a free replacement. Multiple Image Resizer .NET Why resize all of your images by hand when you can use a program to do it for you? Try out Multiple Image Resizer for size... * SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION AS SOLD FOR SERIAL NUMBER ACUMEN BUSINESS SYSTEMS FULL PRODUCT WWW.ACUMENSYSTEMS.COM £9.99 NOT REQUIRED TWEAK IMAGES This handy little program enables you trim and rotate your images to perfection as well as adding some borders and complimentary text R esizing any number of images can be a lengthy and time consuming process. You might, for example, be creating a website to show off your latest batch of photographs and find yourself having to manually create thumbnail after thumbnail. But it need not be like this. Using Multiple Image Resizer .NET, you can automate the entire process, leaving you with more time to concentrate on other things. As the name would suggest, this program enables you to resize a number of images in one fell swoop. But it doesn’t stop there – you can also choose how images should be resized (as a fixed size or as a percentage of the original image), whether images should be flipped or rotated, and what sort of border should be used to frame each picture. Once all of these options have been set, you can select some text to overlay onto your images – perfect if you would like to add copyright information to prevent your work being used by anyone else. When all of this has been done, all that is left to do is decide how your resized images should be named, where they should be stored and which image format they should be saved in. While this program is perfect for creating website thumbnails, it can be used for any purpose, even if all you want to do is convert a folder full of images into a different file format. It’s a useful tool whatever your requirements may be. 01 ADD YOUR IMAGES 04 ADD BORDERS Launch the program and go to the Select tab. Click Add Folder of Images. Select your folder to add an entire folder or select images independently by clicking Add Individual Images. If you would like to add a border to your resized images, use the next tab to select your options. You can change the type of border to use as well as its colour and thickness. 02 RESIZE THEM 05 ADD TEXT Use the next tab to indicate which processing options you would like to use on your images. Move to the Resizing tab to scale down your images to the ratio you want. You can also add text to your images – such as copyright information. Click on the Text Options tab, enter your text and choose the font and positioning your would like to use. 03 ROTATE THEM 06 SAVE YOUR IMAGES The Rotate tab can be used to determine if images should be rotated or flipped at all. As you change options, you will need to refresh the preview by clicking on the Refresh link. Finally, on the Save tab, you must select the file format to save images in and the naming convention to be used. You can then move to the final tab and hit Go. Upgrade The company behind Multiple Image Resizer .NET, Acumen Business Systems Ltd, produces a whole range of other software – some of which is available free of charge! Working on a similar idea to Multiple Image Resizer, Multiple Unzipper enables you to work with several zipped archives at once so you can quickly and easily uncompress a number of files in one action. Another free tool is Net Tester, which may be used by network administrators or those with home networks to check all available machines on the network at any one time. .Net tester then reports their IP addresses back to you. Take a look at the company’s website (www.acumensystems.com) and you can find out more details on all these useful products. Picture Window 2.5 Picture Window is a professional image-editing and photo-enhancement tool that offers you an unparalleled level of control over your work * SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION AS SOLD FOR SERIAL NUMBER DIGITAL LIGHT & COLOR FULL VERSION WWW.DL-C.COM $49.95 NONE REQUIRED PHOTO EDITING Picture Window 2.5 has all the tools you need for some nifty digital manipulation. If you like this, why not check out version 3.1? E quipped with your camera and Picture Window 2.5 from this month’s cover disc, you can turn your computer into your own personal digital darkroom. The program places at your disposal a wide range of power tools covering every aspect of image editing. Whatever alterations you make to your images, Picture Window 2.5 makes it easy to revert to an earlier version of your work should you make a mistake. As well as the usual undo feature, every time you make a change, apply a filter or special effect, a new window will open containing the newly transformed version of your file. This means that it is easy to take an original image and try out a number of ideas and view them all on screen simultaneously for easy comparison. As well as special effects and filters, and the usual range of graphic tools, Picture Window also offers a collection of options brought together in the Miscellaneous Tools window. From here you have access to a number of useful features such as lighten, darken, smudge, red eye removal, sharpen and blur. The fact that all of these tools and their various options are available from a single window greatly increases common image enhancement tasks. The Monitor Calibration tool can be used to ensure that what you see on screen precisely matches the output of your printer, so you will not waste time on an editing session only to have to redo it when your printout is not up to standard. With support for layers, masks, and boasting extremely customisable options, Picture Window is ideal for those looking for professional results without the hand-holding of wizard interfaces. 01 BROWSE YOUR IMAGES 04 CALIBRATE YOUR MONITOR Picture Window includes a useful Browse option which can be used to preview the entire contents of a folder of images. You can then open individual images or print out miniature reference sheets. Before you start image editing, you should calibrate your monitor. Turn the contrast right up and click File8Calibrate. Adjust the settings for the best picture output. 02 TWAIN SUPPORT 05 PAINT AND CLONE TOOLS The program also features TWAIN support so you can acquire images from other sources, such as a scanner. You can then use Picture Windows tools to adjust the image as necessary, using the usual methods. The top tool bar can be used to access some of the basic image tools such as paint brush and the clone tool. Cick on a toolbar button for the appropriate options box. 03 SLIDESHOWS 06 MISCELLANEOUS TOOLS Digital slideshows are great way to send out a whole collection of images to people. Simply click File8Slideshow and double click on the empty box to start adding pictures to the slideshow selection. The Miscellaneous Tool window should be your first port of call for the common image editing tools. Select your tool from the drop down list and set the option below. Upgrade Picture Window Pro 3.1 If you liked the power of Picture Window 2.5, take a look at some of the new features included in version 3.1. All operations now include support for 48-bit colour, and there is better colour management available, with full support for ICM profiles. Mask-making has been improved with a number of new features, including a new smart brush mode that selectively masks only areas with similar colour, enabling you to make accurate masks more easily. Other improvements and additions include rotation during cropping, cropping to irregular shapes, a new Fan special effects transformation, support for shadowed text, greater ranges in the blur and sharpen dialog, cropping in the print dialog and more. Find out more by visiting the Digital Light & Color website at www.dl-c.com 07 TEXT OPTIONS 10 MULTIPLE CHOICE Using the Text option (Transformation Text), you can precisely control the appearance and positioning of text over your pictures. The preview option enables you to try out ideas before committing them by clicking OK. Each time you apply a special effect or transformation to an image, the original file will be retained. This enables you to try out a few ideas and compare them before deciding. 08 MASK OPTIONS 11 COLOUR BALANCE Masks can be used to protect certain areas of an image while you work on others. Click the M button on the toolbar to display the Masks options. To make masked areas less obvious, remember to feather the edges. Picture Window’s comprehensive Color Balance Transformation enables you to precisely configure the colour levels of pictures, along with saturations and other settings. Color Mechanic Another product that may be of interest is Color Mechanic. This is a colour correction plug-in tool that works with Adobe Photoshop and Photoshop Elements as well as other plug-in-compatible, image editing programs. The key feature of this particular colour correction tool is that it enables you to adjust individual colours without any others being affected. This gives you 09 COMPOSITE TRANSFORMATION 12 SAVE FORMATS You can use the Composite Transformation tool to merge two images together or to add a special effect to an existing image. The gradient blend, for example, fades in an image from the centre of the screen. When you’re happy with the changes you’ve made to your picture you can save it in any of 11 popular image formats, depending on how you want to use your images. more control over your images than other tools which simply apply a uniform filter to the entire image. Extremely impressive results can be achieved using Color Mechanic by simply adjusting the slider settings. In just a few simple steps you can perfect your images. Again, you can find out more by visiting the Digital Light & Color website at www.dl-c.com FotoPrinter 3.0 Complete package for editing and improving your photos, or printing them out with fine control * SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION AS SOLD FOR APPROX SERIAL NUMBER MEDIENTEAM66 FULL PRODUCT WWW.MT66.DE £10 Internet access required F otoPrinter is a versatile photo editing and presentation program that makes it easy to import images from your camera and print them out for maximum impact. Installing the software is very straightforward, with the minimum system requirement being modest: Pentium PC, 32MB of RAM and 500MB of hard drive space. FotoPrinter works with any version of Windows from Windows 95 onwards. Although the software is free, you do need to obtain a user ID and registration key, which you can do by going to the maker’s website. Oddly, the program asks for the registration details when you close it, but online registration only takes a matter of minutes. Another quirk is the interface: unlike most photo editng programs, there are no pull-down menus, and the graphical, colourful appearance is much more reminiscent of Kai’s PowerTools or Power Goo. Although this software is not time-limited, you need to pay a small upgrade fee (just under £5) to use the advanced photo-editing effects and add printable frames to your shots. One big advantage of FotoPrinter is its ability to set your printer margins. Every printer has non-printable areas (top/bottom/left/right). Consequently, blank margins may occur when printing on preprinted paper. To fix this in FotoPrinter, select the ‘Adjust Printer’ option in the Print menu. The “Test” option is located here. Clicking on this option generates a test printout. On this printout, measure the actual distance between the vertical line and the left margin of your page (x) and the distance between the horizontal line and the top page margin (y). Enter these values in the corresponding fields (X and Y). Your printer will now be adjusted. 01 IMPORT THE IMAGES 02 TOOLS OF THE TRADE 03 ENHANCE YOUR IMAGES Photos can be obtained directly from a TWAIN-enabled digital camera or scanner, or from a location on your PC by clicking ‘disk.’ Key functions within the program can also be accessed by right mouse clicking. Along the top of the main screen is a collection of 15 tools for editing and adjusting your shots. The first couple enable you to reduce the number of colours in an image for turning it to a grayscale colour palette. Moving along, you find tools for changing to true colour, adjusting image saturation and tweaking brightness and sharpness. The tools can handle basic quick fixes only. Look for a dedicated package for more intensive corrections. MORE IMAGE TWEAKS FREE IMAGES ADD SOME TEXT The strange-looking squiggle (ninth along, top bar) lets you adjust gamma settings, while the next one along alters the rotation. Next to that are tools for mirroring an image and moving it around the printable area. Along the bottom of the main screen you’ll notice a modest selection of royalty free photos. Click the Underlay tool and you can merge two images for an easy, yet dramatic, effect. Text can also be added to photos for print out or inclusion on your website. Before text can be added, you need to select drag and drop mode, then enter the details in the dialog box which pops up. 04 07 PICTURE ALBUM Click the album function on the main screen to view your photos as thumbnails in a photo album. Handy if you have a lot of images accumulating on your PC and need to identify a shot quickly. 05 08 PRINTER CALIBRATION Printer adjustment is carried out via ‘Settings.’ You can calibrate your printer so it can print within the margins of pre-printed documents, as explained in the introduction to this software or within the included help files. 06 09 GETTING MORE FEATURES To access the more sophisticated photo effects and picture frames, you need to re-register for an update. When you see this screen, click the Internet button and you’re taken to a web page where you can pay the update fee. Also on the coverdiscs With this lot installed on your workstation, managing and editing your digital photos should be a breeze PhotoRecovery for digital media 3.0 DVD Picture Show 1.0 Arcsoft Photobase 3.0 * * * SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION LC TECHNOLOGY INTERNATIONAL DEMO WWW.LC-TECH.COM T SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION ULEAD DEMO WWW.ULEAD.CO.UK E SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION ARCSOFT DEMO WWW.ARCSOFT.COM T his application can undelete deleted images or recover files from formatted media cards – as long as you haven’t placed fresh data on the card. Simply direct it to the media card and it’ll scan the device displaying the list of files it has recovered. Then, just copy them to your hard drive for safekeeping. ven though you’ve turned to digital, the slideshow is not a lost art. DVD Picture Show enables you to build digital slideshows that you can master to either CD or DVD. You can add menus, music and special effects. If you burn to DVD the disc should be compatible with most standard DVD players. his is a photo and media management application for the non-professional. To justify the $49 price tag there are basic editing and adjustment tools, slideshow functions and a Web album builder, which takes a folder of images and automatically creates a thumbnail image gallery. Dup Detector 3.0 Lightbox 2.0 Digital ROC Plug-in * * * SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION Y PRISMATIC SOFTWARE FREE WWW.PRISMATICSOFTWARE.COM our hard drive’s cluttered enough without keeping duplicate files. Dup Detector can identify and delete duplicate files regardless of the file name (it compares pixel data instead). Matching images are displayed with image previews plus the option to delete them. This application is free. SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION T CONCEIVA DEMO WWW.CONCEIVA.COM his file/image browsing add-on supports many other applications. Lightbox offers a visual thumbnail listing of images (and other media files) so it’s easy to find the image you’re after. Partial integration means the image can be imported into your application. This package costs just under $30. SOFTWARE SPECIFICATIONS PUBLISHER PRODUCT STATUS CONTACT INFORMATION APPLIED SCIENCE FICTION DEMO WWW.ASF.COM T his Photoshop plug-in makes image correction simple by doing the adjustments automatically. It focuses on colour fading (scanned photographs) and light castings. The example images on the developers website show some remarkable transformations and our tests also produced excellent results. DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 125 NEXT STEPS NEXT ISSUE On sale everywhere 13th March New supernova caught on digital camera Future Publishing, 30 Monmouth Street, Bath, BA1 2BW Customer services [t] 01458 271 100 [w] www.digitalcameramagazine.co.uk EDITORIAL & ART Nick Merritt Managing Editor [e] editor.dcm@futurenet.co.uk Rob Mead Acting Editor Kai Wood Deputy Art Editor [e] kai.wood@futurenet.co.uk Elizabeth Raderecht Operations Editor Vicky West Sub-editor It’s taken 10,000 pictures shooting 100 galaxies a night for amateur astronomer Doug Rich to finally achieve his dream EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTORS Steve Bavister, Aidan O’Rourke, Pete Martin, Mark Harris, Will Smith, Sandy Gardner, Joe Apice, Ed Davis, Tim Daly, Simon Danaher, Joe Cassels, Matthew Richards ©WWW.REXFEATURES.COM 2003 T here aren’t many people who are prepared to build a two-storey observatory onto the side of their house, but Doug Rich likes to do things differently. By night this air traffic controller from Hampden in Maine, USA sits in front of his $4,000 telescope, hooked up to an even more expensive digital camera and laptop and snaps distant stars once every 47 seconds. Now the amateur astronomer has seemingly achieved the impossible – discovered the remains of star that exploded over 150 million years ago and completely missed by his more professional and expensively equipped astronomical compadres. Doug Rich discovered the supernova, named 2003O, by accident during a routine star search that sees him shoot 100 galaxies a night for the five nights a month when the weather is clear enough to see any stars at all. Realising that the extinct star couldn’t be found on any of the 9,500 celestial maps in his possession, he immediately registered the find with the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams, making it the 15th supernova to be discovered so far this year. Sadly, the images Rich took won’t be adorning the space above the fireplace: the electronic images he takes are seemingly unremarkable sheets of grey, peppered with tiny black dots. But that doesn’t seem to bother 54 year old Rich, who told local newspaper the Kennebec Journal that the discovery was his own Super Bowl “You wouldn’t find something like this at Wal-Mart,” he said. But then you can’t imagine Wal-Mart selling observatories, two-foot long aluminium telescopes or star-shooting digital cameras either. Next month – on sale 13th March ■ Spring back to life! PHOTOGRAPHIC CONTRIBUTORS (Where not credited inside) Future Network Photo Studio, Getty Images UK, Rex Features UK ADVERTISING [t] 020 7317 2600 Michelle Blackwell Ad Manager [e] michelle.blackwell@futurenet.co.uk Ben Shoesmith Sales Executive [e] ben.shoesmith@futurenet.co.uk [t] 020 7317 0259 NEW MEDIA James Brown Group New Media Manager [e] james.brown@futurenet.co.uk Jeremy Ford Senior Disc Editor [e] jeremy.ford@futurenet.co.uk James Guest New Media Development [e] james.guest@futurenet.co.uk Steve Pashley Online Editor [e] steve.pashley@futurenet.co.uk CIRCULATION AND MARKETING It’s a fantastic time to get outdoors and capture the birth of a brand new season – we reveal the top photo techniques that will help you take brilliant pictures of plants, animals, places and people ■ Web publishing essentials Clare Tovey Production Manager Diane Ross Production Coordinator Mike Thorne Team Buyer Jamie Malley Circulation Manager Fiona Tully Marketing Manager Marie Spicer Subscriptions Executive SENIOR MANAGEMENT We pick the best program to help you post your pictures on the net ■ Photoshop and Paint Shop Pro tips Dave Taylor Group Publisher John Weir Publishing Director Colin Morrison Managing Director Greg Ingham CEO Printed in England © Future Publishing Ltd 2003 More top tips from our experts. PLUS: Photoshop filters explained ■ Up to the minute camera reviews We put five of the latest models through their paces. PLUS: find out how you camera fares in our brand new six-page Buyers Guide! ■ Don’t forget to reserve a copy of Digital Camera Magazine at your newsagent, or subscribe See page 80 for full details! 130 DIGITAL CAMERA MAGAZINE 2 PACKED CDs! Plus 8 pages of events & ideas to Getup&go to, and five new-format tips cards! Disclaimer Getup&go section, tear-out factsheets and gatefold covers are published in UK editions of the magazine only. All contributions to Digital Camera Magazine are accepted on the basis of a non-exclusive worldwide licence to publish or license others to do so, unless otherwise agreed in advance in writing. We reserve the right to edit letters. 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