Categories
Technology

Aperture Photo Workflow

I shoot mostly in RAW using a Canon SLR; my other cameras are a Canon IXUS and an iPhone — either one of the three with their unique benefits and drawbacks. The SLR is precise but clunky, the IXUS goes underwater with me but is not very light-sensitive, the phone puts GPS in the EXIF tag but the quality is only mediocre. Nothing’s ever perfect…

Either way, here’s my Aperture 3 workflow. After a trip or shooting, I …

  1. Copy photos & videos from cameras and phones into Aperture
    Nowadays, I tend to simply connect the camera rather than take the SD/CF cards out. The import includes: adjusting time zone offset and adding standard IPTC data
  2. Force TimeMachine to backup immediately
    This sits on a FireWire-attached (always connected) hard drive and is reasonably fast
  3. Update my “Aperture Vault”
    This sits on an external 2.5″ USB hard drive which remains disconnected and stowed away otherwise
  4. Wipe the cards and phones
    I typically do this in the camera
  5. Rate the photos
    Reject everything that is truly f’d up (e.g. out of focus)
    3 stars for everything that is cool but will need work
    4 stars for photos that I might enjoy showing off to friends
    5 stars for the “Call National Geographic” type pictures
    I compare pictures side by side and stack them to make my pick
  6. Crop, adjust levels, Exposure the 3 – 5 star pictures
    This is the lengthy process of fine-tuning everything and creating the “keepers”
  7. Add captions to the keepers
  8. Add geo-positions and tags to the keepers
  9. Upload the keepers to Flickr
  10. Blog or email about the new album
  11. Update the vault again

Current considerations include switching from a managed Aperture library to one with referenced files to enable a simple folder sync onto a NAS that would allow me to access the pictures via the internet. That would make things a little bit more secure (additional on-site backup) and the remote access might come in handy, too (although it is mostly a gimmick).

Alternatively, I could get a second external vault that I keep off-site. Howver, the trouble with that is “I know myself”. How often would I bring that drive home to update it?

Photography is a pretty serious hobby of mine and I wrote this down mostly to remember the process myself. However, feel free to share your thoughts in the comments.

Categories
Technology

Switched!

We finally did it: a few weeks ago we switched over from Windows to Mac. And, besides the good looks it did only “hurt” a little bit… However, I guess you can read a whole lot about what people like about the Mac out there. That’s why I decided I am going to tell you what I am missing the most and what I dislike at this stage. Keep in mind that I don’t have a dual boot setup or Parallels Desktop installed and am not planning on doing that anytime soon. Guess it can’t be that bad after all…

  • You can’t launch an application on the dock with the keyboard (at least not in a fast & convenient way)
  • You can’t cut and paste files in Finder to move them (ooh, how I miss that)
  • And, when you navigate with the arrow keys to a certain folder and then hit the shortcut for a new folder, it is created on the root level (what the fruit is going on?)
  • Haven’t figured out how to select some files in a directory listing with just the keyboard (extra evil!)
  • iWeb creates the craziest URLs when publishing to an FTP folder
  • No full-screen view in Safari
  • No standard German postcard sizes in iPhoto – the postage for Apple cards is about 3times as high.
  • No vaults for referenced files in Aperture
  • Last but not least, there’s no application that comes even close to IrfanView (PC software) for the Mac community

I am sure I could think of other things but that’s it for now.

Categories
Technology

Bar code

No it is not about drinking etiquette or the code of the west ;-)

QuickMark is a cell phone application that lets you scan in barcodes using your cell’s camera. That code may be a bookmark or bunch of other things that are not too much fun to type on a mobile phone. I am currently experimenting with it. Here’s the URL for my homepage for example:

Barcode for floriankoehler.de

Apparently in Asia they have these codes on vending machines and such. Check out this YouTube video…

Categories
Travel

After Job Party

Categories
Technology

Mapping travels with Google

I am quite excited about adding a Google map to my site. That way I could show where I have travelled in the past. For this post I tried to simply copy the code from my Picasa Web Album to this blog. That did not work though. I had to take a snapshot of the little map in my gallery – far from what I had in mind. Of course, I may not always have photos uploaded to Google either. In other words I will have to provide coordinates to build the map.

The documentation on Google’s pages for their API is pretty good. However, to get the coordinates for all of one’s trips organized it would be nice to auto-generate the JavaScript code from a database. Anyone have an easy-to-use way to do this, leave a comment, pleeease.