Monthly Archives: February 2016

How To Be A Successful Photographer, v.2

PUT THE HOURS INTO IT

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Doing anything worthwhile takes forever. 90% of what separates successful people and failed people is time, effort, and stamina.

If somebody in your industry is more successful than you, it’s probably because he works harder at it than you do. Sure, maybe he’s more inherently talented, more adept at networking, etc., but I don’t consider that an excuse. Over time, that advantage counts for less and less. Which is why the world is full of highly talented, network-savvy, failed mediocrities.

Stamina is utterly important. And stamina is only possible if it’s managed well. People think all they need to do is endure one crazy, intense, job-free creative burst and their dreams will come true. They are wrong. Being good at anything is like figure skating—the definition of being good at it is being able to make it look easy. But it never is easy. Ever. That’s what many people conveniently forget.

If I was just starting out writing, say, a novel or a screenplay, or maybe starting up a new software company, I wouldn’t try to quit my job in order to make this big, dramatic, heroic- quest thing about it.

I would do something far simpler: I would find that extra hour or two in the day that belongs to nobody else but me, and I would make it productive. Put the hours in; do it for long enough and magical, life-transforming things happen eventually. Sure, that means less time watching TV, Internet-surfing, going out, or whatever. But who cares?

How To Be Creative
Hugh MacLeod

Ft Myers Beach is a Happy Place for Beach Portrait Photography

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Ft Myers Beach Portrait Photography should be fun!

Don’t settle for old fashioned stiff and expressionless beach portraits of your family.  When we hit the sand in Ft Myers for beach portrait photography, I am going to work hard to put your personality into your beach portraits.  Ft Myers Beach Portrait Photography is different from shooting in the studio or your back yard.  It’s a happy place.  You’ve come here to have fun.  So let’s have fun at your photography session!

Lightroom CC Now Processes HDR

 

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Lightroom CC now offers HDR processing.  This is significant because you no longer have to export your files to NIK HDR, Photoshop, or Photomatix.  When you use the Lightroom CC, the output is a 16 bit DNG file of considerable size and sharpness.  You can process the DNG in Lightroom CC, and the exposure latitude is now 10 f/stops in either direction.  The other basic controls work the same as with a non-HDR image.  The LR HDR DNG file looks the same as the middle/normal file you used to create the HDR. I think there is a minimum of tone mapping in Lightroom HDR, and if you have a large dynamic range you are trying to capture, you may get better results with NIK HDR.  But there is no color or structure or contrast added with the LR HDR, unlike the NIK.