December 21, 2006

New Additions to My Stock Library and Photoshop CS3

The following nature, landscape and wildlife photographs represent the latest additions to my ever-growing and developing library of stock images. The landscape photographs were captured with a Canon 5D with Canon 28-70mm f2.8 L and 70-200mm f4 L lenses. The wildlife images were taken with a Canon 1D Mark II and a Canon 300mm f4 IS L lens. Of course I use professional-grade tripod and ballhead for all of these photographs. Each was shot in RAW mode and then processed and converted with Adobe Bridge and Adobe Photoshop CS2 on a MacBook Pro.

Just yesterday I downloaded the beta version of Photoshop CS3 by way of a mention in the most recent webzine from istockphoto. The download is available at http://labs.adobe.com/technologies/photoshopcs3/. So far it reminds of Apple’s Aperture. I’m still getting to know CS3. One change I’ve already noticed is that Adobe did way with the “ready-made” web portfolios that were available in the earlier version - the ones where the user could create a file where all the thumbnails and pages were automatically generated that could then be placed on a simple FrontPage site using a frame, for lazy people like me who still haven’t gotten around to learning Dreamweaver. Aperture still provides this option.

Now Adobe has teamed-up with a web design and hosting service by pointing photographers to a set of hosting “options” ($$$) with a choice of several templates. Although these sites have that “cool-simplistic-urban-photograher-flash” thing going on (quite unlike my barnyard-variety mish-mash I’ve created with FrontPage), I kind of wish that Adobe still included the previous options, and possibly even offer a few more that would work with WordPress. Kind of like a “make your online gallery,” “choose a template” and then “press it to your blog” thingy-dingy. Oh, well, maybe they will when the full release comes out. Even though I enjoy using Aperture, Adobe still sets the standard with Photoshop.

Spring Sunrise in Hocking Hills by Jim Crotty

Spring sunrise ove farm in Hocking Hills by Jim Crotty

Sunrise through trees above Cedar Falls by Jim Crotty

The Road Less Traveled by Jim Crotty

Long-eared Owl by Jim Crotty

Golden Eagle close-up by Jim Crotty

American Kestrel close-up by Jim Crotty

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