Tag Archives: digital

Scrapbook Saturdays

Here is recent project and one from Christmas. (The benefit of not sharing these for the past few months is that I have tons of older projects I can sneak in here during my not-so-productive weeks.) :)

Will got a 3 ft tall giraffe from my grandmother for his birthday (best present ever, Koko), and loved it so much that he brought it to bed with him.

scrapbook layout photo

(Layout template from Katie Pertiet’s Valentine Mini Book 2 Pack, patterned paper from her Winky, Blinky, and Nod kit, and little giraffe sticker is from the jungle gym kit at Designer Digitals.)

layout

(A good ole paper layout. Patterned paper from Scenic Route.)

I had plans to share more, but messing with the blog ate up my morning and now I’m off to photograph a newborn. Hurray for squishy new babies!

Photoshop Fridays: Week 2: Creating a Border in Photoshop

One of the first things I wanted to do when I was a brand new photoshop newbie was make a border around my photos.

The thing about photoshop, is that there are as many ways to get an end result as there are people. Of course, all of those ways are not created equal, and my very first way was absolutely awful.

Want to waste time and lose a little bit of your photo when making a border? Do what I did and use the line tool to make four lines and then put them around the edge of your photo.

It took me a few days to figure out a better way: the “canvas size” way.

1. Open a photo. In this case, we’re going to open one of my faves from my recent session with baby Eli:

portrait of mother and baby

2. Go to IMAGE>CANVAS SIZE.

canvas size menu photoshop screenshot

3. In the pop-up menu, select your border color (you get to choose from white, black, grey, your foreground color (in this case, brown) or your background color (in this case, orange–both the foreground and background colors are seen in your tools window) .

4. Check the “relative” box.

5. Enter the size of your border.

canvas size menu photoshop screenshot

And there you have it. Simple and fast! If you want to create a double border (like the white border with thin gray border I used), you just do this process twice.

The War on Photographer Chaos

I realize that it is neither Photography Tip Tuesday nor Photoshop Friday, but I would like to talk today about how to keep your digital files from consuming you, your home, your life, and your sanity (because I’m procrastinating from going through my own photos).

Oh, your pictures want to take over your life. It starts off so simply. You buy a digital camera, you fire off some shots, you download them to your computer. You look at them, you may delete the obviously horribly bad ones, but you save the rest. You can’t possibly delete them–they are photos.

And then it gets worse. You discover “burst” mode and have a baby–all at the same time. Suddenly you’re taking 400 pictures a day and you certainly can’t delete any now because they are of your precious baby, and that is the only photo you have of that precious baby from April 3rd at 3:30pm and 35.28 seconds (you also have one from April 3rd at 3:30pm and 35.29 seconds as well as 35.27 seconds).

And you do this day after day and week after week and month after month…and then you discover the joys of shooting RAW files instead of jpegs. And instead of immediately converting them into jpegs and tossing the RAW files, you can’t possibly part with the RAW files. What if you need to make adjustments later on?

And this goes on for a year or two or three until your home server is bursting at the seams and you are forced to constantly delete a little of this and a little of that just to squeeze one more thing on to it.

And yes, you could certainly buy a bigger home server, but sanity needs to play a part here, too. How many photos does one really need of their own life? I have maybe 350 pictures of my entire childhood. Will has 350 pictures in a folder labeled 14 March 2006. And this folder isn’t alone. It’s not even sort of unique.

How does one manage their digital photos without resorting to purchasing a storage unit for their 1000s of external drives? How does one protect their photos from computer malfunction? And how does one organize their photos so that they can be found amongst the hundreds of thousands?

I have done very well with two of these questions, and failed miserably with one. I’m working on the one this week, and thought it might be helpful to share my workflow with others lest you make the same mistake (or make an even worse mistake and don’t back up your pictures…).

In my experience, there are three important aspects to storing your family’s digital photo snapshots:

1) Editing

2) Organization

3) Back-up
1. Editing
In the past, I wasn’t so good about the editing. I kept almost everything. And a lot of that almost everything is totally unnecessary. I don’t need 35 pictures of Will laying on a blanket with ever-so-slightly different expressions. One, two, or MAYBE three is enough. In the last couple of months, I have been good about deleting the unnecessary pictures the day I upload them. But that still leaves two years of Will photo-mania. So, I have assigned myself a project–every day I’m going through one month of pictures and deleting the ones that really aren’t necessary.

When I’m done, I’ll have a photo library that is actually enjoyable to browse through.

2. Organization

I’m not going to call anyone out, but I have seen some nasty photo organization going on out there in the world. Dumping all of your pictures into the “My Pictures” folder in Windows is a recipe for disaster. Here is the system that I’ve been using since 2002, divided into “b.w.” (before will) and “a.w.” (after Will–when our picture taking went from occasional to hourly).

Before Will:

1. In “My Pictures,” every year gets a folder. Then every event/picture taking reason got a folder within the year. Like 2003>Trip to Disney World or 2005>Ferrets Make Mess in Kitchen. I had 20-40 folders within each year, and it worked well and was easy to browse and easy to manage.

After Will:

2. Suddenly we were taking pictures every day, and 365 folders were not going to be easy to browse, or to manage. So I came up with a new system: every year still had a folder, but within that folder there was a month, and then a day. So it now looked like 2007>January>14 Jan Will and Nic in snow.

3. When I first started Real Photography, my home snapshots dropped dramatically, so I was able to go to just a year>month folder system this past summer, since June only had 30 pictures in it (for example).

Organizing after RAW:

If you shoot in RAW, your pictures are a lot bigger. Odds are good that you won’t ever go back and want to readjust your RAW adjustments, so to save storage space and my sanity, when I download my personal snapshots, I immediately make my adjustments, convert them to jpeg, and delete the RAW file. (This also means that my pictures are ready to be shared online and I can view them in windows photo gallery as opposed to only in bridge.)

Taking Organizing to the Next Level…

By using Bridge or Lightroom, you have lots of options for adding additional organization to your photos. But this post is getting a little long, so we’ll save those tips for later this week.

3. Back-up

You know how in the movies people always lose important files and then the supporting character says “well, didn’t you back it up?” Backing up is like flossing. Everyone knows they should do it, but only the professionals and anal-retentive actually do.

Here’s the deal: if you don’t back-up because it’s a pain in the butt, I hear ya. So you have to build a system that makes it automatic.

For our family photos, we have a simple two back-up system. When I download the files initially, they go to our home server, which has an additional hard drive set up to mirror the first. Without having to click anything or adjust anything, every photo is saved to two hard drives. If one dies, the other will be there.

And in case that doesn’t work out, every month I burn a cd with the past month’s photos. Just once a month. And since the pictures are organized by month, it is super easy to just drag and drop that month folder into Roxio data dvd burner. Voila!

(For our personal snapshots, I don’t back-up as much as we do for our wedding and portrait photographs. If you want to go for the gusto and treat your family pictures like treasures, you need to consider what happens in the event that your house is destroyed and invest in a firesafe box rated for electronic media or look into off-site/online storage, as well as burn two DVDs with the pictures immediately every time you download.)

Scrapbook Saturdays: Digital Kit Organization

One of the best parts of being a garden girl at 2peas was amassing a giant collection of digital scrapbooking kits. And then I continue to add more.

But in spite of the zillions of digital products on our home server, I found myself using the same ten over and over again, because I didn’t have the desire to pour through all of my files before starting a layout. I created a hard copy preview of all of my digital kits that means I get to quickly look through all my digital patterned paper before starting a layout. (If only the same could be said for my actual patterned paper!)

digital-kit-organization.jpg

95% of digital kits come with a small jpeg preview of the kit that shows its contents. I used those jpegs (you don’t need to resize them–they are already tiny) and pasted them onto 8.5×11 photoshop documents. My organization of the previews mirrors how I organize my digital kit files. They are organized into one giant digital kit folder, then each store gets a folder, then each designer. The exception to this rule is layout templates, which have their own folder and all templates from various stores/designers are stored there.

Now whenever I buy a new kit or template, I print out the web preview and cut it out and paste it onto the appropriate sheet (as you can see in the picture).

You could get much fancier with these and design something pretty, or print it nicely on photo paper, but I wanted the quick, easy, stress-free and cheap version.

What do you do with the kits that don’t have a web preview saved in their folder (other than curse them under your breath)? You can deal with it two ways. You can steal the preview off of the seller’s website or use Photoshop’s contact sheet feature (this is what I did). In Photoshop, go to File>Automate>Contact Sheet II and find the folder in question. Photoshop will create a little contact sheet of the contents that you can then shrink down and include on your 8.5×11 digital kit sheets.

If you wanted to really go for the gusto with digi kit organization, you could create contact sheets of each digital kit and reserve one piece of paper per kit. The downside to that, though, is that takes longer to browse through your digi kit stash. And it uses more paper/ink.

This is a really easy project and definitely worth doing if you haven’t already organized something similar. I’d been meaning to do this project for a year now, but finally sat down and completed it last month and I was surprised how fast it was–it only took an hour or two, and I am kicking myself for not doing it sooner.

Scrapbook Saturdays

template-layouts.jpg

Welcome to Scrapbook Saturday!

The scrapbook industry was my gateway into professional photography. Before opening our portrait business, I did freelance work for the scrapbook industry (which is how many of our blog readers know us). In the past year I decided to quit scrapbooking professionally and go back to how I started scrapbooking–a hobby to be enjoyed by my family. I have no desire to get back into scrapbooking seriously, but thought that since so many people that stop by here are scrappers, we should talk about scrapbooking occasionally!

One of the things that scrapbooking needs right now is fun. It used to be so fun, but as the competition and skill level rose, the fun slowly drained away for me (and for many other people, I’m sure).

Six months ago, scrapbooking was work to me. Now, it’s pure fun again.

One of the ways I made it fun was to go back to quick layouts. The kind of layouts where you can whip out four in a single evening. That is fun to me.

My favorite things are layout templates from Kellie Mize at Designer Digitals. Her designs are gorgeous, simple, and completely my style. They are simple and graphic, so they’re versatile and can be used a million times. I want them all! They make putting together a layout stress-free. The design is already there, so all I need to do is pick my pictures, write some journaling, and pick out patterned paper/elements to go with it (playing with the pretties has always been my favorite part).