Last night was a workshop-ish, looking at what can be done when processing digital images with several different software packages. The aim was to help we members think about what what’s possible, about what we’re using right now, and about how we might want to move forward.
We looked at a selection of apps, from free software you can use on a phone or tablet (Snapseed), through to industry-standard desktop tools favoured by enthusiasts and professionals(Lightroom, Photoshop), with a look at some of the creative possibilities of artificial intelligence (Luminar AI) on the way.
Our panel of ‘test drivers’ put the apps through their paces, editing a selection of digital images. Tim, above, worked with Luminar AI on Ian’s snowy peak image. Graham, below, pointing a finger at his tablet running Snapseed, produced a multiple exposure combining three images he’d taken earlier in the evening. Ian and Wol took turns too, with Photoshop and Lightroom respectively.
Spending only 10 minutes on each image, we barely scratched the surface of the ‘how to …’, but we may have started to explore the ‘why’.
This week will be a workshop night, and we’ll be looking at what can be done when processing digital images with several different software packages. The aim is to help us members think about what what’s possible, about what we’re using right now, and about how we might want to move forward. We may manage to explain some terminology along the way.
We’ll be looking at a wide range of apps, from free software you can use on a phone or tablet, through to industry-standard desktop tools favoured by enthusiasts and professionals.
It promises to be a lively evening, with a panel of ‘test drivers’ putting the apps through their paces, 10 minutes at a time, editing a selection of digital images, and with plenty of time for questions and discussion.
New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.
We had a cracking field of entries for the Grant Cup, with 51 images from 17 members. Four of these entrants are in their first season of PPS competitions, so special congratulatons to them. We don’t have space here to show them all – you really had to be there – but It should be clear, even from these wee thumbnails, what a high standard of images this event attracted.
The Grant Cup is themed, and this year the theme was ‘Transient’, not that we hold anyone too closely to that. We watched the entries through several times, noting our favourites with paper and pencil. This year, to cast our votes, we used the online voting process we used for the two years we met on Zoom. This turned out to be beneficial, and we’ll use it again, for the Dall and Simpson Cups – the online scoring not only quickly counts votes cast, but simultaneously counts how many 5’s, how many 4’s, and so on, which becomes significant in the event of a tie on overall points. So it proved to be – the top two images both scored equally highly, but one had attracted more 5’s, and so had the edge.
The top five placed images can be seen on our Gallery page for the season’s competition winners.
Happy New Year! We start back after the break with a real treat – the Grant Cup competition. It’s for digital images, up to three per person. It’s themed – this year’s theme is ‘Transient’. And it’s judged by the members present. So, no learned commentary from an external judge this time, just us, looking at all the entries a couple of times, then casting our votes to identify the top crowd-pleasers. Don’t miss what promises to be a great evening. Bring your own pencil.
New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription reduces by 50% after New Year, and the £27.50 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.
Last night, another evening of insight from our own ranks, as we were treated to four speakers sharing their images and skills.
John Boyd’s title, Home Training Ground, referred to the daily practise that helps us get familiar with our camera and what it can do. Satisfying images can be hard to come by when we’re struggling with our gear. On the other hand, cultivating a habit of taking photos every day helps us get to the point when the camera becomes an extension of our eye, and it’s no longer an effort to think about which settings to use. Illustrating his message with scenes from his daily dog-wallks, John has set us a challenge – to take daily images in December, and bring the best ten to share at the next Members’ Night.
Dave Moran showed us how to make an audiovisual presentation, a self-running slideshow of images with a soundtrack, perhaps to tell a story or set a mood in a way that’s a little different from a single image. His hands-on demo used PTE software (it stands for Pictures To Exec), available for Windows and Mac. There are other products, based on similar principles, offering a variety of features. Dave’s timing is spot on – an AV does take a bit of planning; our annual Simpson Cup is contested in March; and we now have four weeks off over Christmas to get organised.
Tom Ryan’s Photographing Birds in Flight suggested that, to capture striking images of small things that are both distant and fast-moving, it can be helpful to turn our back on manual settings, and instead let a modern high-end camera take a lot of the guesswork and luck out of the process. With examples from four days out over the summer, Tom showed us what’s possible, and how freeing ourselves from the technicalities lets us concentrate on the feeling we’re seeking to convey.
Finally, David Hay shared a series of images from his local walks around Pitlochry, taken during the time when local walks were the order of the day. These showed the great variety of autumn colours on the trees, mists hanging above the Tay, the way the sunlight refracts through the dewdrops – so many of nature’s wonders can be found not far from our doorsteps, even if we live in the town. David tells us that these were taken on a lightweight consumer-level camera with a plastic lens – no high-end megabuck pro gear here. But, to come back to John’s message at the start of the evening, his eye is trained by many years of daily practise.
New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription of £55 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.
Last night we were treated to an evening of judging of our mono prints, for the PKM Trophy competition. Doug Berndt from Edinburgh PS did the honours, and cast his judicious eye over our 35 prints. His commentary included his appreciation of the impact and story of each image, before considering composition and technical matters, and an assessment of photographer input.
Being a print competition, Doug also made a point of noting the choice of paper type for each entry, which for the most part he found to be appropriate to the image thereon. And he noted how helpful it is to judges when entries include a white-paper border between the image and the mount, the better to assess how the highlights appear on the chosen paper.
We met in the more intimate surroundings of the Sandeman Room, upstairs. As for the 4-Way the previous week, prints were shown on the new display stand, this time illuminated by a pair of rather large studio softboxes, before being moved to the bamboo stands around the walls. To see each print from a good angle, and to keep out of the way of the audience, Doug delivered his commentary, and his laser pointing, from the back of the room.
This week, it’s the PKM Trophy, our annual mono print competition. We’ve had to bring this forward a week, so this will be held upstairs in the Sandeman Room rather than in the theatre, which should make for a more intimate evening. Judging will be by Doug Berndt from Edinburgh PS, who was last with us in Feb 2020. We can expect him to cast a keen critical eye over our prints, with the aim of helping us think a little deeper about our work in the context of SPF-judged events.
New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription of £55 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.
Last Wednesday, we were hosts for the annual Four-Way Battle and what an interesting evening it was! Unfortunately, Glenrothes Camera Club was unable to take part this year but the three remaining clubs, Dundee, St Andrews and Perthshire Photographic Societies enjoyed an exciting contest.
The judge was Guy Phillips from Helensburgh and he started the evening by congratulating the competitors for presenting such an incredibly high standard of images. Each club entered 6 mono prints, 6 colour prints and 8 digital images. A camera was set up so that the prints could also be projected onto a screen. The prints were put on display around the room once the judge had commented on them and everyone had the chance to have a closer look at them during the break.
There were many excellent photos, with several of them receiving high scores of 20, 19 and 18 points. It was a close competition and congratulations go to the members of St Andrews Photographic Society who won by one point! Dundee PS was second and Perthshire PS was not too far behind. Overall, it was a very worthwhile evening and a lot was to be learned from listening to Guy’s comments about each photo and why he awarded the scores that he did.
This week, it’s the Annual 4-Way Photographic Competition, better known as the 4-Way Battle. It’s PPS’s turn to host, and we’ll be welcoming our regular co-battlers from Dundee and St Andrews Photographic Societies (the usual fourth club being indisposed for the time being). We’ll have a visiting judge again, from the Scottish Photographic Federation again, who will score the prints and the JPGs each out of 20, and the club with the highest combined score will be declared the winner.
As with last week’s Main Cup, for many of us it’s the judge’s comments that are the real value of these occasions, on both our own images and on those of others. Not forgetting the conversation stimulated amongst ourselves as we compare the judge’s comments with our own impressions.
New faces are still welcome to attend two weeks on a trial basis, to see if you’d like to join us for the season. For those who are ready to join, the online Membership Form for the season is open. The membership subscription of £55 can be paid by BACS or by cheque – details are in the membership form.