Colby Brown, a photographer, photo educator and author based in Boulder, will be the featured speaker at the Flatirons Photo Club meeting June 9.
Brown is a Sony Artisan of Imagery who has led workshops for National Geographic. He specializes in landscape, travel and humanitarian photography.
In 2011, he founded The Giving Lens, an organization that blends photo education with support for various non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and causes around the world. The Giving Lens helps fight for child education, clean drinking water projects, species preservation, women’s rights and more.
Brown creates and helps run social influencer marketing campaigns for some of the biggest companies and destinations in the world, including Sony, Samsung, Toshiba, Iceland Naturally, Jordan Tourism Board, Australia.com, Travel Alberta, and Visit California. He also is a Wacom Ambassador, an X-Rite Coloratti, a G-Technology G-Team Ambassador. His website is at http://www.colbybrownphotography.com
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Tonight’s Photographic Frontiers Study Group meeting
If you’ve been taking photos with your phone (and if you haven’t, why not?), tonight’s Photographic Frontiers Study Group meeting is probably right up your alley. The announcement from Cary Wolfson, who will present tonight, is at the end of this email. Remember to bring in on thumb drive any photo you’re working on that you’d like to discuss.
From Cary:
Sure we’ve all spent beaucoup $$$ on our DSLRs and mirrorless rigs, along with the lenses and accoutrements that go with them. But most of the time are we schlepping that stuff around with us? Probably not. OTOH, nearly all of us have cellphones or tablets and most of THEM have really good cameras built in. At this month’s Digital Frontiers Group I’ll be showing you how to make those mobile images pop with an app that doesn’t even cost a dime: Snapseed. Plus, it’ll work with both iOS and Android.
Check out the attached image that I shot with my iPhone in our backyard and then processed with Snapseed. OK, maybe it’s just about the only image that didn’t receive a “5” in last month’s competition, but I still think it’s pretty cool. Cool
I’ll give you a rundown on most of the app’s features, show you some before and after shots, and then take you step by step through my workflow as I process an unretouched picture. You can download the app and bring your phone/tablet with you and follow along. (Did I mention that it’s FREE?) As usual, we will meet at Boulder Digital Arts in Boulder, at 1600 Range St., from 7 to 9 p.m., so come on down.
May 2016 Competition Results
The judge was Glenn Asakawa. The special topic was trains.
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Savanah Central,” John Harmon
- Award, Digital Realism, “Fire Breather,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “Kestrel in Flight,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Realism, “Indonesian Siesta,” Jim Downs
- Award, Print Special Topic, “Caboose,” Bruce Henderson
- Award, Digital Realism, “Gate to Nowhere,” Mia Mestdagh
- Award, Digital Realism, “Reflections,” Jan Otto
- Award, Digital Realism, “Business Sucks,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “No Easy Way Out,” Mia Mestdagh
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Eiger Train,” John Kieffer
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Dining Car,” Bruce Henderson
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Luminous Iris on Black,” Cary Wolfson
- Award, Digital Realism, “Desert Art,” Mia Mestdagh
- Award, Digital Special Topic, Kmakura Tracks, Cary Wolfson
- Award, Print Realism, “Cow Man,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “Molokai Milky Way,” Ilene Meyers
- Award, Print Special Effects, “Arnett Fullen House,” Cary Wolfson
- Award, Digital Realism, “Wasp,” John Harmon
- Award, Print Realism, “Fan Dancer,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Realism, “Indian Kitchen,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “Ranch Gate,” Kent Copeland
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Paris Train,” John Kieffer
- Award, Print Special Effects, “Red Paua Patterns,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Amsterdam Train,” John Kieffer
- Award, Digital Realism, “Arno at Daybreak,” Richard Smith
- Award, Digital Realism, “Budding Hair Stylist,” Jim Downs
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Water Pattern,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Ternate Moluccas Street Market,” Jim Downs
- Award, Digital Realism, “Mallorca Beach,” Ning Mosberger Tang
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Patina,” Donna Colville
- Award, Digital Realism, “1964 Italian Grand Prix,” Richard Smith
- Award, Digital Realism, “Terrorist,” John Harmon
- Award, Print Realism, “Paradis Divide,” Donna Colville
- Award, Digital Realism, “Kalaupapa Overlook,” Ilene Meyers
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Whirrled Affairs,” Gail Dohrman
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Swiss Train,” Ning Mosberger-Tang
- Award, Digital Realism, “Nesting,” Jan Otto
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Train Graffiti,” Gail Dohrmann
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Autumn,” Ning Mosberger-Tang
- Award, Digital Realism, “Reflection, Neon Canyon,” Peter Bandurian
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Rio Grande,” Bruce Henderson
April 2016 Competition Results
The judge was Robert Castellino. The special topic was Macro.
- Honorable mention, Print Special Topic, “Sky Drop,” Kirk Fry
- Award, Print Special Topic, “Ammonite Galaxy,” Bruce Henderson
- Honorable mention, Print Realism, “The Wave,” Kirk Fry
- Honorable mention, Digital Special Effects, “Wild Pantry,” Gail Dohrmann
- Honorable mention, Digital Special Effects, “Skogafoss Falls,” Kirk Fry
- Honorable mention, Digital Special Effects, “Firedancer,” Chris Gimbel
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Encased,” Charlie Anderson
- Award, Digital Realism, “Peeping Billy,” Cary Wolfson
- Honorable mention, Print Special Topic, “Mushroom Row,” Kirk Fry
- Honorable mention, Digital Realism, “Hawaii Wave,” Ning Mosberger-Tang
- Honorable mention, Digital Special Effects, “Pink,” Kelly Bevilacqua
- Award, Print Special Effects, “Nouveaux Honky,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “Early Morning,” Ning Mosberger-Tang
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Girl Jumping,” Ning Mosberger-Tang
- Honorable mention, Digital Realism, “Cranes,” Chris Gimbel
- Honorable mention, Digital Realism, “Kimono Gals,” Cary Wolfson
- Honorable mention, Special Topic, “Red,” Kelly Bevilacqua
Thomas Walsh’s art opening at Boulder Digital Arts
In the most recent club newsletter it was announced that Thomas Walsh would have an opening on Friday, April 15 at Boulder Digital Arts. Due to a scheduling conflict, the date of the opening had to be changed. Thomas will send out Evites for the rescheduled event. Please be aware that there will not be an opening tomorrow, April 15.
Presentation by Thomas Walsh. Tuesday, April 5, 7-9 p.m.
A number of photo club members are aware of the work, including videography, that Thomas Walsh has done to bring some attention to the very extensive, yet rarely mentioned, abuse of children by nuns. On Tuesday, April 5, Thomas will give a presentation on the subject from 7 to 9 p.m. at Tina Davis Studio, 947 Kimbark St., Longmont. The meeting will take place under the auspices of LightOn Creatives for Community, a Longmont based group of creatives actively involved in further expanding the already burgeoning Longmont art scene.
Photographic Frontiers Study Group Meeting This Wednesday, April 6—Post-Processing Videos
Oaken Beeson will follow up his well-attended and enthusiastically received talk last month with another overview of videography for photographers. Those who attended last month know that Oaken is very knowledgeable and excellent at explaining. It’s time you hit that record video button on your cameras, folks. Come learn how to proceed after the initial capture. As usual, we will meet at Boulder Digital Arts in Boulder, at 1600 Range St., from 7 to 9 p.m. Oaken’s announcement:
“Editing and Encoding: What to do with those video files!
“In the next chapter of our DSLR video course we’ll go over transferring those files off of your camera, into an editing program, and exporting out a completed video. We will use Premiere Pro CC and Adobe Media Encoder to go over basic editing techniques, basic coloring, and encoding file types. Feel free to bring your laptop and go though the process on hand if you have an Adobe subscription, but most of what will be covered is also applicable to other editing programs. Keeping in line with the previous DSLR class, everything will be kept simple and easy, making your own videos does not need o be a complicated and lengthy process, with a few simple tricks you can import, edit and export out a completed video in 15 minutes. So bring your cameras, bring your laptops or just bring a notebook, and let’s finally get those video files out there for everyone to see!”
March 2016 Competition Results
Robert Morrissey was the featured speaker and competition judge. The special topic was the Flatirons.
- Award, Digital Realism, “Whatcom Park Bridge,” Cary Wolfson
- Award, Print Special Effects, “A Peeling Abstraction,” Vandy VAndervort
- Award, Digital Realism, “Touch and Go,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Realism, “Italian Pasta,” Vandy Vandervort
- Award, Print Special Effects, “Chinatown Vendor,” Cary Wolfson
- Award, Print Special Effects, “Water is the Domain of Ducks,” Bruce Henderson
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Dinosaur Among Us,” Mia Mestdagh
- Award, Digital Realism, “Kauai Sunrise,” Ilene Meyers
- Award, Digital Realism, “Artichoke Sun Bather,” Kent Copeland
- Award, Digital Realism, “Prairie Smoke Portrait,” Kent Copeland
- Award, Print Special Topic, “The Formation of the Flatirons,” Bruce Henderson
- Award, Digital Special Effects, “Aspens and Waves,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Realism, “Crooked Doors to the Past,” Kent Copeland
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “Flatirons,” Richard Smith
- Award, Digital Realism, “Close Encounter,” Mia Mestdagh
- Award, Digital Special Topic, “April Snowfall in the Flatirons,” John Harmon
- Award, Print Realism, “Good Grass,” Cal Whitehall
- Award, Digital Realism, “Analog Fashion,” Tricia Rubio
Robert Morrissey speaker March 10
Robert Morrissey, director and executive photographer of Morrissey and Associates, a Longmont-based commercial photography organization, will be the featured speaker at the Flatirons Photo Club meeting and competition at 7 p.m. this Thursday, March 10, at Har HaShem Synagogue in Boulder.
Morrissey is the recipient of numerous awards from Canon and Kodak and is a Phase One featured photographer. Published internationally more than 100,000 times, he holds a degree in photography from the Kansas City Art Institute and has more than 25 years experience in the field. He has been published in almost every photographic genre and style there is.
Morrissey also is the author of iPhoneography Pro: Techniques for Taking Your iPhone Photography to the Next Level; Commercial Photographer’s Master Lighting Guide; and Master Lighting Guide for Commercial Photographers.
His company specializes in product photography, medical photography, 4K video production, portrait photography, fashion photography, catalog photography, advertising photography and food photography. His national clients include: FDC Chassis, Golite, Albertsons, Kraft Foods, Horizon Dairy, Pearl Izumi, Celestial Seasonings, Case Logic, Devilbiss Medical, Novocol, Sunrise Medical, Longmont Dairy, Ultimate Electronics, Sony, Olympus Cameras, Chimera Lighting, Schneider Optics, GE, Disney, Kyocera, AJA, University of Colorado-Denver, University Colorado-Boulder, University of Missouri, KACI, and more.
His company website is at http://www.morrisseyphoto.com and his Facebook page is at https://www.facebook.com/Robert-Morrissey-Collection-62327716796/.
Photographic Frontiers Study Group Meeting this Wednesday, March 2—Videography for Photographers
Folks, if you haven’t yet hit that “Record Video” button on your camera, the time has come. This Wednesday’s Photographic Frontiers Study Group will be a great opportunity to see and hear an overview from basics to some advanced techniques. Oaken Beeson of Seed Design and Production will give a presentation on videography for photographers using DSLRs. As usual, we will meet at Boulder Digital Arts in Boulder, at 1600 Range St, from 7 to 9 p.m. Here’s Oaken’s announcement:
ANNOUNCEMENT:
From Photographer to Videographer: Using your DSLR to take professional quality video
We will discuss opening up your DSLR to another range of possibilities. Going over everything from settings to proper frame rates to the equipment used in professional videography. The worlds of photo and video are completely different but it doesn’t need to be difficult to switch between the two. We will simplify and compare how the two are alike to make it an easier transition for the mind of a photographer. This is not intended to teach composition and basic photography, the class is directed towards photographers who have already learned the basic principles; aspect ratios, shutter speed, framing, etc. Feel free to bring in your cameras for hands on instruction!