Tag Archives: Photography

Round Edges on Images. Not a Magnolia.

I took a few photos this last weekend. I figured I’d run them through roundpic.com to see how they look with rounded edges.

Here’s one sample – it’s a Kousa Dogwood.

Square Edges:

Rounded Edges:

The rounded edges are pretty cool. It gives a different feel and adds more character. Check out roundpic.com to test out your own image. The only downside I noticed with using roundpic.com is that it can strip Adobe color profiles from images causing colors to be slightly different. Check the two images above and you’ll see the correct color profile in the squared version (if your browser recognizes color profiles; Safari does), and stripped color profile in the rounded version. Oh well. Maybe 2.0 will solve this little side-effect.

Renaming Images Based on EXIF Data

I take a lot of photographs. Thousands per year. I’ve been keeping them on DVD and on hard drives for years, but recently I noticed an odd thing – the “date created” and “date modified” reported in Finder have been wrong. Not just a little wrong, like a day or two off, but upwards of four years off, sometimes with no logical correlation to the original shoot date. I’ve pulled some images into Windows Explorer to see if it’d report proper “creation” dates, but it did not.

This creates a problem for me because I like to keep images sorted by date. And unfortunately, my file naming practices have changed over the years. I used to name files by event, like “Dallas BBQ – IMG 0001.JPG”. Useless for sorting by date. At one point, I added the date into the file name, but at the end. Also useless. Then I stopped renaming and left the file as named by the camera, like “IMG_7538.JPG”. That’s great, but when I upgrade cameras, the file names often start over at IMG_0001, and I certainly don’t want my new images to replace my existing files! Imagine 35,000 photos with inconsistent file names, then imagine them with incorrect file data. When the file info is screwy, the sorting and organizing becomes a hellish nightmare. Not even iPhoto can organize things properly.

Allow me to introduce the little application that saved my sanity – ExifRenamer. It’s a simple app – terribly simple – but it solved all my image renaming problems in a matter of seconds. ExifRenamer looks at the Exif data stored in your digital photos (date shot, for example) and renames the files based on that Exif data. In my case, I wanted ExifRenamer to add the exact shoot date as a file name prefix, then use the existing file name as a suffix. So “IMG_8399.JPG” instantly becomes “20071108 14-21-06 – IMG_8399.JPG” with down-to-the-second accuracy.

Check out this little video clip wherein I run some of my images through ExifRenamer. You’ll see how fast it works, but pay particular attention to the “Date Modified” column. Finder says these images were Created On and Modified On December 4, 2007. Bull-honkey. Check the proper output from ExifRenamer. 2003, 2004 and 200-frikin-5!

The best part about ExifRenamer… it’s free. Check versiontracker.com for the most up-to-date download.

A Quick & Easy White Box (Light Box) for Product Photography

I thought I’d post a little photography-based tip for those who are interested. It’s how I built an inexpensive but very effective white box (or light box) for white-background photography. After searching numerous websites for suggestions on white boxes, I was left pretty disappointed. The cardboard box suggestions were the worst. They resulted in sloppy contraptions that gave awful color integrity.

At long last, I found a short mention of using white foamboard from Office Depot (Staples, whatever). Desperate, I went with that suggestion and was very pleasantly surprised with the results. I bought several 2′ x 3′ sheets of white foamboard – five in total. The foamboard’s ultra-white surface has the wonderful ability to gently disperse light. The foamboard is also very rigid and makes it easy to construct a 5 sided box that doesn’t get wobbly or weak.

I used a full-sized sheet of foamboard for the bottom surface. I cut 2′ x 2.5′ squares from two foamboard sheets and used them for the left and right sides. A 2′ x 2′ square was used for the back of the box and a 2′ x 2.5′ sheet for the top. Standard masking tape was used to affix the boards together and create the standing box. I would have preferred to use white duct tape or white masking tape, but neither Home Depot nor Office Depot had any in stock.

The slightly-longer bottom extends out from the box for a little more white runway in angled photos. I then used a razor knife to carefully cut several flaps in the top of the box for properly angled lights. These flaps can be opened or closed, depending on what angle I want light to shine. Cutting holes (and not flaps) is discouraged, because it causes a permanent light drain, inhibits internal reflection and, if you’re shooting anything highly-reflective (like glass, bottles, etc.), the dark hole will show up as an annoying artifact on your object.

To reduce the inevitable horizon line from the bottom joint of foamboard sheets, I used a couple sheets of ultra-white paper taped to the backboard of the box, with a sloping angle, then taped to the bottom foamboard sheet.

As for lighting, I used three cheap articulating lamps from IKEA. They cost $8 each. They’re awesome because the insides of the lamps are coated in bright white paint. The key element in this setup is the actual light bulbs. Standard incandescent bulbs cast a terrible orange glow that can ruin shots. I opted for bulbs that had near-perfect light. They’re “daylight” CFL (compact florescent) bulbs that have a color temperature of about 5000 or 5500. (Incandescent bulbs have color temps around 8000-9000 – way, way too orange for any decent photos.)

With the white box built and the bright white bulbs installed, I set up a tripod for some test shots. Here are a few test results:

Not too shabby. Certainly better than white sheets, white felt, white linoleum or goofy cloth-style pop-up photo tents.

P.S. I found that placing a thin sheet of clear plexiglas on the bottom of the white box helps create a neat reflection under certain objects, similar to the drop reflection common to Apple’s product photos.