Established in 1949. The Society exists to further the skills, interests and enjoyment of all types of photography. It provides a forum for the exchange of information and ideas on photographic techniques, and encourages an appreciation of the artistic and creative side of photography. Members of all levels of achievement are encouraged to show and discuss their work. No photographic knowledge required - just enjoy viewing photographs and the night out!

Wednesday, 31 October 2007

Report from Ripon Photographic Society 29/10/07

Unbelievable images taken from the cockpit of a Tornado bombing airfields in Iraq. This was Rob Woods own photographic journey of his war.


It started in Bahrein as he trained in the desert terrain and ended with the ceasefire and return of his best mate, shot down and given up for dead. No phoney film effects but real live bombs,bullets and missiles.

The whole room was hushed as the screen lit up with a photogrph of red tracer fire filling the sky and Rob graphicly describing how he flew through the middle of it to drop his bombs. Wow !!!

Robs candid and lucid commentary imformed and entertained us and he richly deserved the applause at the end.


Jim

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Website Visitors March-October 2007

Website Visitor Details to 31st October.



Tuesday, 30 October 2007

Upcoming Events 5th November

Join us on the 5th of November for the results of our creative competition.
This year judged by Patrick Couzens.

As usual will start at 7.30pm in the Hugh Ripley Hall in Ripon, click for map.

Visitors welcome (small £2 charge).

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Guardian Photography Guides

Lots of good articles and guides at the Guardian Newpaper's website.
http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/photography

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Photology, photo organising software

Photology, set for public release today, is a new photo cataloging and organizing software that will help you make sense of all those photos named "DSC00012.jpg" or something equally unremarkable on your hard drive. Who really has the time at this point to go back and "tag", or group into folders, or make sense of the traffic choke of photos, years in the making, on their computers? If you've been waiting for that rainy day (that hasn't happened yet) Photology might be the solution you've been looking for.
Read more http://tinyurl.com/38q63r

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Resizing you images using Photoshop Elements 4

This PDF document shows you one way to resize your images for the digital competitions using Photoshop Elements 4.

Click here to view the instructions.

If you have any questions post a message in the forum or drop me an email.

Alastair

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Monday, 29 October 2007

Upcoming Events 29th October

Join us on the 29th of October for a lecture on photographing the Gulf War by Rob Wood.

As usual will start at 7.30pm in the Hugh Ripley Hall in Ripon, click for map.

Visitors welcome (small £2 charge).

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

How to Remove Tourists from Your Photos

Every notable landmark seems to have one thing in common: visitors, and lots of them. But if you want that postcard shot or that image that shows how the location may have once appeared, you have a challenge ahead of you. This digital photography and PhotoShop tutorial will provide a means to remove the tourist throngs from your vacation images.

Read full tutorial at http://tinyurl.com/yj9o4v

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Friday, 26 October 2007

Ripon City Photographic Society on Flickr

Are you a member of the image sharing site Flickr?

I have just created a group for members of RCPS to post their photographs.

Pop along to http://www.flickr.com/groups/rcps/ and submit some of your work.


Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

GNU Image Manipulation, Photoshop-like software free!

There is a new version of the GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP) available for PCs and Macs.

This gives you a "Photoshop like" image edited package at zero cost.

Well worth a look if you are on a tight budget.

Dowload from http://www.gimp.org

Some online video tutorials to get you started http://tinyurl.com/34cusp

Help and tutorials at http://docs.gimp.org/en/

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

York Photographic Society

York Photographic Society is a friendly welcoming society with a membership that includes all ages, abilities and photographic interests - whether prints or slides, traditional or contemporary in outlook.

We are always willing to share knowledge, experience and enthusiasm with like minded photographers, through a varied programme of internal and external speakers on a wide range of topics.

Read more at http://www.yorkps.org.uk/



Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Food Photography Tutorials

Some tutorials on photographing food, idea for the upcoming Presidents competition.

Read More at http://tinyurl.com/2mbhsp

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Sunday, 21 October 2007

Shooting photographs for stock libraries

An interesting article giving advice on how to shoot for stock libraries.

Read More http://tinyurl.com/ywo2xm


Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page
Google Groups

Friday, 19 October 2007

Beginner's Guide to Photography

Bernie's Better Beginner's Guide to Photography for those Who Want to be Digital Artists


http://www.berniecode.com/writing/photography/beginners/

Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page Google Groups

Thursday, 11 October 2007

How to Create a Panorama with Photoshop and Photomerge


How to Create a Panorama with Photoshop and Photomerge

A panorama is simply a wide-angled view of a physical space. To the photographer a panorama is usually several photographs that are stitched together horizontally to create a seamless picture.

This is going to be a pretty simple tutorial in which we create a panorama using Photoshop’s Photomerge utility.

Read More

Monday, 8 October 2007

Key Ingredients for Black and White Images

Digital Camera Magazine (UK) has a useful feature in their October issue on Black and White photography. It contains a lot of good information - but one of the topics that they cover was on how to ’see in black and white’.

Read More



Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page

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Lots of tutorials

http://www.tutorialized.com/ has lots of tutorials for Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro and other programs.

Well worth a look.



Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page

Google Groups

External Competition - Digital Photography Competition - Round Five

You chance to win some prizes in October's competition from Trusted Reviews.
This competition is not run by Ripon City Photographic Society, please don't send your pictures to us.



The theme for October is "SPORT & RECREATION", and the closing date for submissions is October 31st 2007.




The Prizes
Just to recap in case you've been stationed at the secret base on the far side of the Moon for the past four months, we are running a regular monthly photography competition that will give you the chance to show off your best photos, and to win some very nice prizes. Each month we'll announce a new theme and a closing date, and then you'll have one month to submit a photo on that theme. Starting this month, we will now be offering prizes not just for the overall winner, but also for the two runners-up.

TrustedReviews - Digital Photography Competition - Round Five

Friday, 5 October 2007

Guestbook and Forum

I've added a Guestbook and Forum to the website.

This will allow visitors to leave their feedback (in the guest book) and ask questions and get answers (in the forum).

Have a look.



Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page

Google Groups

Thursday, 4 October 2007

Twelve Essential Photographic Rules

From Sunny 16 to Moony 11, 8, and 5.6, these facts, formulas, and photographic rules can get you out of a jam and help you get good shots when nothing else will.


September 2007

What happens when your systems go belly-up, when all of that cutting-edge technology dies and you must rely on (gasp!) your own knowledge? It pays to have these basics in your head. They can get you out of a jam and help you get good shots when nothing else will.

1. Sunny 16 Rule
The basic exposure for an average scene taken on a bright, sunny day is f/16 at a shutter speed equivalent to one over the ISO setting—that is, f/16 at 1/100 sec at ISO 100. From this you can interpolate, and try f/22 at the beach, f/11 on a cloudy-bright day, etc.

2. Moony 11, 8, and 5.6 Rules
There are many different rules that work well when shooting the moon. One favorite for a proper exposure of a full moon is f/11 at one over the ISO setting. For pictures of a half moon, use the same shutter speed at f/8, and for a quarter moon, use the same shutter speed at f/5.6.

3. Camera Shake Rule
The slowest shutter speed at which you can safely handhold a camera is one over the focal length of the lens in use. As shutter speeds get slower, camera shake is likely to result in an increasing loss of sharpness. So, if you're using a 50mm lens, shoot at 1/60 sec or faster. Not enough light? Use a flash, tripod, or brace your camera against a solid object.

4. Anatomical Gray Card
Metering off an 18-percent neutral gray card is a good way to get a midtone reading that will give you a good overall exposure of a scene. Forgot your gray card? Hold your open hand up so it's facing the light, take a reading off your palm, open up one stop, and shoot. (Various skin tones rarely account for even a full-stop difference.)

5. Depth of Field Rules
When focusing on a deep subject, focus on a point about a third of the way into the picture to maximize depth of field, because the depth-of-field zone behind that point is about twice as deep as the depth-of-field zone in front of it. This works for all apertures and focal lengths, but the smaller the aperture and the shorter the focal length, and the greater the distance you shoot at, the greater the depth of field.

6. Largest Digital Print Rule
To calculate in inches the largest photo-quality print you can make with a digital camera, divide the vertical and horizontal pixel counts (see your manual) by 200. For critical applications, or if you want exhibition-quality prints, divide the pixel counts by 250.

7. Exposure Rules
The classic advice is, "Expose for the highlights, and let the shadows take care of themselves." This works with slide film and digital. But with negative film, especially color negative, you're better off overexposing by one stop.

8. Quick Flash-fill Rule
When using an automatic flash unit that doesn't provide auto flash-fill ratios, set the flash's ISO dial to twice the ISO you're using. Meter the scene, select an f-stop, set the autoflash aperture to the same f-stop, and shoot. The resulting 2:1 flash-fill ratio will produce filled shadows one stop darker than the main subject.

9. Flash Range Rule
Want to know how much extra flash range you get by going to a faster ISO? The rule is, "Double the distance, four times the speed." For example: If your flash is good to 20 feet at ISO 100 (film or digital), it will be good to 40 feet at ISO 400.

10. Megapixel Multiplier Rule
To double the resolution in a digital camera, you must increase the number of megapixels by a factor of four—not two. Why? The number of pixels in both the vertical and horizontal dimensions must be doubled to double the pixel density across the image sensor.

11. Action-stopping Rules
To stop action moving across the frame that's perpendicular to the lens axis, you need shutter speeds two stops faster than action moving toward or away from you. For action moving at a 45-degree angle to the lens axis, you can use a shutter speed one stop slower. For example: If a person running toward you at moderate speed can be stopped at 1/125 sec, you'll need a shutter speed of 1/500 sec to stop the subject moving across the frame, and a shutter speed of 1/250 sec to stop him if moving obliquely with respect to the camera.

12. Sunset Rule
To get a properly exposed sunset, meter the area directly above the sun (without including the sun). If you want the scene to look like it's a half-hour later, stop down by one f-stop, or set exposure compensation to minus one.

Twelve Essential Photographic Rules - - PopPhotoSeptember 2007: "Twelve Essential Photographic Rules"

Wednesday, 3 October 2007

Tutorial on Contrast

This tutorial covers the basics of contrast in your pictures.

Contrast is the difference in tone in your picture. Specifically the difference between the brightest colors in the pictures (called highlights) to the darkest colors in the picture (called shadows). Usually talking about contrast goes hand in hand with talking about hard light and soft light.

Read the full thing at Back to Basics - Contrast | DIYPhotography.net

Tuesday, 2 October 2007

IMAGES INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB

English speaking photography club of The Hague

“IMAGES” has been in existence in The Hague since 1984, and has a growing and committed membership, despite the constant change in the expatriate community in the area. Members come from many different countries and span many ages. All interests are covered: prints and slides, colour and black & white, and digital. We are a friendly, enthusiastic group of photographers and we motivate and learn from each other by exchanging ideas, developing new skills and critiquing each other's photos. We do our best to cater for beginners as well as for experienced photographers - through help, advice, exchange of information and new challenges.

http://www.imagesphotoclub.com/index.html




Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page

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Club Night 1st October 2008

Agony Aunties David, Michael and Andrew attempted to heal the rift between Camera, Computer and their precocious son The Photograph.

Poor image, disappearing pixels could be cured with a small TIFF file. Shooting RAW can create extra work but does give a lifelike exposure. Members clamoured for more..Apple or Microsoft, it's down to the individual, Canon or Nikon, it depends on your budget but Natural History must be kept pure, and No titles on your prints. That's what aunt Andrew said.

To see if the advice from the Aunties was taken visit us on October 15th, 7.30 pm Hugh Ripley Hall, it's judgement day for the dreaded Square Format Competition.
Members then seemed happy to seal the union for another year as they pinned cheques to Andrews designer jeans.

Next week its a the turn of our members to judge photographs sent from our colleagues in the Hague Photographic group, Holland. Light hearted fun, details phone 01765604353 or see Alastair's work on www. riponphotographic.co.uk..


Jim



Ripon City Photographic Society Main Page

Google Groups

Monday, 1 October 2007

The Hague Photo Exchange

We need up to four photos on disc to send to the dutch club ( http://www.imagesphotoclub.com/ )

They will need them for the 3rd Tuesday in October but we must have time to get them formatted into the correct size and onto one disc.

Michael will raise it at the next meeting but we were thinking that it would be good to get entries in by the 8th October as this is the day we will view the dutch photos and comment on.

Either bring in them in on a disk for Monday 8th or email them to Sarah here ripon.cps@googlemail.com

Thanks

Kathy




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