Tuesday, July 30, 2013

5 Best Mobile Apps For Android Photography

Photographers are in the catbird seat. Camera technology is much more affordable than ever before. Even if you can’t spring for a Hassleblad or Leica, both considered to be the Cadillac status of camera gear, you most likely can afford the camera that lives inside your cell phone.
For the purpose of examining what a smaller budget can buy, mobile devices offer decent quality. Using an IPhone or Android camera phone is advantageous: it takes up very little room and the varied app market is readily available. With a quick download at a modest cost, and in many instances free, apps are ready to use instantly. Add the apps to the cost of a mobile phone (anywhere from $200 -$400) and you can easily enjoy becoming a fully equipped mobile device shooter. Compare that system to a full version of Adobe Photoshop ($489) or even its pedestrian equivalent, Adobe Elements, ($62), and the cost of a camera (from $200 to $7000), it’s plain to see the savings add up. Apps take considerably less time to learn and the phone comes in handy too!
Five awesome apps for mobile Android phones are:
Snapseed: Free! Ten adjustments tools: align, crop, grunge layers, contrast, saturation and vintage effects that can be cumulatively applied.





Instagram: Free! Comes with 20 filters, square format, selective blur.










EyeEm: Free! Rectangular shape format similar to 35mm, adjustment colors, grunge effects, and cropping tool.








RetroCamera: $2.99 Lomography, Polaroid, Pinhole camera, 35 mm film edges and light leaks effects.







Vignette: $2.60 Has numerous settings such as Holga and Diana styles, Instant camera, retro, film grain, pastel colors, light leaks, colored filters, soft-focus, monochrome, b&w, filter intensity, self-timer, time lapse and customizable filters settings.
All of the above apps have share capability. Since all the editing is done in the device, users can quickly share to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr or app specific galleries. 

EyeEm for example, has periodic meet-ups within certain cities. You can create your own meet ups and start a photo live event. Part of the fun of photography is sharing works, and the affordability factor is consumer favorable. Here’s to making art – and being snap hAPPy!

Friday, July 26, 2013

New Kid On The App Block

Instagram isn't the only kid on the app block. I recently started using the EyeEm app and what I like best about it is the use of the rectangular frame. It reminds me of 35 mm, albeit a bit longer and narrower.

I am still in awe over the quality of images the Android takes. The ease of use factor is phenomenal. Combine that with being able to tweak on the run is what makes apps so appealing. EyeEm has similar filters that Instagram has such as vintage, b&w, and a set of processed color filters that range from a cyanotype effect to a faded light effect. In addition to color shifting, EyeEm has a grunge effect which gives the image an antique feel.

The danger to using too many creative filters is the image then becomes more about the process than about the content. Many critics might argue phone photography isn't as serious as that coming from a camera. I think capturing a scene with a mobile device doesn't have any less intent than that of one made from a camera.

Photography isn't inherently serious or not. It's a technical process whereby the tool is the one you happen to have. Yes, indeed the fancier the lens the better the image quality, but where visual reference is concerned today's mobile phone devices do a decent enough job when the user familiarize themselves with the feature of that device.

Ben Lowry, a pro photojournalist, uses apps to accentuate images. Lowry employs mobile photography for documenting life in Sarajevo and uses the Clara filter from the EyeEm app. Lowry states the Clara filter is "Best for shooting outdoors in sunny conditions."

Using apps with digital photography is analogous to knowing the difference between film ratings of ASA 100 to ASA 800. The app is a setting of sorts just as the film speed must be appropriate for each specific light scenario. Photography is all about technique even when the technique is that of additional editing to the original source file.

The following images were taken on a Motorola Android paired with the EyeEm app:





Sunday, July 21, 2013

Pitch: Why Photography Works To Tell Your Story

Photography is society's memory keeper. It acts as visual reference to news, be it good or bad. It serves many a referee when it comes to declaring a questionable play. Brides and grooms and ad agencies alike, rely on photography to capture emotions and purchasing power of the wide-eyed consumer.

It seems photography sells itself and yet now more than ever, a career in photography requires the photographer to be versed in many skills such as technician, artist, marketer, accountant and web designer.

As much as digital technologies made image making more accessible, the need to declare the pitch for work will always be necessary.

I shoot live events for news reporting, corporate communications, weddings and portraits. Photography is a good tool for communicating ideas and commemorating events:


To see the referenced videos in presentation see below: 

'Animal Love' Featuring the Meriden Human Society

Bread For Life PSA

To see work samples visit: http://www.margaretwaage.com

Friday, July 19, 2013

Selfies: Grist For The Social Media Mill

Selfies are the new 'self-portrait' - have you heard? They're quick and easy, extended arm shots of the star of the genre - you! Not well thought out but popular nonetheless, selfies immortalize the moment. The majority of selfies are good times, of the moment, sometimes inebriated, moments. The digital files will typically live on your mobile device, that is unless you take the time to transfer the file onto a storage device other than that you keep in you back pocket.

Do selfies have value? They do to the millions of Facebook users. Selfies are visual currency for any social media platform, where once snapped, the image goes along its happy, sharable way onto the Internet via Tumblr, Instagram or other platform of choice.

Selfies are autobiographical memes of sorts. They provide fun at the taker's own expense. They can be compared to snapshot photography. The snapshot genre is meant to be a recording of the time and place of a vacation spot or family gathering. Selfies take that idea, of a timestamp, and simply is applied to oneself. The difference between the two is that snapshot mostly shows the landscape, and selfies, show the self as landscape.

Of the two I prefer landscape. I like to see a place I've never been from the point of view of the photographer. If I were to visit that place, chances of me taking the same photo are slim. The time of day and weather conditions would have to be identical and even if they were, how can my image be similar to one before?

Selfies cannot be duplicated for obvious reasons. No two people are alike. I prefer self-portraits over selfies because they seem to contain a higher level of concept than just a 'snap' of a mobile device.

Selfies have become increasingly popular due to the proliferation of digital technologies. See the following article by Casey N. Cep on how that came to pass: http://tinyurl.com/mkfnpep

Do you find value in selfies?

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Photos Tell Stories - What is Yours?

Pictures are like food to me. Good ones, bad ones, images that shock, images that impress with the quality of light that seems possible only in a Hollywood film. A steady diet of imagery represent ideas worth exploring, problems worth working out and stories worth telling. Pictures are digested - they are consumed by the masses. Think of every Instagram, Facebook or Tumblr feed. Are you looking at those? Do you contribute to those? If they don't apply to you then you won't know what I am telling you.

Photography is not a new idea and the process has been around for quite some time. Photographic digital technology has become as common as getting dressed in the morning. Images are footprints, measuring how users navigate their days.

How to make a distinct statement in image creation is the challenge. What significance will my images have compared to the thousands of others being created simultaneously? My images belong to me. They are my footprint. Where my path crosses yours is the avenue I'd like to pursue. Are you ready to tell your story? What is important to you? Can you share that - can you allow me into your life to tell your story?

This portrait marks the time I am spending with husband in San Francisco. I liked his expression and how his body is relaxed. Documenting how we look is something that most everyone can relate to. We don't all look like young, gorgeous models, because we're not like that in real life! I like images that appear as real as I can capture them.

Give this a thought. Consider the exchange. We may share similar life circumstances. Give a look at my work, and give me a call.

I am interested in shooting portraits and hearing what you have to say!

I am in Connecticut but have wheels and can travel. Seeking collaboration:
http://www.margaretwaage.com
mobile 203 228-0277

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Curious About You

Two things are certain in life. You know what they are: death and taxes. We can't seem to escape these inevitable circumstances. What happens between the two, life and living, is something everyone has some control over.

I'm interested in hearing how your life is going. Are you aging the way you imagined? Does the Affordable Health Care Act seem a good thing as you discover new aches and pains? Do you approach each day as a blessing or just another day of getting through a series of obstacles?

I am interested in your story. I want to know because knowing how life is for you, helps me appreciate how life is for me.

Wanted: your story. In return, I provide a listening ear, a portrait or video testimonial. This project aims to connect human beings to the experience we both share: our time and how we manage it.

Do you have a project you need help with getting the word out? Consider this an open pitch for assistance with telling your story. I offer photography | video | writing services. Consultation by appointment:

Web: http://www.margaretwaage.com
Mobile: 203 228-0277

Work samples include:

'Animal Love'

'Bread For Life' PSA


Elevator Pitch

An abbreviated elevator pitch of sorts, the 6-word memoir. The origin of the idea says novelist Ernest Hemingway was asked to write a story in six words. The results: “For Sale: baby shoes, never worn.”

The more concise the writing, the more meaningful each word. The exercise makes Twitter seem long in comparison! Six words can mean so much ~ here are mine: Camera in hand, connection in mind.

What's important to you is worth recording. I am available for hire for video testimonials, portraits, corporate communications, public relations, business announcements, blogging.



Friday, July 5, 2013

Persona Presence in Photography: Examined

The idea of being in two places simultaneously has been a great plot for several great sci-fi movies. Remember 'Back To The Future' when Michael J. Fox travels back in time to play match maker to his parents - before he was born? The movie was a hit and transformed the single blockbuster into a trilogy.

Science fiction gives audiences the opportunity to suspend plausibility, and at the very least, to be entertained. Photographic self-portraiture presents itself as an opportunity for photographers to be in two places at once, and in some cases, to recreate themselves as fictional characters.

Cindy Sherman dubbed 'Queen of the Self-Portrait' by the New York Times, creates masterful images of herself posed as unique fictitious characters. Each image in 'Untitled Film Stills' series is Sherman's interpretation of female personae that she crafted. Using clothing and props to further capture the essence of a character, Sherman embodies the imaginary world. The camera acts as a stage and the resulting portraiture, is a host of women that sometimes resemble Sherman.

What is striking about Sherman's photography is it transforms a traditional genre of self-portraiture into something entirely different. By using herself as both model and photographer, Sherman's work is sometimes referred to as self-portraits. Because of the nature of Sherman's process (dressing up in character for the photo) the resulting images Sherman created is more accurately known as conceptual photography.

A traditional self-portrait might otherwise depict the subject as a representation of who that person is, not a charade of characters. What is clear in Sherman's work is her purposeful intent to present a story  about women that highlight various themes of female stereotypes in society.

Sherman's work encompasses the power of an image to tell a story. Photography doesn't propose, in and of itself, to be truthful, but rather it is an expression of what the image maker intends to tell. In Sherman's work, the artist wants the viewer to determine what the images mean. Sherman proposes she merely produces the content, 'Untitled Film Stills,' for which dialogue can potentially take place.

During a 2012 New York Times interview Sherman said her work is not meant as self-portraits, "None of the characters are me. They're everything but me. If it seems too close to me, it's rejected." The question remains then, who is Cindy Sherman? Does the viewer get a sense of who the artist is her works? Sherman uses the photographic medium to express her ideas of what it is to be a woman during a specific time and place. We don't see Cindy Sherman, we see symbols of women as character. Sherman's work raises the question, do her images tell us what we want to know?

That question can only be answered by each viewer and what they bring to the experience of looking and seeing. An image after all is a reflection, not a totality of being. Photography is visual expression of something and by no means, is it an end all absolute, only one-meaning, type of work. That is the beauty of art - to be many things to many people.

Using photography as a medium to tell stories works any way the image maker chooses. In photojournalism the idea is not to manipulate the contents within the frame. When documenting live events, a news photographer attempts to capture what is happening in an objective way. Objectivity is after all the idea that the event IS the story, whether it's a war or wedding taking place.

A camera is merely a tool. It is the photographer's vision, impression, emotional reaction and skill of capturing the decisive moment that determine which image best tells that story. A combination of skills that employ editing in camera, meaning which frame to snap, and editing again in post process after the photo is taken, is what makes great photography.

'Self' © Margaret Waage
In some ways photographers are in two places at once when making images. With camera in hand the photographer surely should be present in operating the equipment.

The mechanics of any machine require the user to familiarize themselves with the tool. With digital cameras there are specific light settings: daylight, tungsten, florescent, flash that actually change the color of light on the resulting image file. While shutter speed and aperture have always been integral to proper exposure, these settings are critical when working with film cameras.

Film cameras don't have immediate 'playback' as digital cameras do and require users that shoot film to know the parameters of film types to match the light situation. For example, in a low light situation a higher speed film is necessary to allow for capturing more shadow detail. These details are part of a photographer's mindset during the shoot.

The photographer isn't alone in making an image. The subject is part of the equation, and therefore requires thought on being present and attentive to the needs of that second part of the equation, even if it's a still life! The photographer has to pay attention to the subject, to see what is there to be photographed.

'Self' © Margaret Waage
The act of being photographed or photographing  can be an engaging activity. It's something that requires focus of mind and attention from participants (not just by the lens). 

Whether attempting to capture the essence of a person, place or thing, or attempting to express an idea through conceptual portrayal, photography as visual medium, loans itself to self reflection and that of the world we inhabit.