April 27, 2006
Posted by LRN Editorial Staff
Source: Imaging Resource
Written by Mike Pasini
You may know Julieanne Kost from her amusing Photoshop lectures (“How do you pronounce GIF? Get a life!”) or her Classroom in a Book Series for Adobe, for whom she’s worked since 1993. As a Senior Digital Imaging Evangelist, she flies all over the world, lecturing on creativity and Photoshop (and Lightroom, too, now) for Adobe.
As she flies from one city to another, Julieanne shoots photos from her window seat. And, after five years of taking pictures of the sky from the sky, she’s published Window Seat, a down-to-earth book on creativity, photography and digital imaging.
April 27, 2006
Posted by LRN Editorial Staff
Brits will use digital trickery to look better
Source: Daily Record
Written by Samantha Booth
ISN’T it amazing what a bit of computer trickery can do for the family album?
It seems image-conscious Brits think nothing of airbrushing their pictures to make themselves look better in family snaps.
April 27, 2006
Posted by LRN Editorial Staff
Press Release: LAS VEGAS–(BUSINESS WIRE)–April 25, 2006–DriveSavers Data Recovery the worldwide leader in data recovery services, announced today at the National Association of Broadcasters annual expo the expansion of its Digital Arts Division. Specializing in the recovery of critical digital assets for studios’ video and film divisions and the gaming and recording industries, the Digital Arts Division was created over a year ago to address the loss of data from high-end storage devices and application-specific needs of its customers.
April 27, 2006
Posted by LRN Editorial Staff
Source: Daily Yomiuri
Written by Julian Satterthwaite
Stop counting your megapixels and shut down Photoshop. All you need to create beautiful pictures is a cardboard box, a sheet of photographic paper and a pin–the three ingredients for the most basic kind of pinhole camera. And since this coming Sunday (April 30th, 2006) is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day, now is the perfect time to celebrate a technique that has roots going back to the fifth century B.C.