Day: 15 January 2007

  • Scary! Scary! Google forgets In Photos

    I wondered why traffic was slow to the site today and then I searched for donncha. Insted of this site being the second or third link it’s nowhere to be found. I know it’s only a Google hiccup that other blogs have experienced too of late but it’s frightening watching my logs. They’re not moving, much.

    You can practically hear the tumbleweed blowing across the screen it’s so quiet.

    Much later .. I figured out what caused the problem. It was my Google sitemap. The “R&H Hall” tag caused a problem because it wasn’t encoded properly. Adding a urlencode() around the right bit of code fixed that. Must tell the author of UTWgoogleSitemaps…

  • Getting started with Bibble Labs

    I’ve been using Bibble Labs Pro for a few months now to process my RAW files but I know I’m not using it to it’s fullest potential.

    I should have looked around the Bibble website because their learning center has a number of videos to help the Bibble newbie!

    Things I don’t like:

    • I can’t believe there’s still no single-step undo in Bibble. It’s either CTRL-R to reset the image settings back to the RAW format, or there’s an awful workaround by copy/pasting the whole image before major actions.
    • Bibble crashes. It usually only happens when saving an image. I have noticed that it happens most often when I change virtual desktop so there’s probably a bug there somewhere.

    Despite those misgivings, it’s still worth looking at the trial version.

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  • The Moonlit Shipyards

    The shipyards in Rushbrooke, just outside Cobh are still active although much quieter now than during their heyday. The cranes make for great photography against the moonlit sky.

    This was shot from across the River Lee in Passage last November.

    FRLinux asked about settings so here they are, including post-processing:

    Flickr’s exif data for this is a bit wrong – gthumb says the exposure was for 5 seconds, aperture was wide open at f4.5, and lens set at 28mm, which you can probably multiply by 1.6 for the crop factor. ISO was 100.

    Post Processing was done in the GIMP using 3 layers:
    1. Top layer is transparent with a black gradient at the bottom. Layer mode is Overlay.
    2. Middle layer is black and white, and blurred and with added noise. It’s set to screen mode, and opacity of 51%.
    3. Bottom layer is the colour image, slightly saturated and darker.

    Hope that helps!

    Aperture ƒ/4.5
    Camera Canon EOS 20D
    Focal length 28mm
    ISO 100
    Shutter speed 5s
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