Archive for the “Photography” Category

GIMP is the GNU Image Manipulation Program. It is a freely distributed piece of software for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring

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The GNU Image Manipulation Program, or GIMP, is a raster graphics editor used to process digital graphics and photographs. Typical uses include creating graphics and logos, resizing and cropping photos, altering colours, combining multiple images, removing unwanted image features, and converting between different image formats.[2] GIMP can also be used to create basic animated images in GIF format. It is often used as a free software replacement for Adobe Photoshop, the most widely used bitmap editor in the printing and graphics industries; however, it is not designed to be a Photoshop clone.[3] The project’s mascot is named WilberGI

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Terragen™ 2

TG2 Overview TG2 Image Gallery TG2 FAQ TG2 Tech Preview
Technology Preview available for Download now!

Introduction

Terragen 2 (TG2) is now the primary development focus of Planetside Software. TG2 is a complete rewrite of Terragen from scratch, and is a significant advance beyond the capabilities of Terragen v0.9. Apart from being a much more powerful renderer, TG2 has a much more flexible architecture which will allow development to proceed at a considerably greater pace.

Core Features

Terragen 2 features the following as part of its core architecture :

  • Cutting-edge adaptive subdivision renderer.
  • Modular, plugin-based architecture.
  • Render entire planets, sweeping vistas, tiny rock gardens, or anything in between.
  • Import 3D objects for rendering. Export high resolution objects.
  • Render millions of boulders or trees using “instancing”.
  • Add multiple heightfields to your scene. Use procedural terrains that can span an entire planet.
  • Apply almost “infinite” fractal detail to terrain and other objects.
  • Overhanging terrain using procedural displacements, image-based displacements, or imported geometry.
  • Volumetric clouds or fast “2.5D” clouds.
  • Production quality anti-aliasing and motion blur.
  • Node graph editor for ultimate control over shaders and textures.

Terragen 2

The core technology in TG2 was used to render planets for Star Trek: Nemesis in 2002 (article in Cinefex 93) and was also relied upon for hundreds of CG terrain shots in Stealth in 2005.

Download Mars animation

TG2 has a global atmosphere system which expands on the unsurpassed realism of the TG v0.9 atmosphere system. TG2 features multiple cloud layers, which can utilise 3D volumetric clouds or 2D clouds for faster rendering. Entire planets can be rendered with realistic global atmospheres and procedural terrain detail from continents down to pebbles on a beach. Multiple planets and celestial bodies such as moons can be added to scenes, and multiple suns can also be used.

3D Volumetric Clouds

TG2 features a realtime 3D preview which refines the detail displayed over time. The preview can be used to position the camera and scene elements. It provides an accurate preview of the landscape, texturing, atmosphere and other objects. cont….

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Flexify Photoshop Plugin

Flexify is a Photoshop plug-in that allows you to bend spherical panoramas into vertiginous new shapes.

http://www.flickr.com/groups/flexify/pool/

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http://www.panoramio.com/map/

Panoramio is a geolocation-oriented photo sharing website. Currently, some of the photos uploaded to the site can be accessed as a layer in Google Earth and Google Maps, with new photos being added at the end of every month. The site’s goal is to allow Google Earth users to learn more about a given area by viewing the photos that other users have taken at that place.

Explore the world

  • Store up to 2 Gb of photos for free

    Keep photos quality in original size at your personal area

  • Create your own map of the World

    Locate your photos where they were taken

  • Show photos and travel routes to your friends

    Easily track your trips and organize your photos with tags

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You can use the Adobe Video Workshop to start learning about any application you’re interested in, whether you own it or not. The Video Workshop shares expertise from across Adobe and the Adobe community—you’ll learn tasks, tips, and tricks from leading designers, developers, and Adobe experts. There are introductory videos for new users, and more experienced users can find videos on new features and key techniques. Many videos show you how to use Adobe applications together.

Start Video Workshop

When you start the Video Workshop, you choose exactly the products and topics you want to learn (see Figure 1). You can see details about each video to help focus your learning path. Each video covers a single subject and typically runs about 3 to 5 minutes. Many videos come with an illustrated tutorial and source files, so you can print out detailed steps and try the tasks on your own.

http://www.adobe.com/designcenter/video_workshop/about.html

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We are heading down to the Snowy Mountains this weekend for the ACP’s Landscape Photography Workshop (details below)

http://www.acpworkshop.com/index.php?obj_id=special

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