Feb 23 2011

For Photographers: Gry Garness CS5 Retouching e-book

A while ago I posted a mini review of a retouching DVD tutorial set by Gry Garness. That original review can be found here.

Gry has just released the e-book equivalent. I’ve just received
my copy and since I was again truly impressed, wanted to let other photographers know about this great resource!
At £29 ($48 approx.) this is phenomenal value. The techniques described are high end, but you don’t have to be a fashion or beauty photographer to reap rewards from this book. There are so many workflow tips and basic methods described to maintain image quality, that it would be great value just to understand the basics of digital image quality!
I have digested the previous CS4 version (not that the latest version is only for CS5…) and highly recommend this material to all photographers – especially those who have basic retouching skills and are frustrated with learning options out there.

Where does this leave the DVD? I think this complements it well – there’s lots of clever use of the latest pdf technology to present rollover images and other interactive methods to better demonstrate the techniques.

Simply excellent, and highly recommended!


Jan 23 2011

For Photographers: Digital Asset Management

I started this blog feature with good intentions – to regularly share knowledge and ideas – but the last few months have been crazy busy with all sorts of projects. Hopefully 2011 will allow us a little more time for these posts! I have a few more in the pipeline – kit we use, simple on-location flash, and some behind the scenes videos from engagement and fashion shoots.

Only the paranoid survive is a great way to paraphrase the required workflow for a photographer working with digital cameras!
We encourage you to think like this – if your files are not located on at least three different disks, your data doesn’t truly exist!
For anyone not backing up any data, that should be a wake up call.

Cameras and cards
Canon shooters, we shoot RAW, so our files are around 20MB each(!), and we shoot to lots of 4GB cards. We consider 4GB cards the right balance between risk of image loss from a card corruption and frequency of replacing the cards in the camera. To ensure we never have a corruption, we always format the cards in camera – even when we know they are blank. This ensures the disk starts clean before the first image is written to it. (No corruptions yet, but this readiness prevents Hope being our strategy!)

Workstations and studio systems
Our workstations are Mac Pros. These have multiple hard disks, but we combine two disks in a striped RAID for the main work disk to increase performance. Since we use Macs, we use the wonderful Time Machine to back up this and other disks to a firewire drobo array – four disks in a redundant array means that the backup cannot be easily lost from a single disk error on the backup itself. I love Time Machine – it has saved our bacon on more than one occasion…
This takes a snapshot of the system at an hourly interval, but we manually force additional backups immediately after file imports.

Around each Mac Pro, we additionally have a second firewire drobo array that we use entirely for local manual backups.
We use Chronosync to sync our various working disks and projects to this drobo. The techie in me loves to script, so we have automated many processes to ensure we always have a second clean backup, local to the Mac.

Import to workstation
We use Lightroom (LR3) to manage and edit our images.
For each project, we have a project template directory structure, complete with legal files, project templates and notes for each step of the process. This ensures consistency in every project, and nothing is overlooked. Each project gets its own Lightroom catalog and directory structure. Anyone familiar with Kevin Kubota’s Lightroom workflow will recognize our project flow as an adaptation of what Kevin suggests in his books – and it is recommended reading!

Before importing the images into Lightroom, we manually copy all Flash cards into a RAW project folder that is immediately archived and replicated. That way, we have a complete record of every shoot and know all images are safe if any are accidentally deleted later.
We import this RAW folder into the Lightroom client catalog.

Two things I really hate about the current version of Lightroom (LR3) are that it can’t do print proofing, and worse, it has no way to allow multiple users to access one database simultaneously. In a small studio with several people needing access to these files, this can be a productivity bottleneck.
To overcome this limitation, we export and sync the catalogs to a Network disk (NAS) – again using RAID disks for redundancy – and this allows catalog export / import from different machines. It’s a fix, and hopefully Adobe will give us a better solution in LR4 or 5?

The RAW Lightroom backup is also backed up to this NAS disk.

The final step in our asset management is to backup the projects to removable hard drives. We backup all projects to TWO hard disks using an eSATA card in the Mac. These disks can be stored at a different location and / or stored in a fire safe to ensure we have triplicate copies of project files.
Again, Chronosync is the gem that ensures we never lose a byte, as every sync gets a data verification pass as well!

We no longer use DVDs or CDs to archive material. They are simply not good enough, regardless of alleged quality. Multiple hard disks appears to be the most optimal method now.

Post process workflow
Beyond Lightroom we also use Photoshop and other image manipulation tools, but the project structures, and Lightroom management ensure our flows are non-destructive. We can always re-trace our steps in any image, and never lose data.


Oct 2 2010

For Photographers: Gry Garness Retouching DVD

Gry Garness is a photographer and retoucher based in London, in my home country, England.

Gry Garness Retouching DVD Cover - review

Gry is also an educator, with a range of e-books, and one-to-one personal training on Photoshop and retouching. I have owned the e-books for quite a while, and can highly recommend them. I’m a soak when it comes to education, constantly seeking out new methods and skills. I’ve taken many courses, workshops and seminars on Photoshop technique and retouching, but Gry’s output really shines for its quality high-end, non-destructive methods. Retouching is so much about finesse and subtlety, and having an armory of skills that maintain quality.

The two DVD set reviewed here is a refresh of the e-book material, using Photoshop CS5 as the retouching environment. Whilst there is a nice section on configuring CS5 as an optimal environment, the DVDs and techniques are wholly relevant to all CS versions – I’m still using CS4…

The DVDs contain 54 tutorials, from RAW conversion, through tone and color manipulations to outputting work with best quality for print. I personally got a lot from the sections on color management, and the Camera-RAW workflow was probably the best I’ve seen, as Gry talks through why she is adjusting what. This section is obviously relevant to Lightroom users too – and shows the power of shooting in RAW.

It’s hard to fault the DVDs – so I apologize for a gushing review – but it is so refreshing to find material and a trainer with a clear technical understanding of the medium, and a flow that maintains quality in a digital image from capture to print. For instance, there are sections on color management, discussing controlling color gamut – and how having a non-destructive, layered flow provides a safety net for correcting the image. I await the day that proofing is added to Lightroom…

All the techniques use re-editable layers and smart objects. I like the fact that simpler, faster methods are also shown – something we can appreciate when retouching hundreds of wedding images!

To summarize, the DVD is relevant to virtually all beauty and portrait photographers. I find I’m already using some of the techniques on my fashion and boudoir images.
One of these days I hope to take a class with Gry on a trip back to the UK.

e-books and DVDs can be purchased on line at www.grygarness.com

I’ll leave the last word to Maria – DVD has great material and Gry has a lovely voice ;-)