Hands-On Digital Printing & Adobe Photoshop Workshop

March 27, 2008

A new workshop is now scheduled for september 25.-28. 2008.

Photoshop is the most powerful darkroom ever. In this four-day workshop at Norways premier studio and lab in Oslo, Studio Technika/ Farvelabben, Jean Miele and Pål Otnes will teach you:

- how to control contrast, tone, sharpness, and grain with incredible precision
- the best ways to convert from color to B&W
- effective workflow procedures, including actions & batch-processing
- RAW capture and workflow
- how to use ICC profiles for printing- the latest options for black-and-white and color printing

Through plenty of hands-on computer time in the lab, you’ll learn by actually working on your own image files. There will be step-by-step Photoshop, RAW capture and printing demonstrations, and discussions of how to optimize your shooting for digital darkroom work. Included in the workshop are portfolio reviews, thought-provoking in-class discussions and lots of laughter and fun.

We will spend extra time on RAW capture and printing, and teach you how to do great digital “darkroom” work. Our technique - relying on layers and masks - gives you the power to change your mind at any point with no loss in image quality, even after an image has been closed and reopened. The staff at Studio Technika/ Farvelabben will also show us what’s possible with todays digital printers, from lightjet to Epson large format printers.This workshop empowers you to apply the full potential of Adobe Photoshop, and explore the infinite possibilities of working digitally. The emphasis of this class is real-world workflow and printing techniques for photographers, designers, and artists, whether you work in black-and-white or color.

The facility will only allow 15 participants, so enrol today to reach the next level in Photoshop.
Please send an e-mail to mail@palotnes.com, or call Pål on (+47) 41 14 66 06 for more information and enrolment. The workshop-fee is 4.900 NOK.
Participants must bring their own computer with Adobe Photoshop CS, CS2 or CS3 installed. A trial-version can be downloded at www.adobe.com.The workshop will be held in english.

Jean Miele (46) is an American artist who uses photography to create moments of “perfection.” Based in New York City, his photographs have been widely exhibited, including a 2007 show at Fotografiens Hus in Oslo, and his original prints are in numerous collections. Miele is also internationally recognized as an educator whose workshops and seminars demystify digital. He has taught for: Adobe Systems; the International Center for Photography (ICP) in New York; Apple Computer; Fuji USA; Advertising Photographers of America (APA); American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP); the Maine Media Workshops; the Santa Fe Workshops; the Norwegian Fotografiakademiet; and many others. 

Pål Otnes (33) is working as a writer, graphic designer and photographer in Oslo. He contributes articles and writes a monthly Photoshop “how-to” column for to the national Fotografi magazine. In addition to his commercial work, Otnes’ fine-art photographs have been exhibited in Hamningberg Church in Finnmark, Skogmuseet in Elverum, Volumfestivalen in Elverum, Varangerfestivalen in Vadsø, Fotofestivalen in Vågå, Rådhusgalleriet in Oslo, and have been featured in B&W Magazine.Together.

Pål Otnes and Jean Miele have presented eight highly successful digital workshops in Norway since 2003.

For more information please visit: www.jeanmiele.com and www.palotnes.com

varanger07-8.jpg


Fjellets og havets folk

March 4, 2008

Sonja Siltalas book “Fjellets og havets folk” is now available through Trane Forlag. Sonia spent six years on this project and the result is stunning. This photobook is designed and the photographs are edited by Sonja Siltala and Pål Otnes.

See www.traneforlag.no for more information.

Kvenboka


Exhibition in Vardø

August 29, 2007

During the Varanger festival 2007 and a couple of months after, some of the pictures from the series “Those who left” will be displayed in I Galleri in Vadsø. The Gallery shows ten prints mainly from Finmark.

 Gelender


Download actions

May 27, 2007

Click the link to download actions as referred to in Fotografi. There are two actions, one for sharpening and one for sharpening, converting to black and white and adding noise. Download the file and import it into the actions-window in Photoshop. I hope you enjoy it!

Download actions.

Dials


Ricoh GR user review

April 12, 2007

After some time I managed to talk myself into buying this great little camera. I’ve had the GR for some months now and I want to sum up the good and bad parts for other potential buyers:

• This camera was made for photographers. Everything can be controlled and the buttons and dials are all in the right places. It feels solid and is so small you can take it everywhere. The battery is excelent and the camera can use regular AAA batteries if the regular battery runs out.
• It’s possible to shoot in 3:2. Personally I love this format. Voigtländer makes a viewfinder that fits the GR and gives you a 3:2 view of the world. I ordered mine from Adorama.
• The lens is excelent.
• Generally fast and userfriendly.
• Excelent infrared posibilities.
• RAW-writing times are slow, but this is not a big issue for me. Using a fast card and not choosing a big JPG to go with the RAW cuts down writing time. It’s still slow, but this is not an action camera. It’s fast to switch to JPG if you suddenly need faster writing speed (you can customize shortcuts for almost everything).
• Noise. This is the biggest problem with this camera. I can live with the general noise from the sensor. I shoot at ISO 64 all the time, so the noise is OK, but the camera quite often shows banding in the shadows. Sometimes this will show on prints. My solution is to add grain to break it up, or to pull down the shadows a little bit before printing (this looses som shadow detail).
• Underexposure. This camera delivers quite dark files. I wish the midle-tones where a little brighter. I think this is intentional to keep the highlights from blowing out. The strangest thing is that the histogram in live preview is lighther than when you review the same file after the shot!
• There is no shadow/highlight warning.
• Maximum one second in aperture mode. Longer times possible in manual mode.
• No viewfinder (optional).

Mostly I use the camera in aperture mode and over/underexpose when needed. I only shoot BW in RAW with a BW preview/JPG. I then convert to BW in Photoshop. The camera does a great job when shooting BW in dayligh. The bottom line is that this is a great poor-mans-Leica, perfect for outdoor and street-photography in BW.
If you want a regular point and shoot, get a camera for half the price of the GR and have fun.

If Ricoh upgrade this camera with a better sensor, faster RAW-speed and fine tune the exposure-curves, they have made the perfect camera. Until then I’m very pleased with the Ricoh GR mark one.

RAW exposure converted in Photoshop, ISO 64:

Ricoh GR


New mailinglist

March 14, 2007

From now on we would like to update our readers about new workshops by e-mail as well. The workshop in may is now fully booked, but by joining our mailinglist you will be the first to know when new dates are set. Just drop us a line at mail #at# palotnes #dot# com and we’ll add you to the list.

Jean Teaching


Finnmart – a success!

March 14, 2007

Finnmart is an exibition where 13 artists come together and show art influented by Norways northernmost area. The venue in 2007 was Rådhusgalleriet in Oslo, Norway and the The exibition closed 17. of february. During the two weeks of the exibithion there was lectures about cultural projects in Finnmark, live music and interactive art-performances.

The exibition was a huge success, and had more visitors than any other show at the gallery. There are now plans for a new project in 2008.

The artist in Finnmart 2007 was: Pål Otnes (photography), Fred Ivar Utsi Klemetsen (photography), Corey Arnold (photography), Arne Borgersen (photography), Jon og Helle Frogner (photography), Sigfrid Hernes (photography), Mott (Paintings), Asbjørn Nilsen (photography), Bjarne Riesto (photography), Daniela Salathe (Glass-art), Sonja Siltala (Vadsø) and Inger Unstad (Paintings).

Please visit the official web-page for more information: www.finnmart.no.

Raadhusgalleriet


B&W Special Issue

November 27, 2006

Once a year the B&W magazine publish the Single Image Special Issue. This is a collection of photographers who are presented with one single image. This is a great collection of images, from the whole range of black and white imagery.

This year I’m representedt with one picture in the still-life category. The picture is from the “Old Mill” series. You can see some of those pictures here.

Be shure to get your own copy of this great magazine.

The old mill 1


Innovate or imitate

November 14, 2006

Some photographers say that amateurs imitate and professionals steal. What does that mean? Is it true that photographers don’t use their own ideas to produce something new? There is no single answer to this question, but what I see around me every day is imitations – it is impossible to invent something new. So why go on taking pictures? When every idea is an imitation. When there are millions and billions of pictures out there already.

I have a different idea about photography. It’s not about imitation. It’s not about stealing. It’s about what you want with your photograpy. It’s about inside and outside.
We se hundreds of photographs every day and most of them are just documentation. It’s about the outside world.
But once in a while you stop and look at that one picture that tells you something. Something that touches you, and you can realate to. Something that tells you something about you own life.
That’s about the inside world. It’s about honesty and realting to other people. It’s about wanting to tell a story or an emotion. It’s about comunication, and that’s what photography is all about.

Hedmark series 2005


Technique: Digital infrared

September 13, 2006

Infrared photography has been around for quite a while and for most photographers this means tricky photography on infrared film. This kind of film is challenging in a coulpe of ways. Firstly you have to store it properly so it don’t get foged. You also have to load the film into the camera in complete darknes. But the biggest challange is the exosure and focus. The focuspoint is not the same as with regulear llght so it needs manual compensation. The built in lightmeter doesn’t work either, so the exosure is a bit of a hit and miss in the beginning.

But now, in the digital age, it is possible to get custom made digital cameras. The way this works is that a technican removes a filter from the chip to make the censor sensitive to infrared light. By adding a red filter or a ir-filter to the lens, you stop most of the visible light going into the lens, so that just the infrared light is visible to the censor.

This way you can get a live preview of your composition in infrared. This makes it a lot easier to visualize the picture you want to take. Since the infrared light is invisible to the human eye, the camera will help you to see what you will end up with on the chip.

The cheapes and easiest way is to convert a camera is to use a digital compact camera. This will give you a live preview which is not possible with a digital slr. I also have the impression that the ccd censor works better than the cmos censor. I have to make you all aware that this is not a guaranteed process. You might end up spending 500$ on a camera you’re not pleased with, but that’s the price for being experimental…

Below is a picture taken with a with a modified Canon Powershoot with a infrared filter. This picture is just adjusted with levels after converting to black and white.

Infrarød 5