| MAY 2005 | ||
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Come see the latest and greatest gear from Nikon Don't miss our May meeting! Jeff Penn, the local Nikon Factory Rep, has agreed to come talk about Nikon’s current product offering, the direction Nikon is heading and what we as underwater photographers can expect. Some products covered will include the D70, D2X, Coolpix cameras and the underwater housings available from Nikon. We may even get to hear about the recently announced D50 digital SLR. There will also be discussion of the new F6 and the future for film shooters. |
Jeff will be available and happy to answer any questions. This is an especially nice opportunity for any film photographers who may be considering switching to digital. For more information on Nikon products check out their web site. Jeff has forewarned me he can talk all night, so get there early for some social time so we can start promptly at 7pm. |
As usual, the meeting will be at the Bayland Community Center. A map can be found on the back of this newsletter. See you there! Let’s Dive....
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| Well, Dave is using a Mac to make the newsletter, but I'll still driving the Internet HTML here out of my PC. While I try to duplicate most of his formatting, not all of it's going to show up here, such as the fonts. . . Plus, I am going to optimize for the Internet - get rid of "page breaks" that do not exist on a computer screen, and let a single article go straight down the screen when necessary instead of making the reader scroll down and then back up to read the second column. As David said, let me know what you like and what you don’t. Pat |
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April Meeting Recap - |
For those of you who were unable to attend Jesse's show on his experience with the humpback whales, it was very educational. Jesse explained how difficult it was to photograph these animals in the wild as you had to be on a snorkel instead of scuba. The amazing images he captured were taken mostly with his Nikonos V and 15mm lens. He shared with us bits on their migration from New England down to the Silver Banks to mate in the winter months. Jesse shared a lot of other interesting facts on these incredible animals as well. As an added bonus, those in attendance were also fortunate to see some of Jesse's work with spotted Dolphins in the Bahamas. Thanks for a job well done!! To see more of Jesse’s work check out http://www.cancelmophoto.com. |
President's Message
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HUPS SEASPACE GallerySEASPACE is rapidly approaching. We will be setting up the HUPS gallery on Friday June 3rd. We need to get all images prior to this date. If your prints are ready, bring them to the May HUPS meeting. If they are not ready by the meeting, contact me and I will make arrangements to pick them up. We need unframed 11"x14" and 16"x20" prints. Other sizes will be considered. These pints must be mounted on foam board or Gatorboard. Gatorboard is preferred due to it’s durability. Thanks to the efforts of HUPS Board Member Dennis Vernon, we have been given special pricing from Houston Photo Imaging for prints made to be displayed at our SEASPACE gallery. Our members will receive a discount of 20% off normal list prices (see below). The discounts are being offered through the Gulfton location. Our contact there is Kathy Muncy. The HPI Gulfton branch is loacated at 5250 Gulfton #3B Houston, TX 77081; phone: 713-666-0282. If you are not familiar with HPI, they are a Professional photo lab that does beautiful work. Most of the images in our 2003 SEASPACE Gallery were printed there. More info can be found at http://houstonphotoimaging.com. Houston Photo Imaging List prices:
HPI is just one option for printing images. Some members prefer to use online services such as www.pictopia.com or www.mpix.com. As Nike says "Just Do It." The time to act is now! Get your favorite images printed and mounted and show them off. For this gallery to be successful, we need everyone to contribute. My email is underh2o@ev1.net. Please contact me with any questions you may have. We are counting on all of you to contribute so we can have a stunning gallery for the SEASPACE attendees.
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QUICK TIP Submitted by Joe Nicklo Recently while speaking with Devon Thompkins, Sub Aquatic Camera Repair’s Housing Specialist, he shared a rather interesting method for cleaning acrylic lens ports. To demagnetize and prevent buildup of algae and also to fill-in very small surface scratches, Devon suggested applying a small amount of "Lemon Pledge" to a soft cotton cloth before cleaning. Then clean the port using a circular motion. He said you'll be surprised at the results. Another tidbit of information from Devon: Do not submerge your camera or camera housing in any rinse tank with water having a blue tint. Some dive services are adding Tidy Bowl Cleaner to the rinse water. Tidy Bowl Cleaner will damage the finish on the camera/camera housing and could damage the lens. For more information on Sub Aquatic Camera Repair, check out http://www.subaquaticcamera.com/. Thank you, Devon! If you have a tip that would be of interest to HUPS members, email it to David Lenderman at underh2o@ev1.net. |
Digital Image Editing – Part IV
After first using Levels - Histogram and then Curves to adjust exposure (see previous articles in the last couple of newsletters), the next tool you might want to use is Color Balance. The Color Balance tool lets you modify color hues in an image. For example, if a shot taken inside your house under fluorescent lights is too green, or one under incandescent lights is too red, or the dark blue in deep water off the edge of a wall has a little too much purple or magenta, then say hello to Color Balance. To use Color Balance you need to understand a little about how colors are generated on your computer. Computer monitors make colors by lighting Red, Green and Blue elements, and you get other colors by mixing the brightness or intensity levels of the additive primary colors red, green and blue. As black and white are “opposite” colors, so red is opposite to cyan, green is opposite to magenta, and blue is opposite to yellow. I.e., if you have an image with the colors black, red, green and blue, and you invert the colors using Photoshop or another image editor, then black turns into white, red into cyan, green into magenta, and blue into yellow:
In Photoshop, click on "Image" on the menu bar, then "Adjustments" (or "Adjust") and "Color Balance..." and here’s what the Color Balance dialog box looks like when you first open it:
So if for example you wanted to take a bit of green hue out of a picture, you would move the middle slider to the left, away from Green towards Magenta. That would turn down the Green and add in some Magenta. Also note, you click in the Tone Balance box to select Shadows to modify the darkest colors, Midtones to modify the midrange colors, and Highlights to modify the brightest colors. So you have a total of 9 sliders you can play with: 3 sliders in Shadows, in Midtones and 3 in Highlights. If you wanted to add or reduce a color that isn’t one of these primary colors, Red, Green, Blue, Cyan, Magenta or Yellow, then you’d have to move more than one slider. For example, orange is a combination of red with a little green, and possibly a touch of blue as well depending on your shade of orange. Here’s a picture of Bloody Bay Wall at Little Cayman I’ll use for a Color Balance demonstration:
If I decide that the deep water and the wall in the bottom right of the picture looks a little too purplish, I could go right to Color Balance and start moving the sliders with the Preview check box on, to see how I could change it. Optionally, first I might use the Eyedropper tool to sample the color that I’d like to change. Then I could look at the color palette information to help me decide how to change it. Say I use the Eyedropper tool
You don’t need to be know exactly what those numbers mean, just notice which are larger and which are smaller in relation to each other. In the RGB column (Red/Green/Blue), I see Blue has the highest number. This tells me there is more blue than red or green, which makes sense because I know it should be blue there in the water. But there’s slightly more Red than Green, and so I wonder, how much red do I really need? In the CMYK column (Cyan/Magenta/Yellow/Black), the highest number is Cyan which ought to be okay (cyan color is a mix of blue and green), but the next highest number is Magenta. So these numbers give me a hint that the purple I’d like to get rid of might be due to a little too much red and magenta. If you didn’t follow that brief introduction to the Eyedropper tool and Color Picker, don’t worry, its not necessary. You can skip it and go right to Color Balance and start experimenting with the sliders. But Photoshop and some other image editing applications do give you that kind of in-depth information if you care to learn how to use it. Now I open the Color Balance tool and try moving the sliders around to see what happens. At any time to reset all the sliders, you can hold down the Alt key on a PC or Option on a Mac which changes the Cancel button to Reset, and then you can click Reset. The area in the Bloody Bay Wall picture I am concerned with is pretty dark, so as shown in the picture below I click on Shadows in the Tone Balance box at the bottom. I move the sliders a bit, and I finally settle on moving the Cyan/Red slider to -4 towards Cyan, away from Red, and moving the Magenta/Green slider to +12 towards Green, away from Magenta:
That got rid of some of the purple in the deep, and it also made the coral on the near wall slightly less red and a little more green. If I wanted to modify the deep water in the bottom right only, I could use one of the selection tools such as the Lasso to select only the areas of the image I want to change. Then I would Feather the selection ("Select" on the menu bar, then "Feather...") by some number of pixels so my changes will blend in smoothly with unedited pixels nearby, and then I would use Color Balance only on the pixels I selected. Experiment with Color Balance. Start by moving the sliders one at a time all the way to the extreme ends and see how they work, see how it can make very bizarre changes in hue. Then back off the sliders and try smaller changes to find more subtle and natural differences in color. Next time we’ll look at the Hue/Saturation tool which can give you finer control over specific colors.
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| Important Dates Put them on your calendar |
May 2, 2005 HUPS meeting - Jeff Penn from Nikon - learn about latest products from Nikon |
June 6, 2005 HUPS post-SEASPACE meeting - Special guest Norbert Wu |
August 1, 2005 HUPS meeting |
| June 3-5, 2005 SEASPACE 2005 - Don't miss it http://www.seaspace.org |
July 11, 2005 HUPS meeting |
September 12, 2005 HUPS meeting |
HUPS Booth Volunteers Needed!HUPS members, once again it is time to show your support for your club. At SEASPACE we will have a beautiful booth next to our stunning gallery. We need you to help with making the booth a success for HUPS. This is our big opportunity to promote HUPS. SEASPACE is the only event where we actively seek out new members. So you enjoy HUPS? Well, volunteer to work at the HUPS SEASPACE booth, for an hour or two, and tell non-members about it. It is easy to sell something you believe in, have experience with first hand, and now know is beneficial to becoming a better underwater photographer. So, now is the time to "give back" to the club that has given much to you. No experience is necessary, on the job training is offered. Working in the booth is a great way to get to know your fellow members. You will have fun. Volunteer at the next monthly meeting or contact Joe Nicklo. We can’t do it without you!
Next Month Norbert Wu is Coming to HUPSNorbert Wu will be our special guest speaker for the June 6th post-SEASPACE HUPS meeting. Norbert is an independent photographer and filmmaker who specializes in marine issues. He is widely published with his work having appeared in thousands of books, films and magazines. He has seventeen books to his credit. He plans to talk about the two major projects that he has undertaken in the past 7 years: Antarctica and the Pew Marine Conservation Fellowship. Each of these two projects lasted three years. Both involved creating libraries of still and HDTV images. To learn more about Norbert and his work check out his website http://www.norbertwu.com/index-aboutus.html. We are very fortunate to have such a talented, well known speaker for our June meeting. Remember that this meeting will be the Monday following SEASPACE - June 6th. Be there!
Great Article in May 2005 National GeographicThe May issue of National Geographic has an interesting article concerning color on coral reefs. It’s illustrated with some truly beautiful images. The article examines how wavelengths of light and color appear at different depths and how marine creatures see this light and color. The photos alone make it worth picking up the issue.
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Check it Out on the Web! With SEASPACE coming June 3-5 you gotta check out http://www.seaspace.org. Get the latest on exhibitors, seminars and of course the photo/video workshops. |
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FOR SALE
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| Upcoming Monthly Photo Topics Each month we will have digital and slide contests. See the complete contest rules. See contest winners. |
May 2005 - Macro - Anything smaller than a grapefruit | August 2005 - Back to school - schools of fish | November 2005 - Scorpio - Scorpionfish, stonefish, and lionfish exclusively |
| June 2005 - Post-SEASPACE meeting - no contest - Norbert Wu presentation | September 2005 - Sand muck critters - just like it says | December 2005 - Best of HUPS contest | July 2005 - Red, White and/or Blue - Predominantly one of more of these colors | October 2005 - Sponges, tunicates, anemones - look them up in a book |
Contest Page
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Some Winners See all the photo contest winners.
Advanced 2nd place Sue Watson ©2005
Novice 2nd place Dennis Vernon ©2005
Novice 3rd place Chuck Jensen ©2005 |
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2005 HUPS Officers and Committee Directors
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The Houston Underwater Photographic Society (HUPS) meets the first Monday of every month at 7:00PM at the Bayland Community Center, 6400 Bissonet, near Hillcroft. Social time begins at 7:00PM for members and visitors to get acquainted. Visitors are always welcome to join us. So, stop by and see what we are all about! |