SnapSeed, ProHDR, Grungetastic, Iris, PhotoForge, Blender and more! If you are wanting to learn more about using your iPhone to create incredibly artistic images using Apps, this workshop is perfect. If you know some things but need to know more, you’ll still learn heaps of information on how to create, process, and print your pictures.
Workshop is scheduled for September 7-9th, 2012. We’ll be covering the basics of using the phone, different camera apps, various processing apps for basic adjustments, and special effects apps. Live demos of working with the Apps, photo field sessions, and time to process in class with my help are included. This is going to be a really really fun learning experience you don’t want to miss! For more information and to sign up, visit the PNWAS site.
It’s going to be finish of mine day, but before ending I am reading this enormous article to increase my knowledge.
Cool pictures, Brenda. It is truly amazing what you can do with an iPhone and a few apps. Who would have thought. Enjoy your day!
Thanks, Lin – it IS truly amazing, and the neat thing about using a smartphone and apps to create images is that it feels more like play than any other type of photography! It allows me to think like a painter, act a little like one in using the apps to create a painterly look, etc. My sister, who IS a painter, takes issue with it – in the sense that it’s not ‘real’ painting. And of course she’s right – it isn’t. But it is a way to take your photographs to the next level, or say a different level, and it makes me think about textures, shapes, form, etc., and what might work together. Freeman Patterson, Michael Orton, Richard Martin, André Gallant, and many more of ‘us’ have played with montages, i.e. double exposures in the film days when you could do that in camera, to doing double and triple exposures now using the computer, in a sense doing overlays of textures and out of focus versions of the image, etc. So using the phone is very much like that and it keeps me stretching. That’s what I like most about it – and it gives me something to do when I’m waiting for the plane to Timbuktu! 🙂