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Want to come out to play?
Wanna come on a photowalk round Edinburgh on Saturday 9th October?
What’s a Photowalk you ask?
Well you sort of walk, and take photos.
That’s it really.
No matter what kind of camera you have, be it a phone, or an all singing all dancing dSLR or anything in between… walking about taking photos is kinda fun.
Especially in Edinburgh.
A rough itinerary…
- 14:00 Meetup outside Waverley Station
- 14:00-16:00 Walk and take photos! I will plan a route to include the Grassmarket, Greyfriars Cemetery, The Royal Mile and time permitting, Princess Street Gardens. I am also working on getting permission from some places with roofs as a wet weather backup.
- 16:00-17:00 Make our way to Calton Hill, weather permitting, for some cityscapes in the hour before sunset.
- 17:00-hometime Eat, drink and make merry at a venue to be decided.
Given the route and the necessity for popping into the nearest hostelry at the slightest drop of rain this event won’t be suitable for children.
I have a few participants already lined up but the more the merrier I always say, hence this blog plug.
You can either email me or leave me a comment with your email address so I can add you to the list of attendees and keep you up to date with arrangements.
And… if you want to skip the walking bit and just come for the food and drink bit that will be tickety-boo too.
I look forward to meeting new friends, taking some fab fotees and, with permission, sharing them to showcase our pretty darn beautiful capital city.
Make sure you are sitting down cos I’m going to say something nice
For 12 years I have (almost) religiously harangued my son whenever he leaves the house to check he has his drugs with him. The little one even started joining in as soon as he could talk. Very cute it was too.
So I have absolutely so explanation as to why we turned up at Edinburgh Airport a few weeks ago with 1 epipen, half an inch of Piriton syrup and absolutely no prednisolone steroids for our 12 hours journey to the USA. There was a full, in fact double, complement of drugs in our checked in luggage but for the plane that was it. Woefully inadequate.
British Airways carry a supply of epipens on board, their cabin crew are trained to administer them and their meals are all nut-free but I was still uncomfortable travelling without any steroids. Andrew’s awkwardly allergic to more than just nuts.
I was carrying the tear off bit from his last prescription, the bit you use for repeat orders, just in case we needed to fill it in the US. On the off chance, a bleary eyed 6am off chance, I popped into the Boots branch in the airport departure lounge to see if I could buy steroids over the counter. That wasn’t an option but the pharmacist on duty took my slip, called the out of hours service in Perthshire, managed to get permission to dispense the drugs without prescription and made me a very happy and contented, if somewhat doofus mother.
Now it might surprise you to hear I write letters. Real letters. Usually whining moaning letters to whoever’s made me feel fed up that week. I very rarely post them as I find the writing process is usually enough to placate me (or make me feel like a right prat – one or t’other).
Back home from our holiday I decided to write a nice letter. A thank you letter. A boy did that lovely pharmacist save me from a hideous journey full of angst and panic letter. A cheers for saving my son from 9 hours of “You’re 13 – for crying out loud check your own bag!” letter.
I even posted it.
And not only did the people at Boots thank me for thanking them… they thanked me for thanking them and promised to pass on my thanks to the branch and sent me a thank you for thanking us gift.
Aren’t Boots lovely?
Just my colours too.
Should I thank them?
iHeartFaces: Photojournalism
I’m not comfortable taking photos of people in the street, candid. Which explains why my photos from Scott Kelby’s Third Annual Worldwide Photowalk which I joined in Kissimmee were a bit…. meh. I was ridiculously self-conscious despite being part of a huge crowd of photowalkers. Our photowalk leader Mark Pino even furnished us all with badges to circumvent any awkward questions.
No it did not help to know that 33,496 other people around the world were doing it too.
I’m what they call backward in coming forward if you know what I mean!
But it was fun, and plans are afoot… I will be running a photowalk in Edinburgh very soon. Watch this space. Actually go watch iHeartFaces for some photojournalism piccies…. see? it’s all connected
The Gallery: a photo I’m proud of
Sometimes a photo just springs to mind and I can’t see past it… so I’ll not bother trying.
This is the first ever photo I remember being chuffed with. It was taken back in the days of film and I can’t for the life of me remember the camera – one of those new fangled panoramic point and shoots I guess. It was taken in early summer 2000, just before my daughter and niece started school and my son started pre-school. Way back in the days when my sister and I could squeeze ourselves and our four children into a Fiat Uno and head for the beach knowing full well we’d get it all to ourselves.
Bliss.
I worked mornings and my sister helped with ferrying my two back and forth between school and nursery and filling in the gaps with looking after them at home. Every afternoon we were free to explore, no ties, no timescales, no hometime.
Then formal education came along and put a stop to it all.
And here I am again 10 years later, back clinging onto the last few afternoons I have with Paul before I institutionalise him for 6 hours a day 5 days a week. Sometimes I wish it were otherwise, sometimes I can’t wait. Just part of the parenting rollercoaster I guess.
I am also rather proud of this oft blogged photo. It was the first shot I nailed indoors and without flash. Looking back the crop ratio is a bit shaming and totally unsuitable for print but I remember it as the day that the exposure triangle of ISO, exposure and aperture just “clicked” into place.

Now I’m almost at the stage where I can get 15-20 shots I am happy with out of a session. People are even beginning to ask me to take photos of their children. They’re offering me money but bollocks to that, for now it’s a hobby. I’ll maybe spend the next year building up a body of work. Who knows where it will take me? Maybe nowhere but it should be fun either way. After all, now that all my children are institutionalised I have some spare time (for now!).
How to give photos a free shot of “oomph” (come GIMP with me!)
I’m all in favour of a little helping hand when it comes to digital photo making. Sometimes you find a so-so photo that has the potential to be fab.. if only it weren’t so flat.
I use a combination of Lightroom and Photoshop CS4 to give my photos a kick up the arse when they need it, but there’s plenty of tools out there that will do the job just as well for free (like totally!). One of my favourites is GIMP.
So what can it do? Well pretty much what Photoshop can to be honest. It handles the most common fixes I use, a bit of colour boost and sharpening. And like Photoshop there are loads of ways to get the same result. When you find one you like you tend to stick with it. Go on, find something dull and washed out and give it a kick (no not you OH – you want to GIMP them then that’s a whole other post).
Something more like this.
Here’s what GIMP looks like once you have opened a file in it and maximised the window… on the left you have a Toobox which is basically all the thing you can turn your cursor into and on the right you have some info to help you work with the opened file.
The first thing I usually do is crop my photo – I rarely manage to frame things the way I like in camera – I am working on it though.
The crop tool is in the Toolbox, you just click on it to activate it then click and drag to select the area of your image you wish to keep before hitting enter to confirm (you can also use the arrow keys once you have selected an area should you wish to nudge it over a bit).
Next I fill the screen with my image so I can see it better (must be an age thing).
OK, now I’m going to brighten this thing up using a few of my favourite methods.. a Levels Adjustment, a Curves Adjustment, the Sharpen filter and a Brightness/Contrast Adjustment. You can use them together or separately depending on how much oomph you think your photo needs.
I always make a duplicate layer first, that way if I make a real pig’s ear of things I can just delete the layer with all the adjustments and get my original photo back again quickly.
Always make sure the copy layer is selected before doing anything else! (you don’t wanna hear the swearing I do when I realise I’ve edited my original).
First I fix the Levels.
When I select this option a Levels Adjustment box opens and I can fiddle about with the settings until I get something I like – GIMP previews my changes as I make them and before I commit to them – which is very helpful indeed.
For a basic pop I drag the black triangle on the left and the white triangle on the right in a bit towards the middle – just a bit usually but since the input levels on this particular photo are skewed to the left I’ve pulled the light one in far enough to meet where it tapers off. Click OK then to see the effect of this adjustment you can switch the duplicate layer on and off by clicking on the eye next to it
Here’s it on (visible)
And here’s if off (hidden)
That one adjustment is often all it takes.
But I usually prefer things to be a bitty more dramatic (who’d have thunk it?).
Another favourite adjustment of mine is a Curves Adjustment. It’s a powerful tool and the one I use to recreate all sorts of vintage looks but for now I’m just using it to inject even more oomph into this scene. So… still working on the duplicate layer…
… opens up the Curves adjustment box.
You can click on that straight line anywhere you want and drag it into all sorts of weird and wonderful shapes. Each time you click a new anchor point is created and you can have a ball with it. For now though I’m just going to tweak it into an elongated “S” shape so bump up my highlights and lowlights.
One thing I can’t live without is Lightroom’s Sharpen, it’s a serious bit of kit and has more than adequately replaced some rather expensive Photoshop Actions as my preferred tool. GIMP gives it a pretty good shot though.
For this image I slide it up to 42 – it’s a trial and error thing – if you do apply an adjustment and think better of it the universal get-out (Ctrl-Z) will undo it.
The final thing I’m going to do with this photo may sound like a step backward but meh – it’s easy to overdo things. All that lowlight boosting has left it a bit dark for my liking so a quick Brightness/Contrast Adjustment fixes it nicely.
I slide them both up to 20 in the Brightness/Contrast adjustment box.
And that’s the lot.
If after all this work you do feel it’s all a bit too much you can always reduce the opacity of the duplicate layer. This in effect “turns down” the adjustments.
Before I can save it as a JPEG I must flatten the image.
This merges all the visible layers and gets rid of any transparencies leaving me with something I can “Save As” a new JPEG file.
And here’s the Before and After.
Those few adjustments give the scene a bit more depth, the light is more directional and the reflections on the ceiling have appeared from nowhere.
Have a go. You can download GIMP for free HERE.
And I’d love to see what you come up with.
































