Monday, February 21, 2011

Mo-oooom! He's Copyin' Me!!!

OK so maybe I've been around the kids too much. Is there such a thing? Yes, yes there is ;) That's why we have Girls' Night.

Anyway I have recently been asked what is a good way to copy protect digital photos for use in Facebook and other social media albums. I am a fan of "easy" so I will demonstrate my favorite go-to copy protect: the watermark.

A watermark is simply strategically placed text on your image so that a person can still enjoy the photo but cannot pirate it for their own purposes without your explicit approval. Some people who are bigger time photographers that have a career in that field will put large but translucent watermarks on their work to ensure that no one will copy and then crop out or photoshop the watermark out of existence. Myself being smalltime currently I just kind of meekly stick it in the bottom corner most of the time. The choice is yours and you can easily try a few different techniques in Picasa.

The first step is to of course import your photos into Picasa. I use Picasa for all my importing needs to get the photos off the card and into the computer because I really like the user-interface's simplicity. Once I have my photos how I want them and in the final stage I export them as a smaller 1024 pixel file. These exports are the ones that I post on Facebook or use for blogs. They are easier to work with and ensure that no one ever gets my large file even if they copy it. You could use an even small format if you want. It doesn't really matter.

The export process in Picasa has an easy watermark field at the bottom which will place the same text you enter in the bottom right hand corner of each of your photos:


Here is how the photo will look when you click on Export:

(red box for illustration purposes--does not show up on photo)

It does the trick but someone could easily crop that out or clone over it if they really wanted to.

The method I have been using is to export the photo but do not check off "Add Watermark". Instead I then open the photo I want to mark and click on the Text box:


Click on image to enlarge

From here the photo will then say "Type anywhere to add text". You simply need to just start typing and a box will appear on the photo with your text in it. You can move this box anywhere on the screen. You can control the color, size, font, opacity (translucence), and placement:


Click to enlarge image

In my example the translucency is up all the way to allow for the color I chose to be seen easily. If you use a larger font size I recommend dropping the translucency half way down. Be sure to click "Apply" to keep the text on the screen.

The next step is to go back to the library screen and on the folder containing your files click on the Save icon:


Click to enlarge image

If you do not click on Save it will not keep your watermark on the photo when you go to upload it!


Final Watermarked Image

Here is some general info on Copyright laws:





Do you have any other suggestions or good articles about this topic? Please leave a comment below!

Monday, February 14, 2011

Gymnastics Birthday Party

I am so lucky to have a great friend who lets me come along to her events and take pictures. Its wonderful practice for me and I get to spend time around some great kids. This past Sunday I got to attend her son's 6th birthday party (and my own older 2 kids got to go too and had a BLAST) at a place called Regal Gymnastics in Winooski, VT. The lighting was poor in the gymnastics area and my external flash has not been cooperating lately so I had to rely on the built-in flash which is so-so and also my "skillz" with the ISO/Aperture/Shutter/White Balance/Light Metering.

At first my flash was working just fine, but after taking about 20 pictures in a row and saving them in RAW format it suddenly started to say "BUSY DAMMIT" and wouldn't take pictures anymore. This is my worst nightmare. Luckily it was not something I was getting paid to do but I am a perfectionist and a control freak, remember? If I closed the flash and opened it again real quick it would work again but it kept happening. So with a sigh I turned the ISO up to 1600 (the highest my camera would go) and put the shutter at 1/100 and the f-stop at 5.6. This only really seems to spell one thing with me: NOISE. I don't know if I am doing something wrong or what. I had to have a fast shutter speed as it was GYMNASTICS and these were all 6-10 year olds high on sugar. Anything less than 1/100 was not worth taking.

At first I kept it in RAW and each photo looked fine on the screen. But when I started to run out of disk space I dropped it to JPG. In retrospect I wish I had just had it on JPG the entire time. I used Lightroom to edit and fixing the luminance/color noise does not look right when you export into a JPG file which is what I end up having to do. The ones I took in JPG were easier to edit and looked exactly the same when I exported them from my external drive to my hard drive for uploading purposes. I need to do some more research into why it is soooo grainy and if there really is no other alternative than to get a new external flash. The one I have is not fully compatible with my camera as it is an older Speedlite made for a SLR, not a DSLR.

Here are a few shots from the party:



Update: While working on the indoor shots in Lightroom I decided to click on the "HSL" section which is Hue, Saturation, and Luminance. Using these three groups of color controls combined with the Contrast slider I found I was able to produce MUCH more desirable results. Now I want to go back to some older pics and see if I can fix them also. Its such a learning process.

The top pic was before I used the HSL controls:

Note the skin tone is greenish and the red blocks are orangey. Couldn't get rid of it with saturation removal alone...


Now she looks a little more natural and less zombie-like! Still darker than I would want but hey what are ya gonna do...