Flickr has rapidly become one of the largest online photo sharing applications allowing photographers to display their work and enjoy a community atmosphere of sharing comments, critiques and just plain fun at no cost. At least not a monetary fee, but they have written into their terms of service a section, buried in a lot of legalese that they have unrestricted rights to use anything you post on the Flickr site.
Here it is:
"With respect to Content you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of Yahoo! Groups, the license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform and publicly display such Content on the Yahoo! Services solely for the purposes of providing and promoting the specific Yahoo! Group to which such Content was submitted or made available. This license exists only for as long as you elect to continue to include such Content on the Yahoo! Services and will terminate at the time you remove or Yahoo! removes such Content from the Yahoo! Services. With respect to photos, graphics, audio or video you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of the Yahoo! Services other than Yahoo! Groups, the license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publicly perform and publicly display such Content on the Yahoo! Services solely for the purpose for which such Content was submitted or made available. This license exists only for as long as you elect to continue to include such Content on the Yahoo! Services and will terminate at the time you remove or Yahoo! removes such Content from the Yahoo! Services."
I understand that is says for the purpose of promoting Yahoo Services, but how would you feel seeing your work as an advertisement and you didn't even get a Thank you, much less a check. Respectable marketing firms pay a lot of money for art and photos and so should Yahoo.
I have several photo's that are very popular and that I do in fact sell. I have removed these from Flickr and from now on will only be posting fun shots on Flickr. I will continue to share my better shots, but on facebook and on my own web site and blog.
Flickr is a fun community and I have made many friends and learned a lot from the people on flickr. I will continue to interact with them and share my work, I will just limit it to low quality, low resolution shots so that the Flickr employees will be forced to search elsewhere.
I am not condemning Flickr, they are not doing anything illegal and many may not mind. I'm simply posting this to let others know where some of my pictures have gone.....I took them off Flickr. I also think that there may be many users that didn't get down to the part about their right to use our work, alter it and not even be required to give credit, and they need to know. I know I didn't know until a friend told me and told me where to find it and I've been using Flickr for a year now.
I hope this helps someone, and I will continue to post on Flickr, just with a little more discretion. Hope to see you all there.
Now go have fun with photography,
Laura
Monday, February 22, 2010
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Tribute to Cades Cove
You may or may not be aware that Cades Cove in the Smoky Mountain National Park will be closing March 1, 2010 for two months to repave roads and perform other necessary repairs. For many of us it will be a loss to not make our yearly sojourn to this wonderful and beautiful place as spring unfolds it's display of new life, color and God's gift to us. In this light I offer this photographic tribute and a brief history of why this is such a special place.
Surrounded by mountains on all sides, a collection of pastures, fields, mills, barns and an assortment of other old buildings and cabins, Cades Cove is representative of what life in America used to be. The pioneer way of life.
Surrounded by mountains on all sides, a collection of pastures, fields, mills, barns and an assortment of other old buildings and cabins, Cades Cove is representative of what life in America used to be. The pioneer way of life.
The national park system has undertaken the task of preserving this pioneer way of life in Cades Cove by transforming it into a historic exhibit through the rehabilitation and preservation of log cabins, barns, mills, churches and other structures. Cattle, hay and grain continue to be raised today by farmers and the park service.
Cohabitating in the Cove is a plethora of wildlife that include deer, bear, wild boar, turkey and coytoe. I would say that the wildlife for many of the Cove's visitors is the main attraction. Without fail a drive around the Loop Road will offer numerous opportunities to view deer grazing, young bucks testing their skill and strength on each other, turkey scratching the ground looking for a tasty morsel. In the spring and fall, it is not at all uncommon to come up on a bear or as in my case have the bear come up on me while I was photographing one of the cabins. (The below bear photo is the result of that delightful surprise) Early mornings in the Cove often offer a glimpse of a coyote hunting in the open fields.
Wild Turkey scratching for food
An Alert Doe
A Typical View in the Cove
A adolescent bear out looking for a meal
Earlier I briefly alluded to the pioneer way of life. Any discussion of the Cove would be remiss if it didn't include the settler's of the area. The first white man to permanently settle in the Cove was John Oliver who established residence in 1818.
The John Oliver Place
was occupied by the family until the establishment of the park in 1934. I have seen a photograph of this cabin with an old model A or T Ford (I'm not sure which it was an old Ford of some sort) and laundry hanging out on a clothes line to dry.
However, the first Cades Cove related land grant was given to Hugh Dunlap in 1794 for 5,000 acres. Another grant given in 1796 was to William Crowson. These grants were actually given illegally; for at that time the land belonged to the Cherokee Indians and was not open to white settlement until the treaty of 1819. Settlement began in earnest and in 1821 William Tipton purchased 640 acres from William Crowson.
One of the out buildings of the Tipton Place
William Tipton eventually ended up owning over 3,000 acres both in the Cove and on the surrounding mountain sides.
Dan Lawson Place
As the settlers began pouring into the region, the land was deforested for pastures, orchards and crops were planted. The settlers were surrounded by mountains and Hyatt Lane was the only road out. Hyatt Lane went across the cove to then Cades Cove Rd., now Rich Mountain Rd. To travel to Maryville from Cades Cove was a three day trip on horseback.
Hyatt Lane
Another Road that cuts across the cove is Sparks Lane.
Sparks Lane
The soil in the cove was fertile and farming was prosperous; corn being the main crop. However, it was not practical for the farmers to try to carry the corn over the poor mountain road into Maryville to market. Corn was selling for 6.25 cents a bushel. The farmers instead fed a majority of the corn to livestock which could be driven to the markets.
Corn was also a family staple, often ground in tub mills by individual families until such time when a community became large enough to support a water wheel powered mill. The Cades Cove community was one such community that in fact by 1870 was large enough to support more than one mill. John P. Cable's mill was a dual mill both wood and corn. John P. Cable was also a farmer and it is told that he had a large bell mounted on a pole in front of the mill for customers to ring to bring him in from the fields. The Cable mill is one of the buildings the park service has restored but much of the mill is still original.
Waterwheel of Cable's Mill
There is one other aspect of the cove to cover. Prior to the settlement of the white man the Cherokee Indians lived here. Cades Cove, Abrams Creek and Abrams falls all obtained their name from a well known Cherokee Chief, "Old Abram" who live in the nearby village at Chilhowee. According to local lore Old Abram's wife was named Kate which became Cades or Kate's Cove, in her honor.
Abrams Falls
That my friends is a brief (too brief to be of any real informational value) history of the cove and my humble attempt to capture and share some of it's beauty. In two short weeks the cove will be closing so that the park service may attend to the maintenance of some of the buildings and rebuild the well travelled Loop Road. Good Bye old friend, until your reawakening in summer. I'm sure I speak for many when I say we will miss you.
Until next time; Have fun with your photography,
Laura
Thursday, January 21, 2010
RAW is Good: and I don't mean Sushi!
I was talking with a friend of mine when I had just switched over to digital and was asking about different settings. In particular RAW. I had no idea just coming from shooting film what that meant or why use it. My friend is an excellent photographer and was also at the time taking a course on digital photography. (A real course with homework, text book and real human instructor in a classroom.) She told me that the instructor made them shoot in RAW but she saw no need for it, it simply used up too much room on a memory card and there was no other advantage. In fact she went on to say, "After this course I'm going to shoot only in jpeg.
With that said I promptly set my new digital camera on jpeg and went off to some of the most beautiful places I've ever had the privilege to visit. I shot over 1000 pictures the first week I had the camera. But nothing came out very well and I couldn't seem to be able to edit my shots the way others were. I didn't understand. After my trip, I began to read up. (I wish I had researched while I was still out in the Pacific North West) I did an experiment I set my camera to shoot both Jpeg and RAW. Wow! it didn't take long for me to recognize the difference.
Here is an example of what you can do with a RAW image.
This image was taken at 4:00 or so in the afternoon. I did a couple of things. I shot in in RAW, I used the florescent setting for the white balance to get the blue hue and then I under exposed it. I also shot it with 400 ISO to give it some texture.
When I opened the image in the RAW converter I increased the blacks, a little bit of fill light and saturation. The sky was still pretty bright so I used the brush tool and lowered the exposure on the sky only and here is the resulting shot.
I shot this to use as a background for a composite picture I have in mind. But this shot alone looks pretty good to me and I didn't have to fool with it in photoshop, just the RAW conversion software. If you haven't already........... I would suggest you become familiar with this powerful tool.
Below is the original image without any adjustments in the RAW conversion software. Not so compelling a shot.
Till the next time: Have fun with Photography!
Laura
With that said I promptly set my new digital camera on jpeg and went off to some of the most beautiful places I've ever had the privilege to visit. I shot over 1000 pictures the first week I had the camera. But nothing came out very well and I couldn't seem to be able to edit my shots the way others were. I didn't understand. After my trip, I began to read up. (I wish I had researched while I was still out in the Pacific North West) I did an experiment I set my camera to shoot both Jpeg and RAW. Wow! it didn't take long for me to recognize the difference.
Here is an example of what you can do with a RAW image.
This image was taken at 4:00 or so in the afternoon. I did a couple of things. I shot in in RAW, I used the florescent setting for the white balance to get the blue hue and then I under exposed it. I also shot it with 400 ISO to give it some texture.
When I opened the image in the RAW converter I increased the blacks, a little bit of fill light and saturation. The sky was still pretty bright so I used the brush tool and lowered the exposure on the sky only and here is the resulting shot.
I shot this to use as a background for a composite picture I have in mind. But this shot alone looks pretty good to me and I didn't have to fool with it in photoshop, just the RAW conversion software. If you haven't already........... I would suggest you become familiar with this powerful tool.
Below is the original image without any adjustments in the RAW conversion software. Not so compelling a shot.
Till the next time: Have fun with Photography!
Laura
Monday, January 18, 2010
Creativity
"For some beauty seems but an accident of creation: to Muir it was the very smile of God"
~ John Muir
Yes, this image has been manipulated in Photoshop. However, it is my personal belief that God provided us with the ability to have visions beyond what is simply put before us. We have visions about our future, that we call goals and manipulate to the best of our ability to achieve them. Why can we not have visions about our surroundings and manipulate them digitally to the best of our ability to achieve that vision? I believe that John Muir would have loved the technology we have today. I believe that he most likely would have been on the breaking edge creating visual beauty.
I am still learning to use photoshop and the above photo is a result of some of that learning: playing to learn if you will. I took the photo of the sun hiding behind the clouds coloring them in gold. There was a sliver of grey sky showing and I thought how fun it would be to shoot that and then mirror it in photoshop. A technique I learned last night watching a DVD on creating masterpieces in photoshop by Jim Zuckerman. Now there is a man with vision!
Remember most of all to have fun with your photography.
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Color or Composition
In Ketchikan, Alaska there is one of the most colorful streets I've ever seen. Both literally and metaphorically. Creek Street, the row of buildings below that are built on pilings over the water, is not a street but was the "red light district". Dolly's House, the building on the far right of the photo, is today a museum taking you back in time to the days when this row of wooden buildings were all bordellos. They were not shut down until 1953.
"In my photography, color and composition are inseparable. I see color."
~ William Albert Allard
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Photography: Pleasure or Embarrassment?
Ketchikan, Alaska
I had been sick for two days when we arrived in Ketchikan. I only took a handful of pictures, all of them using the auto setting and not much thought about composition. I barely made it back to the ship after having only walked around for about an hour. But, I still recall my trip to Alaska with pleasure.
"Most things in life are moments of pleasure and a lifetime of embarrassment; photography is a moment of embarrassment and a lifetime of pleasure."
~ Tony Benn
Friday, January 1, 2010
Happy New Year!
Today is the beginning of a new year. For many of us we look at this as a time of reflection as well as a time for new beginnings. New years resolutions are traditional and often failed as we fall back into our old routines. I believe this is what happens when we try to force upon ourselves some untimely or unwanted change. Change is uncomfortable, even if it is for the best. We grow complacent and prefer what we know over the unknown.
That being said, I'm not going to make a New Year Resolution. Instead, I'm simply going to continue my journey growing as a photographer and a person. Last month I joined the Knoxville Art and Cultural Alliance which offers numerous opportunities to display my art to a larger audience and to learn from others. I am also putting together a Basic Photography seminar in Johnson City. The date is yet to be determined, but I have already received a wonderful and positive response from people interested in learning photography.
I want to invite all of you to come and enjoy with me each new dawn and experience through the lens of the camera by following me here and at my web site PhotographybyLauraLee.com.
That being said, I'm not going to make a New Year Resolution. Instead, I'm simply going to continue my journey growing as a photographer and a person. Last month I joined the Knoxville Art and Cultural Alliance which offers numerous opportunities to display my art to a larger audience and to learn from others. I am also putting together a Basic Photography seminar in Johnson City. The date is yet to be determined, but I have already received a wonderful and positive response from people interested in learning photography.
I want to invite all of you to come and enjoy with me each new dawn and experience through the lens of the camera by following me here and at my web site PhotographybyLauraLee.com.
Happy New Year
2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)