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Engadget

How to Look Thin In Photos


It's spring. And if you're like us, the results of your swimsuit diet aren't quite showing yet. If you've got any graduations or weddings coming up in the warmer months ahead, you're likely to get your picture taken. If the thought of a photographer makes you want to run, relax: We've found a few tips -- online, in books, from experts -- on looking thinner in pictures.

1. Use flashes in sunlight. According to Geek Sugar, it's all about the lighting. Flashes are good because they override the shadows that overhead sunlight might cast on your face, making for pronounced under-eye and chin shadows.

2. Lean in towards the camera. Digital Camera Tracker says leaning slightly towards the camera is helpful: "Think of having a long neck like a gazelle, and tilt your chin down just a bit to avoid the appearance of a double chin," the site suggests.

3. Stand like a ballerina. No, we're not kidding. While it stops short of recommending you wear a tutu, the 'Rocky Mountain News' says you need to pose like a ballet dancer: "The most flattering (read slimming) pose: Face front and cross one leg in front of the other, then turn your body at a 45-degree angle away from the camera and turn head and shoulders toward the camera. Place feet in ballet third position (one foot angled in front of the other)."

4. Put your hands on your hips. The 'Rocky Mountain News' says your shoulders might look less rounded this way.

5. Get a shot from below, as if you were on the runway. In Camilla Morton's new advice book for women, 'How to Walk in High Heels,' model Gisele Bundchen (pictured) is interviewed about how to look good, both in front of and away from the camera. For pictures, the runway-veteran agrees that lighting is crucial, but she adds a few tips on angles and poses: "For long legs, point one leg into the center of the frame and get the photographer to shoot looking up your body," says Bundchen. We just hope it's not up your nose, Gisele!

6. Get a shot from above. The best way to hide that double chin is to have someone shoot your face from a few inches above your head. Just find someone who's taller than you. Either you'll look up at them, which makes double chins disappear, or the area below your chin will be in shadow, and won't show up in the picture at all. For a group picture where you want everyone to look good, stand on a chair and have everyone look up at you: We've been using this technique at parties for years. It works!

7. Forget about looking thin and just relax. Not all experts agree with the stand-up-straight, pose-like-a-movie-star advice. We spoke to Edward Keating, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning photographer for the 'New York Times,' who was the principal photographer for the newspaper's 'Vows' column for seven years. He says that the best thing a subject can do to look good in photographs is to be relaxed and happy. "Look at the photographer, not at the camera," says Keating. "If they're connected with me, they're not thinking about the camera and the lens."

Engadget

World's Oldest Photograph Found?



It's time for a high tech time warp.

Set your clocks for the last years of the 18th-century, because that's when the newly identified earliest example of a photograph was taken.

The picture is of a leaf and the photographer was likely one Thomas Wedgwood of Bristol, England, who lived from 1771 to 1805. Until now, the leaf photograph was thought to have been the work of Henry Fox Talbot, who is credited with taking the world's first photographs in the 1830s.

Early photos were produced on paper treated with silver nitrate to make it light-sensitive. The image was created by laying a leaf on the light-sensitive paper and exposing it to the sun. The exposed areas of the paper darkened, leaving a silhouette.

Wedgwood and other early photographers were not able to solve the problem of over exposure, so most of their early shots were destroyed.

Most of today's digital still cameras use charge coupled devices – or CCDs – to capture images. These chips sense the light and color that comes in through a camera's lens groups and converts it into data, ultimately producing digital images. Automatic settings help us prevent our shots from being over exposed.

An art historian who was asked to assess the photograph before the auction raised the possibility of the picture being even older than originally thought.

Sotheby's was set to auction the photo, which was expected to pull in between £50-£70,000 (about $100-135,000). It's holding off on the auction until the age of the paper can be precisely determined. The auction price then is expected to skyrocket. [Source: Daily Mail]
Engadget

Nikon Debuts Slim, Wi-Fi-friendly Fashion Camera


Nikon is fleshing out its "Style Series" of shooters with the COOLPIX S52 and S52c (pictured) compact cameras. The two cameras are pretty much spec-for-spec identical, other than the Wi-Fi capabilities of the S52c, which allow it to upload shots wirelessly to services like Flickr or Nikon's own "my Picturetown." Otherwise, you're looking at a pair of fairly standard compacts, with 9-megapixel sensors, 3x zoom, optical image stabilization and so forth.

Both will be available in May, with the S52 retailing for $250, and the S52c arriving at $280.



From Engadget
Engadget

Hands-On With Adobe's New Free, Web-Based Photoshop Express



Today, Adobe launched a beta version of Photoshop Express. Aimed at anyone who wants to do quick edits of pictures, this new flash-based version of Photoshop is totally free and runs right in your Web browser -- perfect for anyone who doesn't want to clog up their computer with a full program installation or drop hundreds of dollars on the regular version of Photoshop. The service also allows you to manage and share photo galleries with friends and family with at very own yourname.photoshop.com.

Photoshop Express gives you 2 gigabytes of online storage, and allows you to connect, edit and share your photos directly with Picasa, Photobucket and Facebook. We gave it a quick spin today and are impressed with the program's slick, clean, and easy-to-use interface, but this is definitely not a Photoshop replacement. While you can clean up your pictures and easily share them with friends, you won't be able to "photoshop" images like this.

That said, Express lets you make a range of basic photo edits -- red-eye correction, exposure changes, cropping and more -- that will be more than enough for most non-professional photographers. Also, we were impressed with the app's speed, especially considering the Web-based nature of the site. Ready to try it out? Sign up here.

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Engadget

Vietnam Veterans Memorial - Now Online and Interactive



USAToday reports that The National Archives and Records Administration and Footnote.com have teamed up and launched an online, searchable version of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

"We know that there are many untold experiences represented on that Wall, and we hope that this interactive version of the memorial helps those affected by the war by sharing their stories," said Footnote.com CEO Russell Wilding, on the National Archives and Records Administration Web site.

Essentially an enormous, five-gigapixel image of the Vietnam Memorial built using over 6,000 photographs, the site is completely searchable by name, date of birth, date of death -- even rank, grade and specialty. Users can over each of the 58,320 names and add stories, tributes and photographs after registering with the site.

We checked it out and unfortunately the site is running a little slow -- due, no doubt, to an influx of traffic -- but we hope it'll speed up soon once the initial interest slows down.

From USAToday

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Engadget

Stop Ruining Photos with Blinking


We've all seen it, or been guilty of doing it ourselves: a perfectly good group photo ruined by someone blinking. Photography blog MalekTips has some suggestions for how to avoid this snapshot-destroying impulse.

The easiest technique is to take more than one photograph when using the flash, which will allow your subjects' eyes to adjust to the bright burst of light. MalekTips also suggests trying to avoid using the flash by finding a well-lit area to take photographs. Follow the link below for more tips on keeping your subjects' eyes open.

From geeksugar

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Engadget

Truth About Cats and Dogs (and Photos)



If you've been using the Internet lately, you've surely come across pictures of cats in various states of preposterousness. But how do the photographers coax such absurdity out of their pets? Not easily. As anyone who has tried to snap photos of their cat wearing a hollowed-out grapefruit half on his or her head can surely understand, furry creatures can be just as difficult on the runway as a model who hasn't eaten a full meal in six weeks.

The editors at PC World have come to the rescue, fortunately, with a some advice on how to more effectively capture your pet on film. The tips range from the obvious (put them at ease) to the slightly technical (set your camera to Shutter Priority to prevent those quick-moving pets from becoming a total blur), and overall should help you seize your four-legged companion's cuteness for the world to see.

One thing they fail to mention: Bribery (steak, tuna fish, nachos) goes a long way.

From PC World


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