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Fun With Topaz Labs Adjust

Topaz Labs Adjust

Topaz Labs Adjust 4 is a Pho­to­shop plug-in. It also works with Light­room, Aper­ture and oth­ers pro­grams. Adjust is pow­er­ful expo­sure, detail, color and noise adjust­ment fil­ter. You can cre­ate HDR like pho­tos from a sin­gle photo. Adjust can also turn a plain photo into a stun­ning fine art photo in just min­utes. You are only lim­ited by your own imag­i­na­tion. Once you have cre­ated what you like, you can save the set­tings as a pre­set for your future work. I like Topaz Labs Adjust  4 for its abil­ity to bring back the color, detail and expo­sure to what I saw when I first pho­tographed an object. I also used Adobe Light­room for some minor final adjust­ments. I can highly rec­om­mend Topaz Labs Adjust and all the other plug-ins in the Topaz Labs bun­dle. I use them all. The Video below has some exam­ples of before and after pho­tos using Topaz Labs Adjust 4.


Adobe Lightroom 3

<a href="http://www.linkedtube.com/vsQ9BYo3hZ4a000a889bd29b2c7d7474e0dbe2a8e07.htm" _mce_href="http://www.linkedtube.com/vsQ9BYo3hZ4a000a889bd29b2c7d7474e0dbe2a8e07.htm">LinkedTube</a>

Music by Jimmy Gel­haar. All music made avail­able through the www.jimmygelhaar.com web­site at:
www.jimmygelhaar.com — Film Com­poser and Music Downloadss

You can down­load Topaz Labs Adjust 4 as a free trial and start using it in just a few minutes.

Along with Topaz Lab Adjust 4  you get a down­load user guides, learn­ing cen­ter with video tuto­ri­als, user forum, tech sup­port, and user galleries.

Com­pat­i­bil­ity

The plug-in Topaz Lab Adjust 4 is com­pat­i­ble with:

Mac sys­tem:  OS 10.4, 10.5  10.6

Mac soft­ware: Adobe Pho­to­shop CS3-CS5, Adobe Pho­to­shop Ele­ments 6–9, Apple Aper­ture 2 and 3, Adobe Light­room 2 and 3, Apple iPhoto

Please note: Aper­ture, Light­room and iPhoto require the free Topaz Fusion Express soft­ware add on.

Win­dows Sys­tems: Win­dows XP,  Win­dows Vista,  Win­dows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit all Win­dows versions)

Win­dows soft­ware: Adobe Pho­to­shop CS3-CS5 (32-bit and 64-bit), Adobe Pho­to­shop Ele­ments 6–9, Adobe Light­room 2 and 3 with the free Topaz Fusion Express soft­ware add on, Irfan­view, PaintShop Pro, Photo and Serif Photo Plus.

1 GB RAM Min­i­mum for both Mac and Windows

Not com­pat­i­ble with the Pow­erPC proces­sors like G4 or G5.

 

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Compare Nikon D300s, D7000, D3100

Com­pare Nikon D300s, D7000, D3100

Nikon has Released 2 new Cam­eras the Nikon D7000 and D3100. I thought it would nice to com­pare these 2 cam­eras along with the Nikon D300s. The D3100 is a 14.3 MP at a great low price, The D7000 16.2 MP touted as the new replace­ment for the D90 and the D300s as the pros chose as the top end cam­era of Nikon’s DX (APS-C) sen­sor format.

Nikon DSLR Com­pared all DX format
Nikon Cam­era Type Nikon D300s Nikon D7000 Nikon D3100
Rank #1 #2 #3
Nikon D300s Body only Nikon D7000 Body only Nikon D3100 W/18-55mm NIKKOR VR Lens View the Nikon D300s Video Nikon D7000 View the Nikon D3100 Video
Res­o­lu­tion 12.3 MP 16.2 MP 14.2 MP
HD Video up to 720p up to 1080p up to 1080p
Exter­nal stereo micro­phone jack Yes Yes No
Num­ber of Mem­ory Slots / Card Types 1 / SD,SDHC & 1 / CF 2 / SD,SDHC,SDXC 1 / SD,SDHC,SDXC
ISO range 100 — 6400 100 — 12800 100 — 12800
Live View Yes Yes Yes
View Finder Coverage 100% 100% 95%
Frames per Sec­ond (FPS) 7 FPS 6 FPS 3 FPS
Self Timer 2,5,10,20 Sec. 2,10 Sec. 2 ‚10 Sec.
Flash sync speed max 1/250 Sec. 1/250 Sec. 1/200 Sec.
Max Shut­ter speed 1/8000 1/8000 1/4000
Optional remote con­trol connector Yes Yes + wireless Yes
Max­i­mum Aut­o­fo­cus Points 51 39 11
Expo­sure Bracketing 2 to 9 2 and 3 No
Time­lapse Exposure Yes Yes No
Active D Lighting Yes Yes Yes
Bat­tery Type EN-EL3e EN-EL-15 EN-EL-14
Bat­tery Life ( Num­ber Shot per charge) aprox. 950 aprox. 1050 aprox. 550
Wether Sealed Yes Yes No
Image Sen­sor Clean­ing System Yes Yes Yes
Price (ESP) Bode only except the D3100 $1699.95 $1199.95 $699.95 W/Lens
B&H Pho­toVideo

Buy Now

Buy Now

Buy Now

Nikon D300s

 The Nikon D300s is truly a pro­fes­sional cam­era and the top of the line DX sen­sor cam­era. The D300s is almost the same lay­out as the Full Frame FX sen­sor Nikon D700. It is a 12.3 mega pixel dig­i­tal cam­era with a fast con­tin­u­ous shoot­ing up to 7 frames per sec­ond. Pic­tures are taken in JPEG, Tiff, AVI and 12 or 14-bit NEF (RAW) for­mat. The cam­era has a low noise ISO sen­si­tiv­ity range from 200 to 3200 and expanded ISO 100 and up to 6400. It has 51 aut­o­fo­cus points, pro­grammed, man­ual, aper­ture pri­or­ity, and shut­ter pri­or­ity expo­sure mode set­tings. It has man­ual and auto focus modes. There’s a 3 inch LCD mon­i­tor with 921000 dot res­o­lu­tion with one but­ton live view, a Rugged magnesium-alloy con­struc­tion, image edit­ing, and an auto­matic image sen­sor cleaner are also included. The new fea­ture on this cam­era over the Nikon D300 is that it shoots 720p (24 fps) HD movies. It also has a built in monau­ral micro­phone as well as exter­nal stereo mini-pin jack, along with a built-in pop up flash. The Nikon D300s has 1 SD card slot that sup­ports SecureDig­i­tal (SD) and SDHC SecureDig­i­tal High Capac­ity, It also has 1 Com­pact­Flash Type I &II (CF) card slot. The mem­ory cards are not included. I rec­om­mend 8GB to 16GB class 6, high speed for SD cards and 400x or higher for CF cards. The cam­era comes with video cable and USB cables, as well as an EN-EL3e Lithium-ion recharge­able bat­tery, bat­tery charger, strap, eye­piece shield, rub­ber eye­cup, hot-shoe cover, body cap, and LCD cover, also included are CD-ROMs with Nikon soft­ware suite and a man­ual. This is a rugged pro­fes­sional cam­era and did I say FAST 7 fps. If you’re into HDR then this cam­era is for you with expo­sure brack­et­ing from 2 to 9 expo­sures. WOW! The Nikon D300s is a bit expen­sive but is a work horse. I own this cam­era and even with the fea­tures of the new Nikon D7000 I would still own the Nikon D300s

Nikon D7000

The new Nikon D7000 will be the replace­ment for the D90. The Nikon D7000 is a 16.2 mega pixel dig­i­tal cam­era with con­tin­u­ous shoot­ing up to 6 frames per sec­ond up to 100 shots. Pic­tures are taken in JPEG and 12 or 14-bit NEF (RAW) for­mat. The cam­era has a low noise ISO sen­si­tiv­ity range from 200 to 6400 and expanded ISO up to 25600. It has 19 auto­matic expo­sure scene modes — pro­grammed, man­ual, aper­ture pri­or­ity, shut­ter pri­or­ity and auto­matic expo­sure mode set­tings. It also has man­ual and auto focus modes to ensure the full con­trol of the pho­to­graph regard­less of dis­tance or light­ing. There is a 3 inch LCD mon­i­tor with 92100 dot res­o­lu­tion, one but­ton live view, image edit­ing, and an auto­matic image sen­sor cleaner. The hot new fea­ture on this cam­era is that it shoots 1080p (24 fps), 720p (24 & 30 fps) HD movies. Another nice fea­ture is a built in monau­ral micro­phone as well as exter­nal stereo mini-pin jack and a built-in pop up flash. The Nikon D7000 has 2 SD card slots that sup­port SDHC SecureDig­i­tal High Capac­ity, SecureDig­i­tal (SD), and the new SDXC which sup­ports mem­ory cards up to 2TB. Note that the mem­ory cards are not included with the cam­era pur­chase. I rec­om­mend 4GB to 16GB class 6, high speed cards. The cam­era comes with A/V and USB cables, as well as an EN-EL15 Lithium-ion recharge­able bat­tery, bat­tery charger, strap, eye­piece shield, rub­ber eye­cup, hot-shoe cover, body cap, LCD cover, CD-ROMs with Nikon soft­ware suite and a man­ual. All of this hard­ware makes the cam­era sound like seri­ous busi­ness, and it is. The Nikon D90 stands at the point where dig­i­tal cam­eras start to get expen­sive. Its users would pay a higher price still for such crisp, clear pho­tographs and easy-to-use extra fea­tures. This is one cam­era that’s worth the cost.

Nikon D3100

The new Nikon D3100 one of Nikon’s new cam­eras for the ama­teur pho­tog­ra­pher and I think this will be a great cam­era for pho­tog­ra­phers on a bud­get who still want to be cre­ative with there pho­tog­ra­phy. The Nikon D3100 is a 14.2 mega pixel dig­i­tal cam­era with con­tin­u­ous shoot­ing up to 3 frames per sec­ond. Pic­tures are taken in JPEG and NEF (RAW) for­mat. This cam­era has a low noise ISO sen­si­tiv­ity range from ISO100 to 3200 and expanded ISO up to ISO25600. It has 6 auto­matic expo­sure scene modes, pro­grammed auto­matic, man­ual, aper­ture pri­or­ity, shut­ter pri­or­ity expo­sure mode set­tings. The D3100 has both man­ual and auto focus modes to ensure the full con­trol of the pho­to­graph regard­less of dis­tance or light­ing. There’s a 3 inch LCD mon­i­tor 230000 dot TFT LCD, one but­ton live view for stills and video, image edit­ing, and an auto­matic image sen­sor cleaner. The hot new fea­ture on this cam­era is that it shoots 1080p (24 fps), 720p (24, 25& 30 fps) HD movies motion MOV H.264/MPEG-4 for­mats, Also included is a built in monau­ral micro­phone and a pop up flash. The Nikon D3100 has 1 SD card slot that sup­ports SDHC SecureDig­i­tal High Capac­ity, SecureDig­i­tal (SD), and the new SDXC which sup­ports mem­ory cards up to 2TB. Note that the mem­ory cards are not included in the cam­era pur­chase. I rec­om­mend 8GB to 16GB class 6, high speed cards. The cam­era comes with AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f/3.5–5.6 VR, front & rear lens caps, as well as an EN-EL14 lithium-ion recharge­able bat­tery, bat­tery charger, strap, eye­piece shield, rub­ber eye­cup, hot-shoe cover, body cap, CD-ROMs with Nikon soft­ware suite and a man­ual. All of this hard­ware makes the cam­era sound like seri­ous busi­ness, and it is. The Nikon D3100 stands out as fea­ture rich cam­era for the price. This could make a great backup cam­era as well. Just remem­ber the price of this cam­era includes AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f/3.5–5.6 VR lens.

The Lenses

The Nikon D3100, D7000 & D300s uses the full line of Nikon DX lenses along with many other Nikon and after­mar­ket lenses. I rec­om­mend you buy the best lenses you can afford. The lens is one the most impor­tant fac­tors when it comes to image qual­ity. Lenses have a life cycle of 10 years or more. Cam­eras have a shorter life cycle of between 3 to 5 years because of the fast mov­ing tech­nol­ogy. Because the lens life is so much longer than the cam­era, I rec­om­mend you put more empha­sis on the lens qual­ity than the cam­era. One more thing, these cam­eras are very hi-tech and you should have the lat­est hi-tech lenses. The DX (APS-C) for­mat sen­sor used on these cam­eras, and most other D-SLR cam­eras, is smaller than the 35mm film or full frame FX sen­sor used on the Nikon D700, D3s and D3X. There­fore, qual­ity ED (Extra Low Dis­tor­tion) glass and VR (image sta­bi­liza­tion) is very impor­tant to get the best images from D-SLR cam­eras with DX (APS-C) for­mat sen­sor. There is one great advan­tage of the DX for­mat. You can mul­ti­ply the focal length by 1.5x mak­ing a 200mm lens equiv­a­lent to a 300mm lens in full frame 35mm or FX format.

Con­clu­sion

I picked these three Nikon cam­eras because they all will be good cam­eras for the cre­ative pho­tog­ra­pher from begin­ner to pro with a wide range in pric­ing. Pick­ing the right cam­era depends on what fea­tures are impor­tant to you. All 3 of these cam­eras will take great pho­tographs. If HD video is the most impor­tant to you the Nikon D3100 or D7000 may be best for you because of 1080p res­o­lu­tion. But, if you’re into HDR (high dynamic range) pho­tog­ra­phy then the D300s may be best pick. The D300s has expo­sure brack­et­ing from 2 to 9 expo­sures. So, do your home­work. Pick the fea­tures that you need the most and then choose the cam­era that best suits your needs. Just remem­ber, the most expen­sive cam­era may not be the best for you. One more thing — if you don’t own other Nikon lenses. When you are buy­ing a DSLR cam­era you’re buy­ing cam­era sys­tem with lenses and acces­sories that might still be good and usable if in the future you upgrade your cam­era. So chose your cam­era sys­tem wisely. The two top cam­era sys­tems are Nikon and Canon.


 

 

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Nikon D90 Review and tips

Nikon_ D90

Updated: Oct. 5, 2010 — The Nikon D90 is still a great cam­era but with time and new tech­nol­ogy it will soon be replaced by Nikon’s new D7000 which has not yet been released. I would rec­om­mend the D5000 or D3100 or even the D3000 at the low end, as entry level cam­eras for those new to DSLR’s and D7000 or D300s for the Advanced Pho­tog­ra­pher.  Look for deep dis­counts for the Nikon D90 in the near future.

Post Update: Oct. 12, 2010 — New arti­cle — Com­pare the Nikon D300s, D3100 and D7000 the replace­ment for D90.

 

Nikon D90 Review

Nikon D90 is the new replace­ment for the D80. Some of the high-end Nikons are sta­ples of qual­ity dig­i­tal pho­tog­ra­phy. One model in par­tic­u­lar, though a lit­tle pricey for casual picture-takers, is a favorite among advanced ama­teurs and indus­try insid­ers: the Nikon D90.

The Nikon D90 is a 12.3 mega pixel dig­i­tal cam­era with con­tin­u­ous shoot­ing up to 4.5 frames per sec­ond. Pic­tures are taken in JPEG or 12-bit NEF (RAW) for­mat. The cam­era has a low noise ISO sen­si­tiv­ity range from 200 to 3200. It has 5 scene modes, pro­grammed, man­ual, aper­ture pri­or­ity, shut­ter pri­or­ity and auto­matic expo­sure mode set­tings.  It has man­ual and auto focus modes to ensure the full con­trol of the pho­to­graph regard­less of dis­tance or light­ing. There is a 3 inch LCD mon­i­tor, one but­ton live view, image edit­ing, and an auto­matic image sen­sor cleaner.   The hot new fea­ture on this cam­era is that it shoots 720p HD movies at 24fps in motion JPEG for­mat (first of its kind).

The Lenses

The Nikon D90 uses the full line of Nikon DX lenses along with many other Nikon and after­mar­ket lenses. I rec­om­mend you buy the best lenses you can afford. The lens is one the most impor­tant fac­tors when it comes to image qual­ity. Lenses have a life cycle of 10 years or more. Cam­eras have a shorter life cycle of between 3 to 5 years because of the fast mov­ing tech­nol­ogy. Because the lens life is so much longer than the cam­era, I rec­om­mend you put more empha­sis on the lens qual­ity than the cam­era. One more thing this is a very hi-tech cam­era and you should have the lat­est hi-tech lenses. The DX (APS-C) for­mat sen­sor used on this cam­era, and most other D-SLR cam­eras, is smaller than the 35mm film or full frame FX sen­sor used on the Nikon D700, D3s and D3X. There­fore, qual­ity ED (Extra Low Dis­tor­tion) glass and VR (image sta­bi­liza­tion) is very impor­tant to get the best images from D-SLR cam­eras with DX (APS-C) for­mat sen­sor. There is one great advan­tage of the DX for­mat. You can mul­ti­ply the focal length by 1.5x mak­ing a 200mm lens equiv­a­lent to a 300mm lens in full frame 35mm or FX format.

The lenses I use and rec­om­mend for out­door photography:

Nikon 12-24mm f/4G ED IF Aut­o­fo­cus DX Nikkor Zoom Lens

Nikon 16-85mm f/3.5–5.6G AF-S DX ED VR Nikkor Wide Angle Tele­photo Zoom Lens for Nikon DSLR Cameras

AF-S Zoom-NIKKOR 70-200mm f/2.8G IF-ED VR II telephoto

Nikon AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 55-200mm f/4–5.6G IF-ED Lens

And one on my wish list:

Nikon AF VR Zoom-NIKKOR 80-400mm f/4.5–5.6D ED Lens

The Nikon D90 uses SDHC SecureDig­i­tal High Capac­ity and SecureDig­i­tal (SD) mem­ory cards not included. I rec­om­mend 2GB to 8GB class 6, high speed cards. The cam­era comes with A/V and USB cables, as well as an EN-EL3e Lithium-ion recharge­able bat­tery, bat­tery charger, strap, eye­piece cap, dust cap, body cap, LCD cover, CD-ROMs with Nikon soft­ware suite and man­ual. All of this hard­ware makes the cam­era sound like seri­ous busi­ness, and it is. This is no child’s toy. The Nikon D90 stands at the point where dig­i­tal cam­eras start to get expen­sive. Its users would pay a higher price still for such crisp, clear pho­tographs and easy-to-use extra fea­tures. This is one cam­era that’s worth the cost.

 

The Bat­tery

The recharge­able bat­tery used in this cam­era is the EN-EL3e Lithium-ion pro­pri­etary bat­tery, which for travel I rec­om­mend you buy 1 or 2 spares. The good news is the bat­tery life is great with as many as 800 shots per charge. The price for the Nikon brand is about $50.00 US. The other option is after mar­ket bat­ter­ies at a price of around $20.00 US at Batteries.com And B&H Photo video. I per­son­ally have used these bat­ters and they work very well. For about $20.00 US they also have com­pact charger with flip out plug and auto­mo­bile cig­a­rette lighter adapter that is per­fect for travel. See right side bar to link to these adver­tis­ers.

I rec­om­mend DVD video train­ing for the Nikon D90 to get you up to speed fast with the oper­a­tion of the cam­era. You can watch the video all the way through and then go back to view the areas where you need addi­tional assis­tance. The train­ing I rec­om­mend is Blue Crane Dig­i­tal Nikon D90 Vol 1 & 2 .

A sturdy cam­era, the Nikon D90 weighs in at approx. 22oz. Its phys­i­cal dimen­sions are 4.1in. x 5.2in. x 3in. (HxWxD), Users like the Nikon D90’s nat­ural feel. It fits right into the photographer’s hands and doesn’t feel clumsy or bulky.

Other Optional Accessories:

MB-D80 multi power bat­tery pack: Holds 2 EN-EL3e or 6 AA Batteries

MC-DC2 remote cord: Shut­ter Release

GP-1 GPS unit: for live geo­t­ag­ing to image files

SB-600 AF speed­light unit: Flash Replaced with SB-700 Speed­light Shoe Mount Flash

Or

Nikon SB-900 AF Speed­light i-TTL Shoe Mount Flash

Nikon EN-EL3e Recharge­able Lithium-Ion Battery

After Mar­ket Accessories:

Hood­man H-EyeN22S Hood­eye for Nikon square 22nn SLR Line

Hood­man H-LPP3 Hood­loupe 3.0 Pro­fes­sional 3 inch screen loupe

EN-EL3e AC/DC Com­pact Dig­i­tal Cam­era Bat­tery Charger

Nikon EN-EL3e Li-Ion Replace­ment Dig­i­tal Cam­era Battery

SDHC Mem­ory Cards

User sen­ti­ments are over­whelm­ingly pos­i­tive. This cam­era is touted as the next step to the advance to pro pho­tog­ra­pher. When the seri­ous advance Pho­tog­ra­pher sets out to take great pic­tures the Nikon D90 will be wait­ing for them. Cus­tomers insist that the cam­era is easy to use, even with all the extra fea­tures. You cer­tainly don’t have to be a pro­fes­sional to take professional-quality pho­tographs with the Nikon D90 dig­i­tal camera.

The Nikon D90 sells for about $869US for the body only. It can be found online at B&H Photo Video Dig­i­tal Cam­era and retail­ers or any­where dig­i­tal cam­eras are sold.

Nikon D90 12.3MP Dig­i­tal SLR Cam­era (Body Only)

Other Nikon D-SLRs Cam­eras: D40 ‚  D60 ‚  D70 , D3000D3100 , D5000 , D7000 D80 ‚  D90 ‚  D300 , D300s ‚  D700 , D3 ‚  D3s ‚  D3X, D4

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Nikon D300s review and tips

Nikon d300s

I just received my new Nikon D300s from B&H Pho­tovideo last Fri­day, August 6 2010.  Review of the Nikon D300s. View the video from B&H Pho­tovideo on the new Nikon D300s DSLR camera.

Com­pare the Nikon D300s with the Nikon D7000 and Nikon D3100

Click hear to view the Nikon D300s in 3D

Click hear to view more pho­tos of the Nikon D300s

Nikon D300s
Rugged DSLR for stills and HD video

The Nikon D300s con­tains a 12.3Mp DX-format CMOS sen­sor, 920,000-dot Live View-enabled LCD, and can shoot stills at up to 7 frames-per-second.  Aside from stills, the NikonD300s can also cap­ture 720p video using any num­ber of Nikon optics.

Nikon D300s SLR Dig­i­tal Cam­era Body
MB-D10 Multi-Power Bat­tery Grip
Newslet­ter Arti­cle: Nikon’s D300s

 

Nikon D300s Review

The Nikon D300s is truly a pro­fes­sional cam­era and the top of the line DX sen­sor cam­era. The D300s is almost the same lay­out as the Full Frame FX sen­sor Nikon D700. It is a 12.3 mega pixel dig­i­tal cam­era with a fast con­tin­u­ous shoot­ing up to 7 frames per sec­ond. Pic­tures are taken in JPEG, Tiff, AVI and 12 or 14-bit NEF (RAW) for­mat. The cam­era has a low noise ISO sen­si­tiv­ity range from 200 to 3200 and expanded ISO 100 and up to 6400. It has 51 aut­o­fo­cus points, pro­grammed, man­ual, aper­ture pri­or­ity, and shut­ter pri­or­ity expo­sure mode set­tings.  It has man­ual and auto focus modes. There’s a 3 inch LCD mon­i­tor with 921000 dot res­o­lu­tion with one but­ton live view, a Rugged magnesium-alloy con­struc­tion, image edit­ing, and an auto­matic image sen­sor cleaner are also included.  The new fea­ture on this cam­era over the Nikon D300 is that it shoots 720p (24 fps) HD movies. It also has a built in monau­ral micro­phone as well as exter­nal stereo mini-pin jack, along with a built-in pop up flash.

The Nikon D300s has 1 SD card slot that sup­ports SecureDig­i­tal (SD) and SDHC SecureDig­i­tal High Capac­ity, It also has 1 Com­pact­Flash Type I &II (CF) card slot. The mem­ory cards are not included. I rec­om­mend 8GB to 16GB class 6, high speed for SD cards and 400x or higher for CF cards. The cam­era comes with video cable and USB cables, as well as an EN-EL3e Lithium-ion recharge­able bat­tery, bat­tery charger, strap, eye­piece shield, rub­ber eye­cup, hot-shoe cover, body cap, and LCD cover, also included are CD-ROMs with Nikon soft­ware suite and a man­ual. This is a rugged pro­fes­sional cam­era and did I say FAST 7 fps. If you’re into HDR then this cam­era is for you with expo­sure brack­et­ing from 2 to 9 expo­sures.  WOW! The Nikon D300s is a bit expen­sive but is a work horse. I own this cam­era and even with the fea­tures of the new Nikon D7000 I would still own the Nikon D300s.

Other Optional Accessories:

MB-D10 multi power bat­tery pack: Holds 2 EN-EL3e or 6 AA Batteries

Nikon MC-30 Remote Trig­ger Release

SB-600 AF speed­light unit: Flash

Or

Nikon SB-900 AF Speed­light i-TTL Shoe Mount Flash

Nikon EN-EL3e Recharge­able Lithium-Ion Battery

After Mar­ket Accessories:

Hood­man H-EyeN22S Hood­eye for Nikon square 22nn SLR Line

Hood­man H-LPP3 Hood­loupe 3.0 Pro­fes­sional 3 inch screen loupe

EN-EL3e AC/DC Com­pact Dig­i­tal Cam­era Bat­tery Charger

Nikon EN-EL3e Li-Ion Replace­ment Dig­i­tal Cam­era Battery

SDHC Mem­ory Cards

Nikon Lenses

Nikon 12-24mm f/4G ED IF Aut­o­fo­cus DX Nikkor Zoom Lens

Nikon 16-85mm f/3.5–5.6G AF-S DX ED VR Nikkor Wide Angle Tele­photo Zoom Lens for Nikon DSLR Cameras

AF-S Zoom-NIKKOR 70-200mm f/2.8G IF-ED VR II telephoto

Nikon AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 55-200mm f/4–5.6G IF-ED Lens

Nikon AF VR Zoom-NIKKOR 80-400mm f/4.5–5.6D ED Lens

Nikon AF-S Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8G ED Aut­o­fo­cus Lens

Doug Nie­der­miller


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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 Online Training Videos

Lightroom tutorialsWhen I first con­sid­ered Adobe Pho­to­shop Light­room 2, I wanted to try it out.  You can down­loaded it as a free 30 day trial from Adobe.   From  my research, this pro­gram was just what I was look­ing for.  You can orga­nize your pho­tos and edit them very quickly.   The prob­lem is,  learn­ing all the fea­tures in this pro­gram using the man­ual could take months to learn.  Then I found the lynda.com online train­ing course by Chris Orwig, a pho­tog­ra­pher and instruc­tor at the Brooks Insti­tute of Pho­tog­ra­phy in Santa Bar­bra, Cal­i­for­nia.  In a mater of days after view­ing his online video course I was pro­fi­cient in Light­room 2.  After a week I had all my pho­tos cat­a­loged (about 25000 pho­tos) and could edit about 100 pho­tos in about an hour. Wow! Other pro­grams would have taken me days to edit.  Now I’m really excited about the new Light­room 3.  Chris is a great instruc­tor and pas­sion­ate about pho­tog­ra­phy.  He made this course easy and fun to learn about Light­room 2 and Light­room 3.  Watch the videos below and see if Chris Orwig’s online video train­ing on Light­room 3 or other Lynda.com videos are right for you.

Chris intro­duces him­self and some of the new fea­tures in Light­room 3 Beta

Want more from your software? Learn new skills.

Light­room 3 Beta preview

Light­room 3 Beta is now avail­able for down­load  from Adobe and it’s free until it’s  final release some­time in April 2010.  To down­load Light­room 3 ‚  go to Adobe.com and search for Light­room 3 in the upper right cor­ner of the site.


Adobe Lightroom 2

Intro­duc­tion to Light­room 3 Beta
Sharp­en­ing in Light­room 2 vs. Light­room 3 Beta

I hope you enjoyed the­ses videos by Chris Orwig on Adobe Pho­to­shop Light­room 3.  Lynda.com is a great source for online train­ing which includes classes on pho­tog­ra­phy, graphic design, web design, pro­gram­ming and soft­ware & web appli­ca­tions.  With Lynda.com you will have access to over 1000 online courses 24/7.  Course sub­jects I have taken thru Lynda.com are:  Light­room 2, Light­room 3 Beta, Search Engine Opti­miza­tion, Word­Press,  Twit­ter, Face­book, Prod­uct Pho­tog­ra­phy, Sell­ing & Pub­lish­ing Pho­tog­ra­phy, HTML, Pho­to­shop Ele­ments, Word, Excel and Expres­sion Web.

So visit and try

lynda.com

Pho­to­shop Light­room 3 Essen­tial Train­ing [CD-ROM]

 

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