An Alien afternoon...

© Gunther Deichmann,
Cuttlefish Sepia sp.
-
Alien afternoon...
Hi
everybody... I am leaving this afternoon for a short
one week trip to Palau to be with my friends and
client at Sam's Tours, they are celebrating the Grand
Opening for the completely renovated
Sam's Tours
premisses, the big party is on the 26 of October and
I give you a full report with images once I am back
next week, but now I have to run hence this Alien
afternoon.... so much to do and no time left.
Until soon,
Cheers Gunther
Photo Workshop article in i-mag Photography Magazine
The i-mag Photography Magazine
was very quick and published in their current issue a
nice article from our GDPhotoWorshop in Siam Reap,
Angkor Wat, Cambodia.
The images are from the workshop participants and
text by Jun Miranda, including the image from Luis
Harder, who won the Apple Aperture software, with his
photo of the little boy, the bike against the brown
wall. If you like to read the whole story you can
download it as a pdf file here located under
Publications/Spreads
http://www.deichmann-photo.com/publications.html
For more
information or if you like to view some of the images
in our Gallery from the participants, please click
this link:
http://gdphotoworkshop.com/
The great
sunrise shot was taken by no other then Bebet
Gaudinez,
the group photo is by my good friend and guide
Savuth.
Back to Black and White? With Aperture it is easy.

©
Gunther Deichmann, Santorini, Greece
2005
You
all know how much I love color and contrast! I am
very much of a color person, however when you return
from a trip like Cambodia, or be more specific Siam
Reap and Angkor Wat, you start to think when you look
at your images.
All my editing and adjustments are done using
Aperture,
and after my last trip during the final editing, I
thought well, some of these ancient temples and ruins
lead themselves more to Black and White.
With
Aperture you
can try and find the right combination very easy.
OK here we go:
Once you have your Raw files imported you just
highlight the image you think could look good in BW,
then you go to the adjustment panel click on the one
with the
+ sign
and now another panel opens up which contains
the
Monochrome Mixer,
click on that one and there you go BW, but it gets a
lot better than this, you have the options just like
in the old days with film to experiment with
different filters like
red, orange, yellow, green and blue,
every-time
you click on one of these filters the image is
changing, now it is up to you what you like best,
there are so many more other adjustments you can
choose from, this is just a quick way for you to see
if the image looks better in Black and White, maybe
you like
Sepia,
it is in the same adjustment panel, again the choice
is yours.
I am a color Photographer but I found that some of
the images from these ancient ruins look real great
if not better in BW, so if you using Aperture give it
a try and see what happens, it is so easy but the
best part is if you dont like the changes you made
your original is all out there in its colorful
glory,
Aperture never touches your
Original.
Last but not least, if you like to compare the two
images, BW with the color one, then just hit the
letter
"M" on
your keyboard, toggle on and of and see the
difference. Please see below some images from the
last trip, converted into Black and White, for more
images (sorry all in color) please go to my website
at:
www.deichmann-photo.com
Until
next time,
GD

I have marked the area with a red circle and the
little marked red + is where
you find all your BW tools, top right hand side on
the Adjustment panel.
© Gunther Deichmann, all BW images above,
Cambodia 2007
Cambodia and the Penguin Cafe... the journey continues.
We had spend some time together in Cambodia during our Photo Workshop but never realized that we had so much in common, Bebet is the first Filipino I met and I know who plays the Australian Dideridoo, and knows one of my favorite bands Yothu Yindi from Downunder, Bebet actually played in the Band who performed during this years Australian Day at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, I attended the function but had no Idea who was playing the Dideridoo, now I know.
What a small world!
We had a great time, listening to some cool sounds at the Penguin Cafe and chatted about Photography, Music, Cambodia and Tibet all night, we also talked about getting together for a Jam session soon, his friend who plays the flute, Bebet on the Dideridoo and myself on the Mac mixing and recording on GarageBand, I am really looking forward to this one, that is going to be one hell of a session. These guys are very good, let's see what we can came up with, I am sure we do a cool podcast after. I like to thank Bebet for all the drinks, food and entertainment, I had a real great and relaxing evening, thank you so much.
Music and Photography... how well they go together, I cant be with out it, and after last night I guess I am not the only one, Bebet will join me next year in July/August on my photo workshop to Tibet, lets see if he gets the chance to play the big Horns the Monks are playing during festival time at 3800 meters.
GD
Click this link for information on the GDPhotoWorkshop More information on Gunther Deichmann please go to: www.deichmann-photo.com
Bebet at Bayon
Temple, during our Cambodian
GDPhoto Workshop, September 2007
Bebet caught by my
Cell Phone at the Penguin Cafe
Malate, Manila, October 12, 2007
After the shoot... the digital workflow and Palau

©
Gunther Deichmann
A digital
experience in Palau Micronesia... very
soon.
Here is a very interesting article from my good
friend and supporter Tony Wu (Fins Magazine),
for our underwater photographers cool info from Tony,
please read on below and check out the link for the
whole story. By the way, Tony one of
the top underwater photographers around these days
will be part of my workshop in Palau Micronesia in
April 2008, so keep April free around the 22nd.,
we announce the exact dates later on the
GDPhotoWorkshop website under the Calendar section, this
will happen very soon, the workshop is at
Sam's Tours a member of the
Philippine-Micronesia Alliance
and the premier dive center in Palau, for this one
we have also Ethan Daniels onboard, an underwater
photographer and Marine Biologist, so stay tuned
and check this and my other blog for the final
announcement, thank you.
Dont miss out on this one! You get the best above
and below.
Other links related to the workshop in
Palau:
GDPhotoWorkshop main site: http://gdphotoworkshop.com
Gunther Deichmann Blog: http://www.deichmann-photo.com/blog.html
Tony Wu website: http://www.tony-wu.com
Sam's Tours Palau: http://www.samstours.com
The Divers Choice: http://www.alliancediving.com

©
Tony Wu
Going digital
definitely has a lot of merits. Immediate feedback,
being able to shoot more than 36 frames at a time,
being able to make duplicate/ back-up copies
immediately, and having the ability to edit work
on-the-spot rank at the top of my list.
Nothing in life, however, comes for free.
If there’s been one major drawback of going digital
for me, it has to be the fact that in addition to
being a good photographer, you’ve got to become a
software and image-processing expert too. Back in the
film days, basically a slide was either good or bad.
I kept the good ones, threw away the bad ones. End of
story.
Over the past few years, with the switch to digital
format, I’ve had to experiment with all sorts of
software…some good, some bad…and I think I’ve finally
begun to reach the point where I have a workflow that
I’m comfortable with. Before I spell out the software
I use, please read on at: http://www.tonywublog.com/20071009/digital-workflow.html
Power Mac Center Photography and Aperture
please see the dates/Calendar for October below, hope to see you there. You can contact the Power Mac Center at: http://www.powermaccenter.com/training
or email: training@powermaccenter.com
GD