Tuesday, 23 October 2012

london by iphone



An iPhone photo diary from @Anglo, who has just got back from a long weekend in 
London with her sister @LondonBird. The visit included an 'Instameet' on October 20th with the London Instagrammers, which was part scavenger hunt and part pub crawl. 
Click any image to enlarge. 


I love photos with splashes of red. With its buses,
phone boxes and post boxes, London is happy to indulge me. 

This was snapped outside The Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand. 


Cathedral meets ice cream cone, my first eye-pop moment at 
Kings Cross Station, where you catch a train for Hogwarts. 


Taken through a grotty train window, the
2012 Olympic Stadium and ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture.
Snapping the snappers at the Millennium Bridge,
which takes you from St Paul's Cathedral in the north, to the
southbank attractions of the Globe Theatre (where
@LondonBird works), the Bankside Gallery and Tate Modern.
This close, the handrail of the Millennium Bridge looks like
you could ride it in a hover car from the future.
The cast iron fish at the base of the lamp posts along the 
Embankment. They come alive at night, children.
Big wheel. Big Ben. Also, Big Rain, hence the
moody black and whites.
Westminster Bridge, where I forgive the rain
and thank it for the reflections. 

334 steps to the top of the tower, no lift. 
More fishes and a misty Big Ben. Bit of a Tower of Pisa
lean going on there, no doubt Boris is involved. 
 
Inside the huge Turbine Hall, at the Tate Modern. 
Was a power station, now an art gallery, 
the most visited modern art gallery in the world.
A dad was wheeling a buggy and excited toddler around 

very quickly. Now that's art. 

First Pub of the #igersOct20pubcrawl Instammeet,
and a self captioning image - I'll shut up...
Inside Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese, Fleet Street.
The vaulted cellars are thought to belong to a 13th century 
Carmelite Monastery which once stood here. 
Dicken's was a regular, and the pub is alluded to in 
A Tale of Two Cities.
It's along way to... the first pub to sell Guinness outside Ireland. 
Renamed The Tipperary during WWI as the Irish 
soldiers flocked to the only Irish pub in London.
Outside The Cross Keys in Covent Garden. Bit minimalist
Inside the Cross Keys,
enjoy your pint alongside a copper diving helmet on a hook

and Victorian toilet on a shelf
Cross Keys stair well.  
Bar lights, Cross Keys.

Our Instameet was the same day as the No Cuts protest, 
good on ya ladies. Over 150,000 people took part. 
The No Cuts protesters, all smiles and hugs. Apart from That Guy. 
Ye Olde Cock Tavern on Fleet Street looks like 
it was poured in the gap afterwards. Former customers include
Samuel Pepys, Alfred Tennyson and Charles Dickens
A water fountain outside the Church of
St Dunstan-in-the-West.  Dated 1860, “The gift of Sir James
Duke Bart MP, ald[erman] of this ward." Yikes, Scoob. 
The London Instagrammers + Me (in hat) outside 
Strand's The Coal Hole. Shakespearean actor Edmund Keane 
started the Wolves' Club here for oppressed husbands 
forbidden to sing in the bath.

You can join LondonIGers on Facebook 

See all the photos from the Instameet Pub Crawl 

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Tuesday, 2 October 2012

A Twitter Love Letter


A short break from photography to talk about Twitter...

So you're in love with Twitter and your friends refuse to join you? Nay, they laugh at you when you mention it. Well, here's a little post to right that wrong. To make your friends love Twitter as much as you do.  

I signed up to Twitter in spring 2009 with an ‘oh all right then’ attitude, expecting to come away with a ‘who cares?’ conclusion. I was ready to mock. Another website to get to grips with? And if I don't join up I'm not cool any more? Pah. But within days I was hooked. And I still am. Why?

With its 140 character limit, Twitter’s a hostile environment to people who like to bore, dominate or waffle. As it’s on the internet, it attracts the tech savvy. As a public space (anyone can read your updates) it also asks you to be a bit brave. So to be on Twitter you’re already my kind of person.

But what do people who are really into Twitter do?

Talk.

Imagine a dinner party where a few mouse clicks changes the seating plan to put you in the middle of things; your definition of ‘things’. Antarctic researcher, fashion designer, photographer (currently in Afghanistan), children's illustrator and ordinary soul who shares your humour, there’s your table for tonight. And you can change it at any time. Eavesdropping, chatting across continents, making an exit to *put the spuds on*, and absolutely no need to brush your hair.

For a girl from a small town with a very curious mind, this is epic. Genuinely.

And yes, with Twitter’s list of trending topics, you actually do know there’s an earthquake, plane crash or a new baby for Jamie Oliver, long before it’s reported on the networks. What’s more, you can locate and read the tweets coming from the centre of breaking stories.

So are you interested in the world? Then go sign up.

This blog is not about the mechanics, though. If you want to know them, put some pertinent phrases into Google. I’m cutting to Twitter’s oohs and ahhs.

But one quick tip. Move away from the Twitter website to Twitter clients like Tweetdeck or Hootsuite as early as you can. Why struggle with a Walkman when someone’s invented the iPod?

The Real Life Friends

We all start with people we know in real life. Like any party, it’s nice to turn-up with your gang. So join with some mates and follow those mates who are already tweeting.

The Celebrities

Then it's time to follow the celebs, and experience the jolt of seeing your mate Dave's avatar alongside Stephen Fry and Lady Gaga's, like they're all best buddies.

A good place to make sure you’re following the real stars and not the fakes is www.valebrity.com.

It will take you around 125 tweets to realise celebs a) can be dull and b) cannot reply to your every tweet. Shocking, I know. Chatting with celebs does happen on Twitter, and it is thrilling when it happens, but if that's all you're interested in it's going to be a long wait for a tiny bit of attention.

You may have a Twitter account but your name's still not on the list, sweetheart.

Twitter Friends

But what about the real Twitter diamonds, those friends-in-waiting? People you will adore who will adore you, if you can only find the buggers? Use the search box to see who’s tweeting right now on your current obsessions. Coco Chanel, Firefly, Machu Picchu. It’s like shaking a snow globe and up they float. Pick a few (not just the pretties), look at their bios and read a few tweets. If they tickle your fancy, click follow, and introduce yourself, that is, type an @reply to their username.

But don’t just stick with your kind of nerd. Cast the net wide. Take a gamble. If your followers remind you of those lovable real life friends, you're kind of owning a Ferrari and only taking it grocery shopping.

Within a few days of following someone, you’ll know if they’re for keeps. If they are, plunder the list of people they follow for more goodies. If they’re not for you, un-follow and shake the snow globe again. It's your dinner party.

Once you’re following around 50 active Twitterers, you’ll understand why I call Facebook a ghost town.


Don’t forget to throw in some quality news feeds too, with my pick being @BBCbreaking and @BBCworld. And hunt out the journalists who work in the newsrooms if you want your ear to be even closer to the ground.

The Names

You’ll also want to follow The Names. Brands, governments, charities, football clubs, festivals, museums… Twitter’s full of organisations attempting to hang with the cool kids. I'm a copywriter so it's fascinating for me to watch them sign-up and set out their stalls, with sites like www.mytweet16.com letting you snoop on anyone’s fledgling tweets.
And they can really get it wrong.

Have you ever been in a day of meetings and broken for lunch to find someone still doing meeting talk? Corporate language, only one topic (them), only one opinion (theirs). That’s corporate Twitter at its worst.

People follow Names to hear their latest, of course, but they also want to see personality and charm. They want to venture off topic because that’s fun. They want to see a Name ask questions and listen to answers. To loosen the tie. No one wants a 140 character brochure.

The Instigators

The next Twitter challenge is finding the movers and shakers who link to the best of the web as it breaks, and are often at the heart of fascinating, fearless debates that then make the headlines. How? Explore a trending topic that excites you, and you find a lot of tweets coming from one source. Hmm.

Your Followers

To really enjoy Twitter you need to be in the thick of it.

Plump-up your follower list by following and tweeting yourself. Shake your Twitter booty.
Follow back with a generous spirit, block the spam and anyone you find offensive.

And if someone does not follow you back right away, relax. They may need you to strike up a few conversations (do an @ reply to their tweet) before they notice your wonderfulness. They may simply not want to follow you: that is allowed.

Once you’ve got around 100 good followers, you’ve got a ‘hive mind’ to ask stuff. Any kind of stuff, and you’ll be amazed at what comes back.

Hashtags

I must confess it took me a long time get hashtags.

What are they? A word or phrase with # at the beginning - no spaces - which creates a ready made, clickable search so you can see all tweets with that tag at that moment.

Do you remember picking out a string of matching buttons that someone had kindly threaded together in your granny's sewing box? A hashtag does that, but with a planet full of tweets.

If you want a whole new dimension to watching an event on TV, follow the hashtag, you can do this even if you don't have a Twitter account. Lots of TV programmes now tell you the tag to use in the opening titles. The appeal? It's a like a theatre audience took a wrong turn and ended up at a wrestling match. Or perhaps the reverse. It's naughty, but I like it.

Twitter for the Copywriter

But for the writer Twitter has extra appeal. Making your point within seconds is what copywriting has always been about, so for me Twitter’s a trip to the writing gym. I follow a lot of professional writers, and people who simply write well, and love to see what they do with so little space. And I love the instant feedback. When you watch a tweet skim (being re-tweeted over and over) it sharpens your instincts for what excites. And when a tweet sinks without a trace, you also take note of what bores.

The fly in the ointment?

Not everyone’s a darling, or course. There are people you won’t find exciting on Twitter, oh yes, but you know what, you just don’t follow them. And rude people? Try blocking. And like anywhere else, there is spam. People trying to gate crash the party wearing a sandwich board. Did they think we wouldn't notice? But avoiding them is so much easier than in real life.

So hop over to Twitter now and search for something that matters to you. 
The party never stops. The venue's planet sized. The guests are just your cup of tea. And here's your invitation. 

click to go to Twitter.com

You can find me on Twitter @Angpang


This post is a based upon an article by me first published on the lovely Sarah Lamballe's Copywriting Blogspot here http://copwriting.blogspot.com/2009/05/this-twitter-thing.html


Thursday, 13 September 2012

inside the hip 2B square smartphone exhibition

Following on from our last post, here's some photos from the Instachimps "Hip 2B Square" smartphone exhibition, which you can see until Saturday lunchtime in Lincoln (UK).

With around 100 photos in the room presented in identical square frames, the group believe this is the first exhibition of its kind in the region.

Anglo exhibited nine photos. 

The photos she considered for inclusion can be found in this Facebook album.

The event website is:  http://www.ice.phoneographer.org/news/  pop over there to see a time lapse of the set up and a 360 degree panorama. 

Last minute preparations and photo taking


Friends, families and Linconites join the launch party

The Jelly Baby table was very popular with the little people


Anglo's daughter stands in front of a photo of herself


Thursday, 23 August 2012

hip 2B square iphoneography exhibition



One of Anglo's exhibited images
Exciting news! Anglo's taking part in a Smartpone Photography exhibition. Here's the full details:

UNIQUE PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITION IN LINCOLN, SHOWCASES GROUP’S TALENT FOR SMARTPHONE PHOTOGRAPHY. 1st - 15th SEPTEMBER, LINCOLN LIBRARY

Launch Party - Saturday 1st September 2012 between 1.00pm & 3.30pm, Lincoln Central Library



A selection of images that will be exhibited, with Anglo's top left

InstaChimps are a group of photographers based in Lincolnshire who use smartphones to create images. The group functions through a vibrant online presence, with a varied programme of events and competitions happening throughout the year. The group’s first ever exhibition, called “Hip 2B Square” will be at Lincoln’s Central Library, between the 1st and 15th September 2012. The group believe that this will be first smartphone photography exhibition of its kind to be held in Lincolnshire.

Miles Winterburn, the founding member of the InstaChimps Group, said:

“This exhibition is really exciting for us, being the first one we have pulled together since the group started earlier this year. We also believe that this is one the first mobile phone photography exhibitions be held in Lincolnshire and probably the Midlands. We have a lot of talented image makers within the group, and we wanted to promote not only this talent through the exhibition, but the existence of the group to new members.

“All the images on display at the exhibition have been shot and edited with an iPhone or other smartphones. This is a fast growing and creative medium, helped by the cutting edge technology and apps that modern mobile phones offer the visually creative of Lincolnshire."

The group will be holding an official exhibition launch at Lincoln Central Library, on Free School Lane in Lincoln, on Saturday 1st September 2012 between 1.00pm & 3.30pm. The exhibition will be open from Monday 3rd until Saturday 15th September. Exhibiting members would like to welcome everybody along to the official launch event, to browse and comment on the images and exhibition.

The exhibition's official blog can be found at http://www.ice.phoneographer.org/

Monday, 23 July 2012

let's talk of graves


This gorgeous angel statue lives in the Canwick Road Cemetery in Lincoln, England. In this post @Anglo reveals the two apps she used to turn this from iPhone snapshot into moody Gothic image. 


"First editing app was Dynamic Light. With this I used the Orton filter to make the colours more vivid and the light and dark more polarised"



"I then switched to the Qbro app, where you have to crop to square before you can edit, so that came first. I was tempted by a lot of the filter's effects on the image, but ended up using the Qbro Blacker filter because it looked most dramatic and haunted. I have always loved the work of Simon Marsden, and often find myself trying to capture that infra-red feel. I wonder what she is supposed to be reading?" 

The cemetery was opened in 1856 and contains many angels and Victorian graves. You can see more photos from this session under the #AngloVanHelsing tag on Instagram. 

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Wednesday, 9 May 2012

light & dark

Two editing stories for the price of one. Both images taken by @Anglo on her iPhone 3GS.

"With both these images I used the iPhone app Noir which (and I quote the makers here) 

'...lets you transform your photos with beautiful, dramatic lighting and instant results. Peel away the color to a cinematic black-and-white, apply a lovely tint, and then light up your subject. Touch and pinch the brightness Vignette and spin the Contrast and Exposure dials for white hot thrills and shadow.'

"In this first one, I used the vignette to create a diagonal vignette, to change the natural side light into a more diagonal top light. I made the rest of the image as dark as possible whilst keeping the story that it was a tunnel of trees, with the light at the end of the tunnel also there on the original image.


Original image


"In this second one, I set the vignette to be tall and slim, circling the child and the path behind her. I used the app to make what was inside the vignette slightly darker, whilst bleaching the rest of the image to the barest details."


Original Image

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Monday, 27 February 2012

st swithin's and the multi storey


Original image taken on an iPhone 3GS by @Anglo

Editing Step by Step

"I noticed when I was taking the shot that the sky was very dramatic around the spire, so I used Camera+ to bring out as much detail as possible. Firstly I used the Clarity setting sharpen all the details, then I used the HDR FX effect to expose each area of the image. Not as good as true HDR, which @Ashog does a lot, but it always suprises me what the iPhone lens has captured which you cannot see on the unedited shot. Finally I used the black vignette in Camera+ to really throw your attention on the church"

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Tuesday, 31 January 2012

the dressmaker



original image by @Anglo
taken on an Iphone 3GS

Editing Step by Step

Noir

I used this app to throw light behind the dress to match that in front, and darken the clutter in the room. 

SnapSeed

A new app for me, but one I am really enjoying, SnapSeed provided the high contrast and grungy surface effect .

Breaking News!

This image was one of those highlighted on Google+ under the #MyMobileMonday tag, curated by Sinead Sam McKeown with guest curator Ron Bearry

click to enlarge

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Thursday, 26 January 2012

cathedral close-ups



original image of Lincoln Cathedral
 taken by @Anglo on iPhone 3GS

Editing Step by Step

Dynamic Light

I ran the image through this app's basic filter, to make the greens a little more lush. 

Finger Focus

A new app for me, I used this to put the background completely out of focus, making the viewer pay most attention to the medieval carving and emerald lichen of the foreground, whilst keeping the shape of the cathedral's gothic arches in the background. 

Instagram

I finally added Instagram's Xpro II filter to make the light and dark a little more extreme, and cropped to a square.


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Wednesday, 18 January 2012

from the millennium to st pauls

In another step by step blog, @Londonbird shows her editing of this photograph taken of 
St Paul's Cathedral and The Millennium Bridge, London (of course). 

Raw image take on @Londonbird's iPhone 4

Using Camera+ Clarity filter, it's amazing what
detail the tiny lens of an iPhone can pick up

Finally adding the Silver Gelatin filter on Camera+, which is a little warmer
and smoother than black and white, and harks back to the days
of early photography

If you enjoyed this, don't miss out on the next iPhone photo story:





Thursday, 12 January 2012

the climbing tree

In a break with tradition we're going to start with this raw image taken by @Anglo of what she calls  The Climbing Tree. Then we'll look at how the image can change dramatically with three different iPhone apps. 


The unedited image, taken with @Anglo's iPhone 3GS

Using the Dynamic Light Orton filter (set at 50%) the image
 is instantly richer and softer. Anglo used this enhanced image
as the base for all the following edits


The Contessa filter in Camera+. Now the tree is a dark,
brooding menace. A tree once used as a gallows?

Using the Burnt filer in Qbro, the tree takes on a somewhat
illustrated feel, an enchanted tree from a book of fairy tales

Using Qbro's 914Chrome filter the tree becomes the most
mythical, something you'd expect to see in The Shire

The question is - of course - which do you prefer?

If you enjoyed this, don't miss out on the next iPhone photo story: