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Creating cheesy holiday vignettes for free, plus this week's news


From: Connected Photographer
Subject: Creating cheesy holiday vignettes for free, plus this week's news
Date: Mon, 08 Dec 2003 13:03:44 GMT

A MEMBER OF THE ZATZ MAGAZINE NETWORK
December 7, 2003
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Creating holiday vignettes for free
This week's news

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THIS WEEK'S POWERTIP
Creating cheesy holiday vignettes for free
By David Gewirtz

I truly, friggin' hate vignettes. They're cheesy and tacky and come with the expectation that you're going to "Ooh" and "Ah" at some kid who's usually making too much noise, smells way too weird, and leaves stains everywhere. Can you tell I don't have kids?

But, hey, it's the holiday season, when the slush outside is frightful, and smelly kids are supposed to be delightful, and in that warm and smarmy spirit, I bring you a free utility that will help you create vignettes until the cows come home.

In all seriousness, there are some reasons you might want to make a vignette. Vignettes have long been used to bring an ethereal feel to an image, to highlight something special or romantic. Used very much in moderation, vignettes have a place in your image arsenal.

Remember, I said "moderation." I have a friend who told me that his favorite thing is to create vignettes and he's done many tens of pictures with vignettes. It wasn't until he sent me pictures of his baby that it all made sense. If you're a new dad, go ahead, and enjoy making vignettes. Someday that adorable baby's going to want to borrow your car and making vignettes will be the furthest thing from your mind!

Another friend was nice enough to send me a program that did vignette effects. Unfortunately, the program isn't widely available, came with his camera, and is a few years old -- all of which make it difficult to recommend for a wider audience. However, I found FrameFun, a free program, shown in Figure A, that will do the very same thing.

FIGURE A

Here's a baby picture I can identify. Isn't he the cutest? Click picture for a larger image.

The program is absurdly easy to use. Install the program and launch it. Open a file. On the bottom, you'll see a few settings. Select Border, Vignette, Oval, and set Abs to 100, and click Apply. This setting remains valid even after you close the program and relaunch, so you've basically got yourself a vignetomatic.

The program offers a few other useful features, including the ability to batch process (imaging hundreds and hundreds of vignettes) as well as a variety of other line-based framing techniques.

As imaging programs go, we can't give FrameFun the highest marks. It doesn't do all that much, but it runs well. It loses a point because the vignettes it creates have a strange, blue cast around them, which you can more easily see in Figure B.

FIGURE B

Ooh, pretty warship! David want to play with pretty warship! Click picture for a larger image.

You could also do vignette effects quite effectively in Photoshop, without the blue coloration, but that's not free. We'll leave that as an exercise to the reader. Because of the bluish cast around the vignettes and the overall simplicity of the program, and remembering that it's free, we give FrameFun three lenses out of five.

OUR RATING: 3 of 5


Product availability and resources
For more information on FrameFun, visit http://www.hochstrasser.org/delphi/FrameFun/index.html.

For the record, the images we used were used courtesy of the Big Box of Art clip-art collection, available from http://www.hemera.com.

David Gewirtz is the Editor-in-Chief of the ZATZ magazines and the author of The Flexible Enterprise and Lotus Notes Revealed! He can be reached via email at address@hidden. You can see David's photographic artwork at his personal Web site, http://www.Gewirtz.com.


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CONNECTED PHOTOGRAPHER NEWS CENTER
This week's news
Want to get the very latest photography news? The Connected Photographer News Center is updated every day with news of product releases, industry info, tips, techniques, and pointers to great photography resources on the Web. Here's this week's news:

DOS Blocked
We recently experienced a Denial of Service attack from the domain AMERION.COM, which also operates TELEVAR.COM and BOSSIG.COM. If you have mail through any of these domains and you attempt to contact us, you will have been blocked by our server. It does not appear that the operator of these domains is conducting a malicious attack; it appears to be a server configuration issue. That said, we've been forced to block all mailing coming from them until they fix the problem (which will likely not be over the weekend).

Motorola V600 coming later rather than sooner
Motorola said that supply constraints for parts used in phones with integrated digital cameras were slowing deliveries. Motorola's V600 camera-phone will be delayed until some time in the first quarter, a Motorola spokesman told CNNfn, due to the supply issues.

CVS to have mobile image printing at stores
CVS/pharmacy announced plans to introduce mobile image printing capabilities at KODAK Picture Maker kiosks at more than 3,000 stores nationwide. The service, to be available in early 2004, will offer customers the ability to print pictures from their image-enabled mobile phones. KODAK Picture Maker kiosks will allow mobile camera phone users to beam their images to the kiosk using Bluetooth or Infrared (IrDA) technologies. In addition to the wireless option, customers will still have the choice of inserting a memory card into the kiosk. Customers can then edit, enhance, and print their photos in minutes.

World's Thinnest 5MP Digital Camera
I4U News reviews what is currently the World's Thinnest 5MP Digital Camera

Improving zoom lens quality
This article from Electronic Publishing details what companies are doing to improve the zoom lens on their digital cameras.

Kodak teams with IBM
Eastman Kodak, which expects its health imaging sales to grow as much as 9 percent a year through 2006, said Tuesday it is teaming up with IBM to make it easier for health centers to manage digital medical data. Newsday reports that Kodak has shifted hard this year toward building up its presence in digital photography, printing and health imaging markets.

Federal government turns to digital photography
Newsday also reports the United States federal government will end a year-old program that required male visitors from 25 foreign countries to register annually, a practice that immigrant groups called discriminatory. Department of Homeland Security officials said that a new system, using digital photography and fingerprinting, will be rolled out January 5.

Digital camera in a pill
MSNBC reports that with a single pill loaded with technology similar to a digital camera, doctors can view more than 50,000 still images captured during the trip through the final 20 feet of the small intestine that previously was visible only on X-rays. The pill is the M2A Capsule Endoscopy, and is about the size of a multivitamin and is swallowed with a sip of water. The camera, encased in a white plastic capsule, takes pictures which are transmitted on a radio frequency. The images are captured in a recording device worn on a belt around the patient's waist.

Rambus shares up after Unocal decision
The Detroit News reports that shares of Rambus Inc., whose computer chip designs are used in electronic devices, surged 19 percent as investors speculated that a case brought by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission may be dismissed after a judge ended a similar claim against Unocal Corp. The decision may signal that Rambus won't be held liable in the agency's suit claiming the company tried to influence memory-chip standards in its favor while hiding patent applications on the technology. The company specializes in designing chips to speed up computer programs for databases, games and digital photography.

Advertise in Connected Photographer
Each week, Connected Photographer reaches over 300,000 readers, with a mix of skill-levels (from beginning snapshot-taker up through accomplished professional). Our editorial and news content reflects this broad mix of interest areas. If you'd like to bring your message to connected photographers everywhere, feel free to contact us at address@hidden.

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Copyright © 2003, ZATZ:Pure Internet Publishing, a unit of Component Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved.

Connected Photographer Magazine is an independent publication of ZATZ:Pure Internet Publishing, a unit of Component Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved. Connected Photographer, Computing Unplugged, the ZATZ name, and the ZATZ logo are trademarks or service marks of ZATZ:Pure Internet Publishing, a unit of Component Enterprises. All other brands and product names are trademarks and registered trademarks of their respective holders.


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