Find a show you like and click the
button. The show will be added to your My Playlist page and updated 24/7 with new videos.
Search Results
2 Views
04:58:51 02/08/12
TWiT Photo 43: Guest Quest Winner Robby Cavanaugh + Bonus Image Critiques
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 04:58:51 02/08/12
Hosts : Catherine Hall and Leo Laporte
It’s hard not to want to hate Robby Cavanaugh – fresh out of school, the SoCal boy has already been published in Vogue Italia, won a bunch of awards, and now has another notch in his belt as our first TWiT Photo Guest Quest winner.
Yet, Robby’s incredibly down-to-earth and just has a natural artistic talent. Joining us live in the studio, the fine art photographer comes clean about Photoshop in his “phantasmagorical” images and achieving artistic excellence with very, very little gear, and lots and lots of perseverance and perspiration. Judges Zack Arias and Tamara Lackey crack the whip on the portfolios of Guest Quest winners, and give invaluable advice to contest aspirants.
Guest : Robby Cavanaugh
Guest Host : Zack Arias
Guest Host : Tamara Lackey
Don’t miss a chance to watch or listen to your favorite photographers – download and subscribe to TWiT Photo podcast on iTunes for free.
Robby's Tips
1 If you can think it, it can be done.
2 Be vulnerable and honest with your work.
3 Photoshop is not a dirty word, but it can be.
LINKS
Robby's Website
Robby's G+
Robby's Facebook
Follow Catherine on Twitter . You can also check out her blog here .
Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/photo .
Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this podcast.
Running time: 1:13:02
0 Views
04:57:08 02/08/12
TWiT Photo 43: Guest Quest Winner Robby Cavanaugh + Bonus Image Critiques
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 04:57:08 02/08/12
Hosts : Catherine Hall and Leo Laporte
It’s hard not to want to hate Robby Cavanaugh – fresh out of school, the SoCal boy has already been published in Vogue Italia, won a bunch of awards, and now has another notch in his belt as our first TWiT Photo Guest Quest winner.
Yet, Robby’s incredibly down-to-earth and just has a natural artistic talent. Joining us live in the studio, the fine art photographer comes clean about Photoshop in his “phantasmagorical” images and achieving artistic excellence with very, very little gear, and lots and lots of perseverance and perspiration. Judges Zack Arias and Tamara Lackey crack the whip on the portfolios of Guest Quest winners, and give invaluable advice to contest aspirants.
Guest : Robby Cavanaugh
Guest Host : Zack Arias
Guest Host : Tamara Lackey
Don’t miss a chance to watch or listen to your favorite photographers – download and subscribe to TWiT Photo podcast on iTunes for free.
Robby's Tips
1 If you can think it, it can be done.
2 Be vulnerable and honest with your work.
3 Photoshop is not a dirty word, but it can be.
LINKS
Robby's Website
Robby's G+
Robby's Facebook
Follow Catherine on Twitter . You can also check out her blog here .
Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/photo .
Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this podcast.
Running time: 1:13:02
5 Views
01:00:00 01/18/12
TWiT Photo 40: Design & Photography with Khoi Vinh
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 01:00:00 01/18/12
Hosts : Catherine Hall and Leo Laporte
Fast forward 12 years through art school by learning excellent design lessons from former NYTimes.com Design Director Khoi Vinh.
Named one of “The 50 Most Influential Designers in America,” Khoi discusses how learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
Always wondered about compositional rules, space and geometry in a frame?
Watch this episode to learn how to maximize the graphics and colors occurring in nature to create dynamic, complex imagery.
Also, Khoi introduces his social collage app, Mixel.
Guest : Khoi Vinh
Don’t miss a chance to watch or listen to your favorite photographers – download and subscribe to TWiT Photo podcast on iTunes for free.
Khoi's Tips
1. Learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
2. The language of photography is an important part of design literacy.
3. Photography is an essential part of social media now; understanding photography as a social element is essential for any UX designer.
LINKS
Khoi's Photography
Khoi's iPad app: Mixel
Khoi's Instagram
Khoi's Flickr
Follow Catherine on Twitter . You can also check out her blog here .
Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/photo .
Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this podcast.
Running time: 53:44
4 Views
01:00:00 01/18/12
TWiT Photo 40: Design & Photography with Khoi Vinh
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 01:00:00 01/18/12
Hosts : Catherine Hall and Leo Laporte
Fast forward 12 years through art school by learning excellent design lessons from former NYTimes.com Design Director Khoi Vinh.
Named one of “The 50 Most Influential Designers in America,” Khoi discusses how learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
Always wondered about compositional rules, space and geometry in a frame?
Watch this episode to learn how to maximize the graphics and colors occurring in nature to create dynamic, complex imagery.
Also, Khoi introduces his social collage app, Mixel.
Guest : Khoi Vinh
Don’t miss a chance to watch or listen to your favorite photographers – download and subscribe to TWiT Photo podcast on iTunes for free.
Khoi's Tips
1. Learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
2. The language of photography is an important part of design literacy.
3. Photography is an essential part of social media now; understanding photography as a social element is essential for any UX designer.
LINKS
Khoi's Photography
Khoi's iPad app: Mixel
Khoi's Instagram
Khoi's Flickr
Follow Catherine on Twitter . You can also check out her blog here .
Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/photo .
Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this podcast.
Running time: 53:44
4 Views
01:00:00 01/18/12
TWiT Photo 40: Design & Photography with Khoi Vinh
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 01:00:00 01/18/12
Hosts : Catherine Hall and Leo Laporte
Fast forward 12 years through art school by learning excellent design lessons from former NYTimes.com Design Director Khoi Vinh.
Named one of “The 50 Most Influential Designers in America,” Khoi discusses how learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
Always wondered about compositional rules, space and geometry in a frame?
Watch this episode to learn how to maximize the graphics and colors occurring in nature to create dynamic, complex imagery.
Also, Khoi introduces his social collage app, Mixel.
Guest : Khoi Vinh
Don’t miss a chance to watch or listen to your favorite photographers – download and subscribe to TWiT Photo podcast on iTunes for free.
Khoi's Tips
1. Learning to see through a camera is a great way to sharpen your design eye.
2. The language of photography is an important part of design literacy.
3. Photography is an essential part of social media now; understanding photography as a social element is essential for any UX designer.
LINKS
Khoi's Photography
Khoi's iPad app: Mixel
Khoi's Instagram
Khoi's Flickr
Follow Catherine on Twitter . You can also check out her blog here .
Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/photo .
Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this podcast.
Running time: 53:44
0 Views
04:48:35 01/14/12
Lets Unbox the Otomedius Excellent Special Edition
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 04:48:35 01/14/12
A simple unboxing video of the Special Edition of Otomedius Excellent, which is btw a very underrated game.
0 Views
20:43:05 12/07/11
Clay A. Kahler - Video Resume - KMBC
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:43:05 12/07/11
My name is Clay A. Kahler. Until recently I served as the Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church in Orrick, Missouri. I had served there for nearly nine years and was very happy there. However, I am seeking the opportunity to move into a new career field. I am excited about the possible opportunity to work as the new Weekend News Anchor / Reporter for KMBC. I have experience that makes me uniquely qualified for this position. Throughout my career I have had many opportunities to serve in different public speaking capacities. As a pastor and as a professor of Theology, I have had the privilege to take complex Biblical and Theological concepts and presenting them in a way that was understandable. As such, I have become a talented storyteller. I have learned much throughout my career in the public eye. Over the years I have developed the abilities to problem solve, motivate and encourage others, and set and sell goals. My working philosophy is three fold. One, I am loyal to the organization that employs me. Loyalty is an absolute must if I am going to do my best for the company. Two, it is essential to have the ability to formulate and cast a vision for my future with the organization. Three, I must be a team player. It is important for an employee to realize that it is not all about them. The individual is art of the team and when the team excels, the employee excels. It is my sincere hope that you will recognize the value of my varied background and the principles of work ethic that I have obtained.
0 Views
20:42:34 12/07/11
Clay A. Kahler - Video Resume - KMBC
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:42:34 12/07/11
My name is Clay A. Kahler. Until recently I served as the Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church in Orrick, Missouri. I had served there for nearly nine years and was very happy there. However, I am seeking the opportunity to move into a new career field. I am excited about the possible opportunity to work as the new Weekend News Anchor / Reporter for KMBC. I have experience that makes me uniquely qualified for this position. Throughout my career I have had many opportunities to serve in different public speaking capacities. As a pastor and as a professor of Theology, I have had the privilege to take complex Biblical and Theological concepts and presenting them in a way that was understandable. As such, I have become a talented storyteller. I have learned much throughout my career in the public eye. Over the years I have developed the abilities to problem solve, motivate and encourage others, and set and sell goals. My working philosophy is three fold. One, I am loyal to the organization that employs me. Loyalty is an absolute must if I am going to do my best for the company. Two, it is essential to have the ability to formulate and cast a vision for my future with the organization. Three, I must be a team player. It is important for an employee to realize that it is not all about them. The individual is art of the team and when the team excels, the employee excels. It is my sincere hope that you will recognize the value of my varied background and the principles of work ethic that I have obtained.
0 Views
20:42:04 12/07/11
Clay A. Kahler - Video Resume - KMBC
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:42:04 12/07/11
My name is Clay A. Kahler. Until recently I served as the Senior Pastor of First Baptist Church in Orrick, Missouri. I had served there for nearly nine years and was very happy there. However, I am seeking the opportunity to move into a new career field. I am excited about the possible opportunity to work as the new Weekend News Anchor / Reporter for KMBC. I have experience that makes me uniquely qualified for this position. Throughout my career I have had many opportunities to serve in different public speaking capacities. As a pastor and as a professor of Theology, I have had the privilege to take complex Biblical and Theological concepts and presenting them in a way that was understandable. As such, I have become a talented storyteller. I have learned much throughout my career in the public eye. Over the years I have developed the abilities to problem solve, motivate and encourage others, and set and sell goals. My working philosophy is three fold. One, I am loyal to the organization that employs me. Loyalty is an absolute must if I am going to do my best for the company. Two, it is essential to have the ability to formulate and cast a vision for my future with the organization. Three, I must be a team player. It is important for an employee to realize that it is not all about them. The individual is art of the team and when the team excels, the employee excels. It is my sincere hope that you will recognize the value of my varied background and the principles of work ethic that I have obtained.
0 Views
19:45:21 11/30/11
Elliot Calls Apple's Moves `Excellent, Strategic'
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 19:45:21 11/30/11
Elliot Calls Apple's Moves `Excellent, Strategic'
Nov. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Jay Elliot, chief executive officer at Nuvel Inc., talks about Apple Inc.'s board of directors. Apple beefed up its board by appointing Art Levinson as chairman, filling a vacancy left by the death of Steve Jobs, and adding Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger as a director. Elliot, a former senior vice president at Apple and author of "The Steve Jobs Way: iLeadership For a New Generation," talks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg) From: Bloomberg Views: 25 0 ratings Time: 04:23 More in Entertainment
50 Views
19:31:03 10/18/11
A Diet of Masterpieces Makes You Fat: The Virtues of Bad Art
[LESS INFO] 50 VIEWS | ADDED 19:31:03 10/18/11
New Yorker art critic Peter Schjeldahl sits down with actor Steve Martin to discuss the merits of bad art. "You learn from good art that you can't do it," Schjeldahl says, "and from bad art you see where it breaks."
Complete video at: http://fora.tv/conference/new_yorker_festival_2011
The New Yorker Festival presents: All About Art: Peter Schjeldahl talks with Steve Martin. This program was recorded on September 30, 2011.
Peter Schjeldahl is The New Yorker's art critic and the author of several books of criticism, including The Hydrogen Jukebox: Selected Writings and Let's See: Writings on Art from The New Yorker. He has received the Frank Jewett Mather Award from the College Art Association, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Clark Prize for Excellence in Arts Writing.
Steve Martin has been contributing to The New Yorker since 1996. His books include Pure Drivel, which collects many of his humor pieces from the magazine; the memoir Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life; and the novels The Pleasure of My Company, Shopgirl, and, most recently, An Object of Beauty.
141 Views
16:22:08 10/07/11
PW171 - Color Splash Studio App Review
[LESS INFO] 141 VIEWS | ADDED 16:22:08 10/07/11
Colour Splash Studio is one of an emerging breed of photography applications that aim to do one task well and that are priced very affordably. Colour Splash Studio is for photographers wanting to make black and white photos with selective colour elements in the style of the movie Pleasantville.
When you first open an image with Colour Splash Studio it'll immediately turn your image black and white. You can now use the brush tool to paint back areas that you want in colour. The brush is edge detecting, which makes the process easier and faster and you've got control over the size, softness and opacity of the brush which combined with zooming the image to full size means it's pretty easy to paint in a good selection quickly. Once you've painted in your selection you can tweak the colour and greyscale areas separately with brightness, contrast and blur controls. Sadly there's no local contrast control but on the colour layer you can also tweak saturation, hue and exposure. I found these sliders a little harsh in their operation - fine tweaks were not at all easy and of course they apply to the whole image so there's no opportunity for tweaking just a portion of the image. There are also no controls for crop or rotation and very few options for getting more creative with colour (cross processing or split toning, for example) or black and white (dodging and burning, for example). I was very pleased to see support for my Wacom tablet. Pressure can be used to control brush size. I would have preferred it to control opacity but this is a good start. I was also very pleased to see standard Photoshop keyboard shortcuts working such as [ and ] for brush size and spacebar for dragging around the image while zoomed in.
It's clear that Colour Splash Studio is trying to do just this one thing well and I can respect that but for an app that concerns itself *only* with turning your image black and white there is one glaring omission - the lack of ability to control the black and white mix. Any photographer that is serious about wanting their image to look just a certain way is going to expect to have much tighter control over the black and white conversion process by being able to dial in brightness values for red, green and blue or at least by choosing from a selection of black and white filter presets.
As it stands right now this is a fine app for one simple task that does an awful lot right. I believe they've gone a little too far with simplifying by not including a black and white mix option and they should look at making fine control of those sliders easier. In a perfect world I'd like to see some dodge and burn options to further improve the black and white control. The quality of the application's results is excellent, however, and if you only want that simplified, limited set of options then Colour Splash Studio might be just the app for you.
5 Views
16:22:08 10/07/11
PW171 - Color Splash Studio App Review
[LESS INFO] 5 VIEWS | ADDED 16:22:08 10/07/11
Colour Splash Studio is one of an emerging breed of photography applications that aim to do one task well and that are priced very affordably. Colour Splash Studio is for photographers wanting to make black and white photos with selective colour elements in the style of the movie Pleasantville.
When you first open an image with Colour Splash Studio it'll immediately turn your image black and white. You can now use the brush tool to paint back areas that you want in colour. The brush is edge detecting, which makes the process easier and faster and you've got control over the size, softness and opacity of the brush which combined with zooming the image to full size means it's pretty easy to paint in a good selection quickly. Once you've painted in your selection you can tweak the colour and greyscale areas separately with brightness, contrast and blur controls. Sadly there's no local contrast control but on the colour layer you can also tweak saturation, hue and exposure. I found these sliders a little harsh in their operation - fine tweaks were not at all easy and of course they apply to the whole image so there's no opportunity for tweaking just a portion of the image. There are also no controls for crop or rotation and very few options for getting more creative with colour (cross processing or split toning, for example) or black and white (dodging and burning, for example). I was very pleased to see support for my Wacom tablet. Pressure can be used to control brush size. I would have preferred it to control opacity but this is a good start. I was also very pleased to see standard Photoshop keyboard shortcuts working such as [ and ] for brush size and spacebar for dragging around the image while zoomed in.
It's clear that Colour Splash Studio is trying to do just this one thing well and I can respect that but for an app that concerns itself *only* with turning your image black and white there is one glaring omission - the lack of ability to control the black and white mix. Any photographer that is serious about wanting their image to look just a certain way is going to expect to have much tighter control over the black and white conversion process by being able to dial in brightness values for red, green and blue or at least by choosing from a selection of black and white filter presets.
As it stands right now this is a fine app for one simple task that does an awful lot right. I believe they've gone a little too far with simplifying by not including a black and white mix option and they should look at making fine control of those sliders easier. In a perfect world I'd like to see some dodge and burn options to further improve the black and white control. The quality of the application's results is excellent, however, and if you only want that simplified, limited set of options then Colour Splash Studio might be just the app for you.
0 Views
05:47:16 09/16/11
Nail Stamps Grab A Bargain
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 05:47:16 09/16/11
http://onlinenailbar.com allows you to buy this excellent set of image plates for stamping. Unlimited designs for a fantastic price
1 Views
05:44:27 09/16/11
Your Ideal Nail Art Stamping Kits
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 05:44:27 09/16/11
Visit http://onlinenailbar.com to see this excellent and affordable product. Nail stamps are so popular and this set will give you so many different designs to choose from
14 Views
16:00:00 09/09/11
Le CLIQ du 09-09-2011 - JeuxVideo.com
[LESS INFO] 14 VIEWS | ADDED 16:00:00 09/09/11
FIFA 12 / PC-PS3-360 Sortie : 29 septembre 2011 La prochaine cuvée de FIFA nous arrive à la fin du mois. Electronic Arts en profite donc pour faire doucement monter la pression autour de son bébé. Le jeu de football nous revient d'ailleurs par le biais d'une jolie bande-annonce qui met l'accent sur les animations des joueurs. Ces derniers bougeront en effet désormais de manière incroyablement réaliste grâce à un nouveau moteur physique. Dark Souls / PS3-360 Sortie : 7 octobre 2011 Les créateurs de l'excellent Demon's Souls reviennent à l'attaque en nous pondant une suite spirituelle qui s'annonce prometteuse. Dark Souls promet en effet son lot de pièges et d'ennemis sadiques aux joueurs les plus masochistes. Histoire d'avoir un aperçu de l'ambiance particulièrement glauque de cet action-RPG, ne ratez pas la troisième partie de son prologue en vidéo. Elle vous permettra de lever le voile sur la disparition de la lignée des dragons. Drakensang Online / Web Sortie : non communiquée Nous avons profité du passage de Drakensang Online en bêta ouverte pour vous concocter deux Gaming Live de ce hack'n slash orienté MMO. Vous découvrirez un titre bien réalisé et agréable à prendre en main mais qui possède néanmoins un système économique assez bancal. Vous pouvez logiquement y jouer gratuitement directement via votre navigateur Web mais vous ne tarderez pas à vous rendre compte qu'il faut(...)









