Funky Flowers at the Kyoto Botanical Gardens
One down, 76,916 to go.... -- Kyoto, Japan -- Copyright 2006 Jeffrey Eric Francis Friedl, https://regex.info/blog/
One down, 76,916 to go....

I've been crushed with work as of late, which is why I haven't been posting much. I've recently started doing some consulting on a high-pressure project, and have continued working with new builds of Adobe Lightroom as it rolls toward its public release in a couple of weeks. Despite being a just 1.x release, it nevertheless offers some interesting ways to customize it, and I've been working on some tools that will help with that, and I want to have them ready for release along with Lightroom.

Still, I feel bad not posting something worthwhile, so I went into my archives of “blog about when you get a chance” photos, and thought I'd share the one above, which comes from Anthony's first preschool field trip to the Kyoto Botanical Gardens last May.

If you don't understand the caption, perhaps this full-resolution crop, taken from the lower-left corner, will help:

Kyoto, Japan -- Copyright 2006 Jeffrey Eric Francis Friedl, https://regex.info/blog/

Like the little worker bee probably feels, I sometimes feel overwhelmed by all the stuff I need to do. I usually bite off way more than I can chew.

It's better than being bored, though.

The images above are actually both crops, from this full-frame image (the bee is slightly right of center):

Nikon D200 + Nikkor 18 -200mm f/3.5-5.6 @ 200mm — 1 / 180 sec, f/5.6, ISO 100 — full exif & map Funky cone-shaped flowering plant -- Kyoto, Japan -- Copyright 2006 Jeffrey Eric Francis Friedl, https://regex.info/blog/
Nikon D200 + Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 @ 200mm — 1/180 sec, f/5.6, ISO 100 — full exif & map
Funky cone-shaped flowering plant

I don't know what kind of plants they are, but they're about two meters tall — very impressive. (UPDATE:: according to this comment, they're Echium wildpretii. Thanks Peter!)

Here's another view, from a distance, which I find appealing for some reason.

Nikon D200 + 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 @ 135mm — 1 / 200 sec, f/5.6, ISO 100 — full exif & map -- Kyoto, Japan -- Copyright 2006 Jeffrey Eric Francis Friedl, https://regex.info/blog/
Nikon D200 + 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 @ 135mm — 1/200 sec, f/5.6, ISO 100 — full exif & map

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Women as “Child-Bearing Machines”

Politicians the world around often put on the most brazen displays of stupidity in what they say, and those in Japan are no exception.

Japan's Minister of Health, Hakuo Yanagisawa
Today's Moron
Japan's Minister of Health
Hakuo Yanagisawa

Today's example from Japanese politics, long a juicy source for mind-numbingly stupid political speech, is from a talk given the other day by the Japanese Minister of Health, Hakuo Yanagisawa, about Japan's long-declining birthrate:

The number of females aged 15 to 50 is fixed. The number of child-bearing machines, apparatus, is fixed, so... (saying “child-bearing machines” is.... how shall I say.... well, anyway), so in the end, all we can ask is for each to do their best.

It's bad enough that a person would even consider referring to women as devices like this, but it might not be unexpected from a 71-year-old pig like this man apparently is, but it's so shocking that someone that's risen to the cabinet level of national politics wouldn't be smart enough to keep his mouth shut. It's just amazing.

Of course, he's getting roasted for it, with many calling for his resignation. I asked Fumie what she thought about it, to which she said “I'm just glad I'm not married to him” 🙂

One thing I do find a bit odd about the coverage I've seen is that the parenthetical part of my translation above, where he apparently realizes that perhaps he's made a mistake by voicing his “machine” opinion, is one sometimes not included in Japanese news reports covering his quote, or in any of the English translations I've seen. However, I do believe that this is the Japanese original (with the parenthetic part in my colloquial translation above shown in bold below):

「15から50歳の女性の数は決まっている。産むむ機械、装置の数は決まっているから、機械と言うのは何だけど、あとは一人頭頑張ってもらうしかないと思う」

In any case, it's pathetic.


Petting Zoo Comes to School
alt
Looking at Cute Puppies
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Hi Puppies!

The petting zoo came to Anthony's preschool the other day, with a llama, a pig, a porcupine, goats, hamsters, bunnies, dogs and puppies, some horses, and more.


Adobe Lightroom Version 1.0

Adobe has, just one minute ago, announced the February release of Lightroom version 1.0, its digital photo workflow application. (The official name is “Adobe® Photoshop® Lightroom™” but everyone but Adobe will call it simply “Adobe Lightroom,” including me.)

Update: see my What's New in Lightroom 1.1 post.

Adobe Lightroom Version 1.0, “Library Grid View” (click image for full-resolution screenshot)
Adobe Lightroom Version 1.0, “Library Grid View”
(click image for full-resolution screenshot)

Lightroom allows one to quickly and effectively process large numbers of digital images. I often take 500+ pictures at a single event, and Lightroom lets me quickly go through them, sorting them, hiding/deleting the bad, make small adjustments (or large adjustments — I'm still not a good photographer) in exposure, white balance, rotation, color, de-spotting, etc.

It has modules for dealing with photos as a library (sorting, editing metadata, etc.), “developing” the image (making the aforementioned adjustments), producing slideshows, web pages, and for printing. For the most part, I use only the first two.

I've mentioned Adobe's Lightroom software a number of times in the past — it's been in public beta for a year, and I've been using it since “beta 2” in the summer. The most recent public beta is “beta 4.1”, released in October, but for the last month or so, I've been privileged to be part of a small, private “beta 5” / “Release Candidate” test group, where we put Lightroom through its paces, report bugs and make product suggestions, testing and retesting with each build they release to us.

I use some of the new features in 1.0 to automate each morning's update of my bento page.

There's so much to write about Lightroom that I could write a book about it... but I won't (although many are).

In this post, I'll just offer a few views of the two modules that I use the most — Library and Develop — to whet your appetite.

Note that all the panes around the sides/top/bottom can be hidden or shown independently.

Loupe View
Loupe View

Loupe View is part of the Library Module, along with the Grid View (first pic above) and Survey View (pic below). In this screencapture, the flimstrip at the bottom is showing, as is the metadata pane at right, but the organizational pane (normally at left) is hidden, as is the module navigation pane across the top. (Both are shown in the first picture above.)

Survey View
Survey View

In this screenshot, all the optional panes but the filmstrip are hidden.

Develop Module
Develop Module

The Develop module allows you to adjust a bunch of things, including white balance/tint, many exposure settings (color intensity, brightness, contrast, etc.), enter grayscale mode, apply sharpening, apply noise reduction (separate adjustments for color vs. luminance), correct chromatic aberration, correct for lens vignetting, use a Photoshop-esque clone tool and healing tool, fix red-eye, and rotate and crop the image.

What's really cool is that all the controls are the same whether the input is a raw file, a JPG, a TIFF, or a Photoshop PSD file.

Loupe View with Most Panes Closed
Loupe View with Most Panes Closed

There are so many things new from the previous public beta, I don't know where to start. Just the main ones from the Library and Develop module that I can think of off the top of my head:

  • Clone/Healing/Red-eye tools
  • Virtual copies (allows multiple adjustments/crops/etc for the same image)
  • Image stacks
  • Two new ways to rate photos besides the current 0-5 star system: flags (“picked”, “rejected”, “no flag”) and colors (an image can have one of five color tags associated with it).
  • Lots of keyword-related tools, including a keyword stamper and keyword browser
  • Intuitive folder-oriented layout replaces the “shoots” layout.
  • Export presets (yeah!)
  • Many editable presets (for filenames, metadata, export settings...)
  • Can import/export Photoshop PSD files
  • A “watched folder” — images showing up in the folder are automatically imported.

There are a bajillion more, but I've forgotten much of what Beta 4 was like, and I wanted to get this post out now that Lightroom has been officially announced and I'm no longer bound by the NDA in discussing its features. I was out this morning and didn't see the heads-up about today's announcement until just an hour ago, so this was the best I could put together in that time.

I'm very excited.... Lightroom is really great news for all digital photographers.

I have a page of Lightroom 1.x Resources for links to tidbits and detailed information.