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Polaroid Z340 Instant Digital Camera

November 8th, 2011

Polaroid Z340 Instant Digital Camera

Since the launch of the Polaroid Land Camera in 1948, the first instant camera, people around the world have enjoyed the magic of Polaroid instant photography. Today Polaroid announced the Z340 Instant Digital Camera,  a full-function 14.0 megapixel digital camera with an integrated ZINK® printer. The Polaroid Z340 camera delivers the same instant experience that is synonymous with the Polaroid brand: a simple, quick and easy way to capture, print, share and create with snapshots from our lives.

The Z340 camera produces vibrant photos with the patented ZINK Paper®, an advanced composite material with cyan, yellow, and magenta dye crystals embedded inside. Before printing, the embedded dye crystals are clear, so the ZINK Paper looks like regular white photo paper.

The Polaroid Z340 camera is available for $299.99 US$. The price for thirty sheets of Polaroid ZINK 3×4” Paper is 19.99 US$.

Holograms and 3D holographic projectors

October 14th, 2011

Gorillaz concert with 3D Musion projection

Holography was invented in 1947 by the Hungarian-British physicist Dennis Gabor for which he received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971. The development of the laser enabled the first practical optical holograms that recorded 3D objects to be made in 1962. Early holograms used silver halide photographic emulsions as the recording medium.

Several types of holograms can be made :

  • Transmission holograms are viewed by shining laser light through them and looking at the reconstructed image from the side of the hologram opposite the source.
  • Reflection holograms can also be viewed using a white-light illumination source on the same side of the hologram as the viewer.
  • Rainbow holograms are designed to be viewed under white light illumination. These holograms are found for example on credit cards
  • Specular holograms allow for making three-dimensional images by controlling the motion of specularities on a two-dimensional surface.

Today it’s possible to make your own hologram in about 30 minutes, in a quiet and dark room, with some basic holography supplies and household items, within a budget of about 100 US$. Some tutorials how to make a hologram are listed hereafter :

Some 3D video projection systems are called holographic, even if it’s not a real holographic process. A survey about such pseudo holographic systems is given below :

  • Musion Eyeliner : a video projection system allowing a spectacular 3-dimensional moving life-size model to appear within a live stage setting using Peppers Ghost technology. Musion Eyeliner uses a specially developed foil that reflects images from high definition video projectors, making it possible to produce virtual holographic images of variable sizes and incredible clarity, using industry standard software.  This system was used for example at the MTV Europe Awards 2005  in Lisbon where the first live performance of the virtual band Gorillaz on the stage, was one of the highlights.
  • Musion Telepresence : Eyeliner adapted for tele video conferencing
  • Musion Eyecandy : 3D Point-of-Sale Display
  • TransScreen : by Laser Magic Productions
  • HelioDisplay L90 : by IO2 Technology

3D pseudo holographic video projection systems are also used for the live concerts of the japanese Vocaloids. A list of links with further informations is shown below :

MotionPortrait

May 1st, 2011

MotionPortrait Inc is an japanese entertainment solution company that creates “Surprise and Impression” pursuing technology and creativity.

You can apply MotionPortrait as web sales promotion tools in various business scenes with its realistic expression, easy operation and low installation cost.  MotionPortrait provides its technology for various platforms such as mobile phones, the web and game consoles.

The most exciting applications for mobile phones (iOS, Android, …) are :

  • PhotoSpeak : 3D Talking Photo
  • 3D Animalizer : transforms you and your friends into 3D animals
  • uMovie : movies starring YOU
  • MillionFace : takes a single portrait photo and transforms it into over a million face variations in a 3D interactive movie

Lightbox scripts

February 15th, 2011

last update : 16 August 2011

Lightbox is a simple, unobtrusive script used to overlay images on the current webpage. It’s a snap to setup and works on all modern browsers. Lightbox was developped by Lokesh Dhakar.

The current version is 2.0.4 released on March 9th, 2008. There are specific modified versions available like ThickBox (version 3.1), LyteBox (version 4.0, released on July 30, 2011), … Different plugin’s are available for WordPress.

A very minimal implementation of a lightbox (modal dialog box) is available at the Google code website. More scripts about modal dialog boxes are available at the Designlabel website.

My favorite script is Lytebox developped by Markus F. Hay. Based on the Lightbox class that Lokesh Dhakar originally wrote, the purpose was to write a self-contained object that eliminated the dependency of the javascript frameworks prototype.js, effects.js, and scriptaculous.js. Lytebox supports iFrames.  Since the original version of Lytebox, major modifications were added as a result of user input to improve performance as well as slideshow support, themes support, HTML content support and many more configurable options that allow you to customize the look and feel of the software.

Color Gamut

January 15th, 2011

CIExy1931

In color reproduction, the color gamut is a complete subset of colors. The most common usage refers to the subset of colors which can be accurately represented in a given circumstance, such as within a given color space or by a certain output device. The term gamut was adopted from the field of music, where it means the set of pitches of which musical melodies are composed.

Generally, the color gamut is specified in the hue–saturation plane, as many systems can produce colors over a wide intensity range within their color gamut; in addition, for subtractive color systems, such as printing, the range of intensity available in the system is for the most part meaningless outside the context of its illumination. When certain colors cannot be displayed within a particular color model, those colors are said to be out of gamut.

While processing a digital image, the most convenient color model used is the RGB model. Printing the image requires transforming the image from the original RGB color space to the printer’s CMYK color space. During this process, the colors from the RGB which are out of gamut must be  converted to values within the CMYK space gamut (gamut mapping).

There are several reasonable strategies for performing gamut mappings, these are called rendering intents. Four particular strategies were defined by the International Color Consortium (ICC), with the following names : Absolute Colormetric, Relative Colormetric, Perceptual, Saturation.

Gamuts are commonly represented as areas in the CIE 1931 chromaticity diagram. The accessible gamut depends on the brightness; a full gamut must therefore be represented in 3D space. Systems that use additive color processes usually have a color gamut which is roughly a convex polygon in the hue-saturation plane.

A list of representative color systems ordered from large to small color gamut is shown hereafter :

  • Laser video projector
  • Photographic film
  • CRT Monitor
  • LCD Monitor
  • Television
  • Painting
  • Printing

An interactive Flash demo explaining color gamut mapping is available at the website of the Stanford University. Gamutvision, an gamut viewer, is available from Imatest LCC (Norman Koren).

Different color spaces have been defined for digital image processing : RGB, LAB, CMYK. The sRGB IEC-61966-2.1 color space was conceived as a multipurpose color space standard for consumer digital devices (s stands for standard in sRGB). Other RGB color spaces are Apple RGB, ColorMatch RGB, ProPhoto RGB, Adobe RGB (1988) and PhotGamutRGB. A comparison between sRGB and Adobe RGB is shown at the website of Cambridge in Colour.

DNG : Digital Negative, a public archival format for digital camera raw data

January 14th, 2011

Digital Negative

Digital Negative (DNG) is an open raw image format owned by Adobe used for digital photography. It was launched in 2004. DNG is based on the TIFF/EP standard format, and mandates significant use of metadata. Exploitation of the file format is royalty free.

Adobe provides the Digital Negative Specification, a free Adobe DNG Converter, which easily translates raw files from many of today’s popular cameras, an SDK (Software Development Kit) and an DNG Profile Editor.

DNG is supported by various camera providers  and photographic software developers (Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Lightroom, …). DNG is also supported by ExifTool, a platform-independent Perl library plus a command-line application for reading, writing and editing meta information in a wide variety of files, developed by Phil Harvey. ExifTool is also available as a stand-alone Windows executable and a Macintosh OS X package. The current version is 8.45 published on January 12, 2011.

Find images that contain a certain color

June 4th, 2010

Imagekind Artshop

The Multicolr Search Lab tool created by Idée Inc. allows to find images that share specified colours. There are others who offer this option.

Jim Bumgardner (alias krazydad) developed in 2006 a widget to search flickr photos by color (Colr Pickr). Color Hunter offers a similar service.

Google Image Search  lets you restrict the results based on color. For now, the option is not available in the user interface, but you can tweak the search results URL to try it. More informations are available at the Google Operating System Blog which is not affiliated with Google.

The Imagekind artshop lets you choose artworks by specifying a dominant and four other colors.

Etsy, an online shop of handmade products, has developed color search for their own product database.

PicItUp is a visual image search engine that combines word-based with color based search.

A COLOURlovers community, made up of people from around the world and from all walks of life, are gathering together under the common love of color.

Matt Mueller based the final project for his Computational Photography class on the Idée Labs tool Piximilar.

Daniel Flück posted his tool Color Name & Hue on his website colblindor. He was inspired by the tool Name that color created by Chirag Mehta.

A server version (isk-daemon) and a desktop version (imgSeek) of an image database management system have been developed by  Ricardo Niederberger Cabral as open-source project (licensed under the GPL). Color analysis is also a topic in the ImageMagick discussion forum.

Tilt-shift Photography : Miniature Fakes

December 15th, 2009

Tilt-Shift miniature faking is a creative technique whereby a photograph of a life-size location or object is manipulated to give an optical illusion of a photograph of a miniature scale model.

Altering the focus of the photography in Photoshop simulates the shallow depth of field normally encountered with macro lenses making the scene seem much smaller than it actually is.

In addition to focus manipulation, the tilt-shift photography effect is improved by increasing color saturation and contrast, to simulate the bright paint often found on scale models.

Most faked tilt-shift photographs are taken from a high angle to further simulate the effect of looking down on a miniature. The technique is particularly effective on buildings, cars, trains and people.

The following websites provide useful informations and tuotials about Tilt-Shift miniature faking :

Some outstanding tilt-shift photos published on flickr under a creative common licence are listed below:

There are currently 142 groups on flickr dealing with tilt-shift. My favorite pools are :

Tools to create photomosaics and tilemosaics

November 8th, 2009

Photomosaics are image montages which consist of small pictures called cell images. When viewed from a distance, you see the source image. Standard photo mosaic applications are based on similar processes. Applications are different in implemented recognition/selection algorithms and built-in functions for control/enhance mosaic rendering process.

The following tools are available :

The developer of Mosaic Creator published a comparison table of most available photo- and tile creation applications. A list of more tools is available in the Google directory.

Photo Mosaic

Photo Mosaic