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John Gough Photography

Scanning Old Slides

by John Gough

Scanning Old Slides
Scanning Old Slides

Scanning old slides to your computer? I had been meaning to do this for years, but the pandemic lockdown has given me the opportunity.

There are boxes of old slides in my loft. Taken well before the dawn of digital. I no longer have a projector, so the only way to bring these pictures to life is to scan them. Creating digital copies that I could access on my PC.

Scanning Old Slides: The Options

How? The options are, you can do it yourself or have your slides converted to digital files by a commercial scanning service.

Commercially Scanned Slides

There are scanning services like Digital Converters. Send them your slides and they will professionally convert your old slides to digital images. The cost is about £350 for 1000 slides.

Each slide is scanned as a high resolution image. Digitally corrected for exposure, colour and sharpness, and converted to JPEG. The files are streamed to the cloud or returned on a DVD or memory stick.

This is obviously the route to choose if you have high quality slides.

Scanning Old Slides Yourself

My slides are mostly family snaps, so based on the principle of garbage in garbage out. I decided to scan my slides myself.

On YouTube, there are several tutorials about setting up your camera to photograph slides and there are apps for your phone. However, taking an image of each slide individually seemed unnecessarily time consuming

So I decided to buy a cheap slide scanner. Researching online it seemed that they did a reasonable job quite quickly. I also thought that in the future I could use the same scanner to process old negatives.

Slide Scanners

Scanners are listed on Amazon here. I purchased this scanner.

The scanner had good reviews, the output was to a standard SD card and the display was large enough to view the images clearly.

How to Scan Slides to a PC

I used a setup with a scanner connected to the USB port on a laptop. The laptop has an SD card reader, so the transfer from scanner to PC was just one step. (N.B. The SD card is not included with the scanner)

There are various film holders included with the scanner. The slide holder fits into a slot on the side of the scanner. The slides are pushed into the holder and the holder pushed into the scanner.

Scanning Old Slides
Insert the slide into the holder and holder into the scanner

I found I could process around fifteen slides in about five minutes.

Scanning old slides
Push holder into the scanner to display slide

The image is captured on the SD card as a JPEG. When the image is transferred to the PC I used Lightroom just to crop, adjust the colour balance, exposure and saturation.

I removed dust spots, and looked to improve the sharpness and noise level.

So what do the results look like?

This was taken on holiday in Cornwall,

and this taken at Wimbledon in the seventies. (Note that even back then I was more interested in the camera than the tennis)

The results are not too bad really. Decent exposure and detail considering these slides are over forty years old!

Filed Under: Gear, Journey, Post Processing Tagged With: copy slides, digital files from slides, digitize slides, scan slides, slide scanning post processing

Post on Instagram from a PC

by John Gough

How to post on Instagram from a PC

How can I post on Instagram from a PC? I like to share my work on social media, on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. On Facebook and Twitter, I can log into my account on a PC and upload my photographs. That is not possible on Instagram. So how can I post my images to Instagram from a laptop or a desktop?

Instagram started as primarily a social network for mobile users. However, it is now an important platform for business, influencers, artists, writers, bloggers, and vloggers. For many of these users, it is a tedious process to upload content to Instagram from a PC. It is especially tortuous for photographers who will have images stored on computer hard drives, external drives and in the cloud. For them, it is a lengthy workflow to download images from these drives, upload to a cell phone and then post to Instagram.

Fortunately, the solution is simple, whether you use a Chrome browser or Microsoft Edge. You can easily transfer photographs from a PC directly to Instagram. No additional software is required.

If you use a Chrome browser this is how to post on Instagram from a PC in a few easy steps.

How to Upload Pictures to Instagram from a Laptop or PC Using a Chrome Browser

1 Profile …..(re How to share to Instagram from a PC)

Log into Instagram by signing in, and go to Profile (see Illustration 1)

How to post to Instagram from a PC
Illustration 1 How to post to Instagram from a PC

2 Inspect …..(re How to transfer content to Instagram from a PC)

Right click the mouse anywhere on the page, and a drop down menu will appear. On the drop down menu go to Inspect. Mouse left click to reveal the HTML code for that page. (See Illustration 2)

Illustration 2 How to post to Instagram from a PC

3 Toggle …..(re How to transfer photographs to Instagram from a PC)

On the top left in the header area of the code are icons for desktop and mobile. Toggle from desktop to mobile which is the second one in. Click on Mobile. (See Illustration 2). The page will now reproduce how your mobile device shows Instagram. Do not click off the HTML code using X

Illustration 3 How to Post on Instagram from a PC

4 Refresh …..(re How to post images from a PC to Instagram)

Refresh the page. Either by clicking the Refresh icon. See illustration 4 or pressing F5. The page will now reproduce exactly how your mobile device shows Instagram with the + icon displayed.

Illustration 4 How to Post on Instagram from a PC

5 Post ……(re How to upload content from a desktop or laptop to Instagram)

Use the + to upload your photographs to Instagram just as you would on your mobile. See Illustration 5

Illustration 5 How to post on Instagram from a PC

How to Upload Pictures to Instagram from a Laptop or PC Using Microsoft Edge / Explorer

In Microsoft Edge / Explorer the process of loading content from a PC to Instagram is exactly the same as in Chrome.

  • Open Profile
  • Mouse click right to open Inspect
Illustration 6 How to post on Instagram from a PC using Microsoft Edge
  • Toggle & Click the mobile icon.
  • Refresh the page
  • Post the picture

This workaround has saved me so much time. I can now easily interact with 1 billion Instagram users.

Filed Under: Journey, Photography, Post Processing Tagged With: Instagram, Post Processing

Is Luminar AI Killing Landscape Photography

by John Gough

In 1979, Buggles lamented that Video Killed the Radio Star. Fortunately, this turned out to be premature. Today radio is still very much alive.  Looking to the future, however, will we photographers look back and lament that it was software like Luminar AI that killed landscape photography.

Take a look at this short video about Luminar AI.

Just replace the sky, ‘with a more dramatic one’. ‘Add sunrays to make the image more interesting’. ‘A little mist to add atmosphere’. ‘Add lots of contrast’. ‘Automatically change all your images by applying an AI template’.

AI is changing photography.

Is AI Just Post Processing?

Are the Luminar AI changes any different from what we do manually in post-processing, or do they represent a threat to the way we do our photography?

The debate around how we process images will I guess will run and run. I have never had any truck with those who insist on capturing the image, ‘in camera’. I love shooting in RAW and using Lightroom and Photoshop, to make images pop. Surely that is just bringing out the best from the image that was there? Better communicating what it was I saw on the day when the photograph was taken.  

What I think I object to, is that with one click it is possible to homogenise all landscape photographs to look the same, and that is boring. It destroys authenticity and integrity. How quickly will it take us to get fed up with a sunrise. How do we know it was real? Was it there when the image was taken? Or did the photographer roll out of bed at mid-day?   

The result will be a change in the way we look at landscape photography. We will no longer believe the perfect landscape. Take a look on any day at some of the popular landscapes on 500px. I can’t believe it’s not butter. So many landscapes with red skies, mist and reflections. Were they really captured that way? Or is it AI?

Is it Me?

Is this the way photography is going? Ten years ago the same debate raged around Photoshop and now most of us photographers just love it. We also accept CGI in movies. So will we learn to live with AI?

I think so.

We are human, we will adapt, and because we are human we will learn to bend and control it. Afterall it will always be the creative input that is most important, and robots cannot replace that just yet!

Filed Under: Journey, Post Processing Tagged With: Post Processing

Free Textures: 5 Best Sites

by John Gough

Poppies (with free textures) / John Gough / Canon EOS R

Where can you find free textures, to use with Photoshop to add interest to your images?

Adding textures can lift your image from a straightforward photograph into the realm of digital artwork. If you have never tried it before then a good place to start is this YouTube video from Photoshop Cafe.

When it comes to finding textures there are three options: make your own. Purchase textures, I have bought textures from Sue Woollard, because they particularly suit flower photography. Or download textures that you don’t have to pay for.

Over the years, I have come to rely on these five sites to download textures for free.

Freestocktextures.com

Huge range of textures at this site. These are free to use commercially. There is a limit of 5 downloads a day, which increases to 50 downloads a day if you create an account. Which again is free. freestocktextures.com

Unsplash.com

Unsplash is a site where photographers can upload photographs which in turn can be downloaded for free. There is a massive range of images on this site, which are free to be used commercially. This site is a photographer’s exchange so why not submit pictures as well as download. Go to the site and search for textures there are hundreds to choose from. unsplash.com

Pexels.com

Pexels is another community site. You can. You don’t have to. Upload images and you are free to download images. The images can be used commercially. You can credit the photographer, but it is not necessary. There are many different texture categories. pexels.com

Texturify.com

This is as its name implies is a site dedicated to textures and they are all free. The site was created for CGI designers who require different backgrounds for animations, films and games etc. However, it is a great resource for photographers. So on this site, there are less abstract textures and more actual photographs of metal, wood, brick and concrete etc. The images are free to use even commercially. texturify.com

Flickr

Flickr was one of the first photography hosting sites. This has now grown into a vast photography community with millions of accounts and billions of photos. As a result, the site can be an excellent source of imagery. Photographers have posted thousands of textures which are fully downloadable. Search for textures, and use the dropdown on the top left to refine by the type of licence. There are over 300K images with no known copyright restrictions. flickr.com

There are lots of other ‘free’ looking sites out there, but they often come with a sting in the tail, to part you from your money

Free Textures: Tips

Textures in Photoshop

There are textures available to use in Photoshop, but they are difficult to find. Go to Window>Extensions>Adobe Paper Texture Pro

Changing Texture Colour

Keep the texture but change the colour. It is often useful to be able to take creative control of the colour. Here is how in Photoshop.

  • Open the texture image.
  • Turn the image to monochrome: Image>Adjustments>Black and White>OK.
  • Adjust to reveal the texture: Image>Adjustments>Brightness/Contrast – bring the brightness up and take the contrast down >OK
  • Change colour: Image>Adjustments>Hue and Saturation>tick Colorize – change the colour using the sliders >OK

My Library in Photoshop

To store textures in Photoshop try using Libraries. Window>Libraries.

Filed Under: Journey, Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing, Visual Art Photography Tagged With: Post Processing

PHLEARN 30 Days of Photoshop

by John Gough

One of the best resources on the web for learning Photoshop is PHLEARN. Now they have a free 30 day course online, which they say takes you from the basics to more complicated stuff.

I thought it may be useful because I have learnt my Photoshop piecemeal, as I moved from solving one issue to the next. Perhaps, therefore, an overview was overdue.

So if you have resolved to learn more Photoshop in 2020, this is a good start. So get started here.



Camera Wrist Strap

I have avoided dropping my camera so many times using a simple inexpensive wrist strap like this one. Cameras and expensive lenses do not bounce!

UK

USA



Filed Under: Journey, Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing Tagged With: Learning Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing

New Object Selection Tool in Photoshop

by John Gough

Photoshop will soon have a new cut out tool which Adobe is calling the Object Selection Tool.

YouTube videos on the subject of cutting out objects from their backgrounds will try to persuade you that the marquee or lasso tools make selecting things easy. Perhaps it does with the simplest of subjects, but generally, I resort to a painstaking multi-click marathon with the pen tool.

How Does the Object Selection Tool Work

Adobe is using AI to make the process easier as the video from Adobe above demonstrates. Drag the rectangular marquee or lasso over the subject to be selected and Sensei the Adobe AI engine can distinguish the subject from its background.

By just selecting the general area of the things you’d like to include or exclude, Sensei identifies the correct subject and snips a precise selection around it. 

“It’s like it reads your mind and shrink-wraps the object with the selection,” says Adobe’s Meredith Stotzner in the video.

When will The Object Selection Tool be Implemented

Adobe will not be drawn, (no pun intended) but anytime soon seems to be the answer.

Filed Under: Journey, Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing Tagged With: Post Processing

How Do I Transfer Pictures to a PC from a Smartphone?

by John Gough

Photo by Rachael Crowe on Unsplash

One of the reasons I do not use my camera phone for ‘serious’ photography, is that I find it awkward to transfer pictures to a PC from my iPhone.

I am well aware that there are lots of different solutions out there regarding the transfer pictures to a PC from a smartphone, but I also know that my method, which is mailing them to myself is not the most efficient! Furthermore, I am also aware that I am too much of a curmudgeon to pay for iCloud.

I am not the only one confused. One of the most asked questions on Google is ‘how do I transfer pictures to a PC from a Smartphone?’

So what is the best solution?

Simple Way to Transfer Pictures to a PC from a Smartphone.

There is now an app from Microsoft. It is new and still in a testing phase, but it is available and works a treat. Furthermore, it does not involve the Cloud but it does require WiFi. It is free. It works for both Android and iPhone. It simply and seamlessly transfers pictures from your smartphone to a PC. How?

  • Find the Microsoft Photos Companion App in your App Store. And download to your phone.

Microsoft Photos Companion

  • Open the Windows 10 Photos App on your PC.
  • To make the Photos Companion App active. Go to the top right: See More>Settings>Preview>Help Microsoft test the mobile import over WiFi feature>Slide to On.
  • On the Windows 10 Photos App: Import>From mobile over WiFi
  • Open the Photos Companion App on the phone
  • Scan the QR code on the PC screen, to pair the PC and the smartphone.

Microsoft Photos App QR Code

  • Select the images to be transferred hit Done.
  • The pictures transfer across seamlessly to the Windows 10 Photos App on your PC.
  • Drag the pictures from the Photos App to your pictures folder.

The pairing isn’t permanent and will have to be re-established for each sharing operation, but it is quick and easy. If you think this could be useful, head to the Microsoft site to find out more.

I realise that there are many options out there to transfer pictures to a PC, but this one is both free and simple. The big advantage for me is that I no longer have to mail my own pictures to myself!

Filed Under: Gear, Journey, Post Processing Tagged With: Post Processing

Give Your Images Away with Unsplash

by John Gough

Unsplash

Mountain Biker / John Gough / Canon 6D

 

The other day my son asked if he could use my image Billboards for a new site he was developing. Yes, of course, no problem.

It got me thinking. If you are prepared to let family and friends, use your images then why not let anyone use your images. I have been fortunate enough to sell some photographs, but that is the small tip of a very big iceberg. Below the waterline, there are thousands of images languishing on my hard drive which will never again see the light of day.

Could these be of use to somebody?

What is Unsplash?

Last week I gave it a try using Unsplash. Unsplash is a website where photographers can share high resolution images, making them publicly available for everyone for free, even for commercial use. Created in May 2013 by a trio of Canadian entrepreneurs. Four months after creation they hit one million downloads, and a year after that they had more than a million downloads per month. Now there are 400,000+ high resolution images hosted on Unsplash, shared by 65,000+ photographers from all around the world.

The image I used was I thought vaguely commercial, in that it had a young man on a mountain bike in outstanding scenery. So how has it done over the past week? Well, I don’t know if this is good or not, but it has had  1534 views and 11 downloads. My work is out there flying free.

Why Use Unsplash?

Imagine designers, artists, writers from around the world can now use my image for album covers, posters, article headers, blog posts, and advertising etc etc. However, this is a disruptive technology which will threaten traditional curators like Shutterstock, and eventually undermine the work of professional photographers. So should we allow our photographs to be given away?

Stock photography is dying, people are paying less and less for images, and let’s face it there is a lot of theft out there. The value of my images sitting on my hard drive is virtually nil.  So why should I not give myself the pleasure of giving them away? People in poorer parts of the world, students, new businesses, charities can all benefit.

My photographs will be out there doing good.

What makes you happy is worth all the money in the world, and it makes me happy to give my images for free to those who need them.  Samual Zeller

 

 

Filed Under: Journey, Photography, Post Processing Tagged With: Post Processing

Silver Efex Moody Monochrome

by John Gough

 

silver efex

Coffee at The Mitre / John Gough / Sony a6300

I was out and about in Cambridge yesterday with my camera, and I was accosted by an elderly lady. She thought that because I was carrying a camera, I must be a snoop from the council. That is just one of the hazards of street photography. Had I been carrying a big DSLR, she would have assumed I was a proper photographer. However, a small camera like the Sony a6300 can unfortunately make you seem like a furtive fellow.

The picture above was taken there. The couple look delighted to have been caught on camera. I was having a good day!

The Google Nik Collection including Silver Efex Pro2

I created the moody monochrome image using Silver Efex Pro2, from the Google Nik Collection.

The Google Nik Collection is the best free resource for photographers available on the web. In 2016 when Google decided not to support the software further, it went on to provide the software free to photographers. This was both good and bad news. The software was free, but it was never going to to be updated. However, a month or so ago it was agreed that DxO acquire the Nik Collection, and fortunately they plan to continue to develop it. A revised version will be available mid 2018.

It is still possible to download the existing software, including Silver Efex for monochrome post processing here.

Silver Efex Pro2

This is a note to myself about how the image was processed.

Lightroom

In Lightroom, there are the usual workflow: exposure, sharpness and white balance adjustments to process from RAW. The image was then desaturated to -31, the vibrance taken down to -29 and the clarity pushed up to +71. Reducing the colour to provide a dark and moody presence.  I also added a shallow tone curve and imperceptible vignette.

Photoshop

Removed the reflection of myself and used the burn tool to tone down the interior of the pub, reducing lights and reflections.

Silver Efex

Processed to mono using preset 23 Wet Rocks and film type Agfa APX Pro 100.

Conclusion

To achieve that look, without Silver Efex would be impossible for an amateur retoucher like myself. Furthermore, in the distant analogue days it would have taken hours of work in the darkroom to achieve the same results.

 

Learn more:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Journey, Lightroom, Nik Collection, Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing, Silver Efex, Sony a6300, Street Photography Tagged With: Post Processing

How to Make Your Photos Pop

by John Gough

I recently entered an event at Bedford Camera Club, where we were presented with six photographs in RAW. Our objective was to process three images and present back how we did it. These are my notes, about how I went about trying to make these photos pop in Lightroom and Photoshop. I have not explained the technical details, but I have included some links to all the technical information..

Amazon have a good deal on Lightroom and Photoshop at the moment:

 

Image 1. How to make Your Photos Pop

This is the first image in RAW. Looks very drab and ordinary, BEFORE processing.

How to make your Photos pop

Image 1 BEFORE

The Issues with this Image

The picture is grey and washed out. There is no detail in the sky. There is no real focus on what the subject is. There is too much foreground. The edges are messy. The detail in the pebbles and brickwork are lost.

Processing in Lightroom and Photoshop

  1. Import the RAW file to Lightroom CC.
  2. Crop to A4 (Custom size 2.1 x 2.97) tightening the view to concentrate on the fishing boats. Excluding the motor boat on the right.
  3. Straighten the horizon. The roof in the background is not flat
  4. Check exposure. This image looks around a third of a stop under exposed
  5. Add contrast to make the image less flat
  6. Launch a Develop Lightroom preset. Here we are using my user preset for landscape
    1. Highlights -100 Shadows +100
    2. Adjust the whites and blacks by holding down the alt key (Windows)
    3. Move the Clarity / Vibrance / Saturation sliders to suit the effect required.
    4. Tone Curve.  Again to suit effect. Try an S curve
    5. Sharpening and Luminance around 30-45
    6. Tick Lens Correction and Enable Profile Correction
  7. Check the white balance. Take the dropper and pick a neutral grey colour. This will set the white balance.
  8. Move the image to Photoshop. Photo>Edit in>Edit in Photoshop CC
  9. Clone out the distracting speed boat on the right.
  10. Use the Dodge Tool to lighten the foreground and under the boats
  11. Use the Burn Tool just to add some detail back into the buildings and the decks of the boat
  12. To replace the sky. Erase the existing sky. Select>Colour Range>Fuzziness c’139. NB this method avoids having to somehow cut around the masts and rigging
  13. Use Erase tool to take out any remaining sky.
  14. Select an image with sky and add as a layer. Blend with the existing layer
  15. In Photoshop save. Image then available in Lightroom
  16. In Lightroom recheck the white balance / exposure /contrast etc for the new merged image
  17. Add a Post Crop Vignette that is there but not visible e.g. -14
  18. Save the image as a JPG

How to make your photos pop

Image 1 AFTER

 

Image 2 How to make Your Photos Pop

This is the second image in RAW. At least there is some interest in this image, but despite the magnificent architecture, it is drab and unexciting.

how to make a photo pop

Image 2 BEFORE

 

The Issues with this Image

This image has an odd sepia cast, as if the white balance needs correction. The detail in the sky is probably not worth trying to recover and could be replaced. The picture is dark and lacks detail. There is no real focus on the subject, the photograph is not about the two pigeons in the foreground.

Processing in Lightroom and Photoshop

  1. Import the RAW file into Lightroom CC
  2. Crop to A4 and lose the foreground
  3. Check exposure. This image looks around a third of a stop under exposed
  4. Add contrast to
  5. Launch a Lightroom preset (see above)
    1. Clarity / Vibrance / Saturation important to get some colour from the bland landscape.
    2. Manipulate the tone curve to get some detail
  6. The tower looks as though it is leaning backwards
    1. Go to the Transform tool
    2.  Use the vertical slider to -20 to correct
  7. Move the image to Photoshop. Photo>Edit in>Edit in Photoshop CC
  8. Use dodge and burn tools to create different light in the piazza, and to the buildings left and right
  9. Erase the sky. Select>Colour Range>Fuzziness (see above). This will preserve the building tracery on the buildings to the left and the spires and crosses
  10. Select an image with sky and add as a layer. Blend with the existing layer
  11. In Photoshop save. The image is then available in Lightroom
  12. In Lightroom recheck the white balance / exposure /contrast etc for the new merged image
  13. Add a Post Crop Vignette that is there but not visible
  14. The image still has an orange cast so recheck the white balance. The foreground piazza looks as though it should be grey so use the dropper to sample colour there.
  15. Save the image as a JPG

photos pop

Image 2 AFTER

Image 3 How to Make Your Photos Pop

This is the third image in RAW. There is a picture in there somewhere trying to get out.

photos pop

Image 3 BEFORE

The Issues with this Image

The detail in the columns is lost. There is no real colour so would it be better in black and white? The portrait mode makes the picture mostly pavement. The two nuns should be made the focus of the image.

Processing in Lightroom, Photoshop and Nik Silver Efex Pro2

  1. Import the RAW file into Lightroom CC
  2. Crop to A4 and change from portrait to landscape. That way we focus on the ladies walking and lose the black shadow overhead. Place ladies in the centre of the rule of thirds grid
  3. Check white balance/exposure/contrast
  4. Apply a Lightroom preset (see above)
  5. Move the image to Photoshop. Photo>Edit in>Edit in Photoshop CC
  6. Use dodge tool to reveal the detail in the columns and paving.
  7. In Photoshop save. The image is then available in Lightroom
  8. Move the image to Nik Silver Efex Pro2 which you can download for free here. Photo>Edit in>Edit in Siver Efex Pro2
  9. Select a preset from the preset library in Silver Efex.
  10. Save to move image back to Lightroom
  11. Add a Post Crop Vignette that is there but not visible
  12. Save the image as a JPEG

 

I am fascinated by digital post production. However, I am still very much in the foothills in the journey to master Photoshop especially. If you want to see just what can be achieved, look at the books and videos of Glyn Dewis.

 

Filed Under: Journey, Lightroom, Nik Collection, Photography, Photoshop, Post Processing, Silver Efex Tagged With: Post Processing

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Copyright: John Gough 2025