Colby Brown Twitterview Transcript

On May 1st, Colby Brown joined us for a lively Twitterview about how photographers can use Google+ to build a following and connect with other photogs and customers. Relive the magic with this transcript.
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On May 1st, Colby Brown joined us for a lively Twitterview about how photographers can use Google+ to build a following and connect with other photogs and customers. Relive the magic with this transcript.

Robin recently gave a keynote presentation at Santa Fe University of Art & Design. The event, Hire Education, was a day-long event and portfolio review, sponsored by AIGA New Mexico.

In Mac OS X, it’s a snap to convert almost any document to PDF. From the print dialog, simply choose Save as PDF... from the PDF popup button. If you’ve done this before, then you may have noticed there are some other options in this popup, as well, such as Mail PDF. These are print plugins, and, using Automator, it’s possible to create your own and add them to the list. Suppose you upload PDFs to your FTP server on a regular basis, so you can share them with your family, coworkers, or whoever. Every time you do this, you have to save your document somewhere as a PDF, launch the popular FTP client Transmit, connect to the server, and upload the PDF. This is a perfect time to create a custom print plugin to do this for you. Here’s how...

Join author Colby Brown for a lively Twitterview on how photographers can use Google+ to build a following and connect with other photogs and customers.

On April 25th, Jeff Carlson joined us for a lively Twitterview about the latest tool for photographers: the iPad. Relive the magic with this transcript. (You can also snag his entire eBook, The iPad for Photographers, for only $9.99 this week: http://www.peachpit.com/deals.)

Every month in our Photography newsletter, we feature the work of a new photographer who has contributed to our Photography Newsletter Flickr group. This month, we chose the photo Pemaquid Point Sunset 6763 by Maine-based photographer Cindy Farr-Weinfeld.

Your wife’s surprise birthday party is tomorrow. You’ve prepared a top notch slideshow on your Mac using Keynote, and transferred it to your iPad. Great! Now you can present directly from the iPad. There’s only one problem. The fonts in your presentation are no longer appearing properly because the iPad doesn’t have all the same fonts your Mac does. It looks like you might have to lug your Mac along too. No, with Automator’s help, you can just replace the problem text with images. Here’s how...

Adobe unveils Adobe Creative Suite 6! Get up to speed with books, videos, articles, and tutorials at our new CS6 Resource Center.

Every month in our Photography newsletter, we feature the work of a new photographer who has contributed to our Photography Newsletter Flickr group. This month, we chose the photo “Sunburst, Harbor, Ship.” by Pasadena-based photographer Lance Cunningham.

Cleaning out the garage can provide a nostalgic trip down Graphics Memory Lane, plus stir up lots of ideas for new projects.

There are tons of apps that allow you to manipulate images on your Mac. iPhoto and Preview are two from Apple, and there are lots more available from the Mac App Store and third-party software vendors. What you may not know, however, is that you don’t need a third-party app to do some basic image manipulations with your existing operating system. Using Automator, you can create your own custom image processing plug-ins, which you can run right within the Finder.

Grab your iPad and join author Jeff Carlson for a lively Twitterview about the latest tool in a photographers' bag on April 25.