- www.digikam.org digiKam 8.5.0 is released
Dear digiKam fans and users, we are proud to announce the stable release of digiKam 8.5.0.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/22563127
> digKam, KDE's image organiser for amateur and pro photographers, releases version 8.5.0. This version of digiKam improves the Face Management system, adds colored labels to identify important items, increases its list of supported languages to 61, and fixes over 160 bugs. > > Help keep projects like digiKam producing new releases with awesome new features by donating to KDE's fundraiser.
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Canon EOS R50 custom menu - What's on yours?
Mine: ISO, Drive Mode, Battery Info, Digital Zoom. I have 2 more slots. Does your camera provide this feature? What is on your custom menu?
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RAW photography processing (including infrared) on an android phone
www.macklin.co RAW photo developing & ProcessingThis page is really just an index for the pages that describe & demonstrate the power of dcraw & Imagemagick for advanced processing of RAW files.
I've been messing with #infrared #photography using #termux #dcraw & #imagemagick to process RAW files without needing a computer.
There are examples, instructions & the scripts, in mobile friendly chunks, on my #selfhosted website, & the basics are on github too (https://github.com/Linecutterx/PhotoScript) More examples at https://www.macklin.co/infrared-photography-0/
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Autumn in the city
Taken with a regular 'ol potato iPhone 13 (with a dirty lens by all appearances, heh.) Some light editing and noise removal + the perspective has been fiddled with a bit
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Multi-colored anthotype photograph?
I've been looking into anthotypes recently and thought they were pretty interesting.
Then I started to wonder if it was possible to make an anthotype that could display multiple colors (like a colored photograph).
I came across this post and thought it was like the reverse of a regular anthotype.
Which made me wonder if you could use the same process to create a colored picture?
I was thinking if you took plants that produce pigments across the color spectrum and mixed them together it could make the coating black.
Then when the light hits the paper it removes the pigments from the other colors on the spectrum only leaving the color that was hit in that space eventually creating a colored picture.
I haven't had the chance to try this yet and I am not really knowledgeable about photography, but would this work?