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Wednesday, November 26, 2008   -   Mid week update
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Having managed to squeeze a flurry of back-processing and printing a week or so ago, this week time has once again got the better of me. 

I have followed on from an idea I picked up from another blog which was to turn one room that you use relatively frequently into a small preview gallery. So I've just taken delivery of a stack load of A4 aluminium frames from Trade Frames and hung them all in my downstairs bathroom. It's not exactly the Tate Modern, but it works for me. In case you're wondering, I've done this for two reasons: As any photographer will tell you, you don't really get to appreciate your work unless you print it. Whether its film or digital, you've really got to make prints and reasonable size prints in order to properly appreciate and critique what you're doing. I also find that once I've got an image printed and I see it every day on the wall, it gives me ideas on how I can improve on the print - be it by a different slightly  crop, maybe a little dodging or burning here and there, or possibly a tweak in the toning. I'm also really getting into the Epson R2400 at last, and really loving it. The quality of the black and white prints it produces are really phenomenal, and the colour ain't too bad either. One of these days when I fire up the wet darkroom again, I must make a couple of prints to compare - one wet printed direct from the neg, and one digitally printed on the 2400 from the scanned neg - would be interesting to compare the two.

On a slightly different tack, readers will be aware that I've been struggling with off-site backups and a stream lined method of being able to work on files at home and in the office. To this end, I pocketed a Western digital 400 GB pocket hard drive from PC World earlier this week which I can use to transfer files around and I can also work directly on Lightroom galleries from the drive at home. It remains to be seen just whether the access speeds will be quick enough for Lightroom or whether I'll have to copy data off the drive first, but it looks neat, its small and it holds 400 Gb which should be large enough as a temporary carry around drive for the time being. And as long as it last longer than that crappy 32 Gb memory stick, it'll be worthwhile.  It also comes bundled with some auto-syncing software which I am just investigating.

Anyway, that's it for the time being. Time to get back on the M6 again. I'll just leave you with this - Martin Bailey over at MBP is running another of his fantastic workshops in Japan in February next year. Check out the details here - http://www.mbpworkshops.com/ . If there were 13 months in the year and my little ones were just that little bit older, I'd be there. Last year's workshop looked a real corker - much fun was had by all and some of the work they produced was outstanding. 
Wednesday, November 26, 2008 6:02:42 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Tuesday, November 18, 2008   -   Goodbye George W.
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Just been catching up with some of my feeds and came across another blinder from Zoriah.

"There are things that U.S. soldiers are allowed to talk about with the press and others they are not. One of the things they are not allowed to voice is their political opinion, especially if it goes against their commander in chief. In the privacy of latrine stalls on military bases in Iraq and Kuwait, however, it is quite a different story." - Check them out here

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Tuesday, November 18, 2008 5:44:43 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Thursday, November 13, 2008   -   Manchester portraits
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Myself and some of the other guys I was recently at night school with spent a couple of hours wandering around Piccadilly and the Northern Quarter the other weekend. I won't flannel you with excuses, save to say that my head really wasn't quite in the place I needed it to be to do this, but I reckon I got some half decent shots nonetheless. These are 2 of my faves. The rest are on Flickr.

Manchester1

Manchester

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Thursday, November 13, 2008 8:54:41 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Tuesday, November 11, 2008   -   Accrington
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 Accrington by Fabrizio Filippini

Finally managed to get some processing done at last. Thought I'd plough through a couple of dusk and dawn shoots I did in Accrington last month. Shot with D300 and used Nik's fantastic Silver Efex Pro.

Accrington by Fabrizio Filippini

Tuesday, November 11, 2008 5:44:27 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Sunday, November 02, 2008   -   Backup regimes
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I've been reading quite a lot lately on other blogs, Scott Kelby's and Epic Edits are two that spring to mind, about the do's and dont's of backing up photographs. This particular topic has caught my attention once again as I've been having problems of my own in this area lately. The secondary drive on my primary pc which has around 200Gb's of RAW files and scanned negs, is rapidly running out of space. My offsite backup plan has also gone out of the window. So not only am I worryingly low on disk space, I'm also not getting duplicates of my files off site anymore (at least not very easily).

Previously I was using Retrospect 7 to make a duplicate of all these files over a VPN connection to a device that I have stored in the spare room at home. This made sure that I had an identical duplicate of all my RAW files, negs and Lightroom catalogs should anything untoward ever occur at my office. The problem that appears to have arisen in this area, is that the VPN has been getting dropped with increasing regularlity resulting in the backups failing. The system does automatically recover and start over again, but as a result I am often using over my 50Gb broadband monthly bandwidth allowance - and they just love sending me invoices for it!
So I now have two problems - I am running out of space at the office and I no longer have a regular off-site backup system.

I think that I can immediately address the problem of disk space by clearing out a lot of superfluous images. When I come back from a shoot and post-process, I delete all the real rubbish - out of focus, camera shake, flash didn't fire etc, but I generally keep the rest and I think that I could probably free up several Gigs by going through a rating process and deleting the images that I know I will never come back to. Looking to the future, I also need to add additional storage space. The options for this are to buy a new external drive, which will probably get me another 500Gb, but with no redundancy, or alternatively I could bite the bullet and buy a Drobo. Though I have yet to price up a firewire Drobo and the necessary drives to populate. This would mean that I could keep copies of everything, but would free up enough space.

Unfortutantely I'm no stranger to hard drive failures as I've had more than 1 catastrophic data loss in the past so I've been through the pain of the irretreavable loss of important data.The biggest headscratcher for me at the moment, is the off-site situation. The the existing off-site regime works well for backing up webservers and exchange mailboxes etc, but the bandwidth required for photographs is the killer. Since the issue of excessive bandwidth came to a head and I had to temporaily pause the off-site copying of the photographs, I've been reduced to transporting them from  site to site on a 32Gb memory stick - which is far from ideal - I'm a big fan of automation. Another problem that I have is that I can't always get into the office to work on images, so I often work on them on a laptop at home. So ideally, what I need is a two-way synchronous back up off-site system that will look for changes and copy files in the appropriate direction!

Since drafting this post yesterday, I've had a little time to investigate Drobos. (If you've not heard of this marvellous invention - check it out here). For one of the 2nd generation units populated with 4 x 1TB Western Digital Green drives which would give me 2.7TB worth of storage space (The rest is required as overhead for fault tolerance), would come to about £700. Which ain't all that cheap, and I'd need 2....Hmmmm...
Sunday, November 02, 2008 7:13:46 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Fabrizio Filippini, Fill Factor Photography