I haven’t really talked about my photo workflow since I got my new MacBook pro. So, here you go.
Using Image Capture, I import the photos into a folder on my desktop named New Pictures. Image Capture allows you to run an Automator Workflow, so it also opens up HoudahGeo, Photoshop, and iPhoto. Finally the workflow asks for photos to view, then opens them up in Preview. I delete the rejects in Preview.
Next, I drag my new photos into HoudahGeo. It lets me easily and efficiently add geotagging info to my photos. I save those, and now my photos know where they were taken (in iPhoto, in Flickr, etc).
Typically, I revisit my photos, and delete ones that don’t impress me again.
Next, I edit photos one at a time in Photoshop. Recently, I’ve been using LAB mode. It preserves the histogram, and therefore the integrity, of the photos. I typically bump up the contrast (using a variety of ways) too.
I use 1001 to upload my photos to Flickr. It’s free, and easily lets me send new pics to my photo-a-day set and several groups.
The final step (on my local hard drive) is to drag the keeper photos into iPhoto. I like editing and geotagging the photos before iPhoto. If you edit in iPhoto, it creates an original file and a modified file. I think that’s lame. Also, I like having the geocoding info written into the exif data of the photo itself. The new iPhoto doesn’t do a great job of that.
Once online, I add every photo-a-day picture to its Flickr set, and then add it to my photo-a-day blog. To get it to blogger, I manually create a post. I use TextExpander to paste in all the info so you can see the picture, when I created it, leave a description, and the formatting is all set.
And this goes at the end of every post: Year 3, Day 106