Useful digital photography utilities

This content is 17 years old. I don't routinely update old blog posts as they are only intended to represent a view at a particular point in time. Please be warned that the information here may be out of date.

I’ve just got back from a weekend in the Peak District National Park and, rewarded with clear blue skies as dawn broke yesterday morning, I rushed to the top of Mam Tor to rekindle my long-dormant desire to make great landscape photographs (I’m no Joe Cornish, but there has to be some reward for leaving my tent at 5.15).

It gave me a chance to try out a number of things that I’ve wanted to do for a while – shooting camera raw (.NEF) images and using the Lee Filters 0.6 ND graduated filter that I bought a couple of years ago. I have to say, that I am definitely a convert to these features (although they would not be practical for the majority of my photography which falls into the “snapshots of the kids” category). Both the OS X Preview application and my post-production tool of choice (Adobe Photoshop CS2) had no difficulty opening the camera raw files and the quality is excellent (Windows users might find this post useful). Meanwhile, whilst using a large graduated filter on a camera with only a 24mm image sensor makes it slightly difficult to position, using the 0.6 ND filter to tone down the sky by two stops meant that I was able to take pictures with a well-exposed foreground, without washing out the highlights.

Renamer4MacI also found a couple of little programs came in useful when I got home. Firstly, having had some issues with my CF card before leaving home, I formatted it and the file numbering recommenced from DSC_0001.* – thanks to a little recommendation from my buddy Alex, I used Renamer4Mac to bulk rename the files. Also useful (although not for the RAW files) was Simple EXIF Viewer for Mac OS XAli Ozer’s Simple EXIF Viewer for Mac OS X, which let me easily examine the EXIF data on my images (something sadly lacking in the OS X Finder).

Finally, whilst writing about OS X and digital photography (apologies to Windows readers but my digital photography workflow is based on a Mac) it’s worth mentioning one little tip that can come in useful (much as I hate to publicise anything from Scott Bourne, whose “advice” often serves only to fuel Apple elitism and general Mac vs. PC bigotry, I think I picked this up from an iLifeZone podcast). Previewing multiple images in Mac OS XUnlike the Windows Preview function, which lets viewers page forwards and backwards through a directory of files, the OS X Preview default is to open just a single file. Switchers are often frustrated by this (I know I was) but it is possible to open multiple images in Preview (by selecting multiple files, then choosing to open with Preview), after which the cursor keys can be used to scroll through the list.

8 thoughts on “Useful digital photography utilities

  1. If only I could be bothered to go back through my podcasts, you could. There’s a link to his iLifezone podcast already, but you only need to listen to a few TWiT or Macbreak Weekly podcasts with him on the panel to hear him banging on about how he’ll never run Boot Camp or Parallels because “he’s pureblood” and doesn’t want any viruses or spyware, or how Windows is full of Blue Screens of Death.

  2. Scott Bourne[‘s] “advice” often serves only to fuel Apple elitism and general Mac vs. PC bigotry

    Sounds juicy; can we have a link or two? ;)

  3. Well, I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt and assume he was being tongue-in-cheek, but your review certainly doesn’t make me want to listen to any of his stuff.

    I personally won’t ever run Parallels (again) because my demo license expired and I won’t ever run Boot Camp because installing it seems like too much hassle ;)

  4. I’m pretty sure that Mr. Bourne was not being tongue-in-cheek (he restates his position way too frequently for that) but I’m with you on both your points about Parallels/Boot Camp. If the Parallels demo didn’t time out after 15 days I might have managed to get it working reliably with Windows Vista on a Boot Camp partition by now, but I’ve timed out, and I’m not shelling out real money for it until I know I can reliably run Windows Vista Media Center in coherence mode…

  5. @Florian – CS4 uses Adobe Camera Raw – and if that can read your raw images then it’s probably reasonably up-to-date. Aperture and OS X also need frequent updates to ensure that they can read raw images for the latest cameras – have you have applied all recent updates to Aperture and OS X?

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