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Aperture Exposed: The Mac Photographer's Guide to Taming the Workflow
 
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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Aperture Exposed provides a comprehensive yet easy-to-read guide for taking advantage of the new power and abilities provided by Aperture. The book takes an unfamiliar interface and feature set and makes it logical and intuitive so that Aperture quickly feels like an old friend. Aperture Exposed is visual and easy to understand yet comprehensive; readers will immediately see that it was written by photographers for photographers, without all the entry-level clutter found in most books that try to please everyone. Itâs completely organized to follow a professional workflow.

Ellen Anon is an Apple Certified Trainer in Aperture and a renowned photo workshop instructor; she teaches thousands of photographers every year how to shoot, organize, and edit their images in person and through her writing. Photographer Josh Anon applies his experience in Mac OS X photo software engineering to reveal Aperture's secrets, from time-saving tips to advanced workflow customization advice.

Aperture Exposed is the best coverage available of what working pros need to know, including the 1.0.1 and 1.1 updates. And now, Ellen and Josh have made available a report on "What's New in Aperture 1.5", a companion to the book for users of the latest version; download the free booklet from www.sunbearphoto.com.

With a foreword by master photographer Charles Glatzer, Aperture Exposed is the photographer's authority on Apple's workflow solution.



About the Author

Ellen Anon, Ph.D. (Erie, PA) is an Apple Certified Trainer in Aperture. She has been a freelance photographer for more than a decade, leading and co-leading a variety of Photoshop workshops and seminars on her own as well as with renowned photographers such as Arthur Morris and Joe and Mary Ann McDonald. Her images have been in many gallery shows and are in collections on several continents, as well as being used in calendars, books, and more. Ellen has written extensively on digital photography, including magazine features, book chapters, and coauthoring Photoshop for Nature Photographers with Tim Grey (Sybex, 2005).

Josh Anon (Moraga, CA) has been a nature photographer for 10 years. His work is represented by EcoStock in Seattle and has appeared in a variety of media. Josh is a technical director at Pixar Animation Studios, where he works on cinematography and has contributed to Mac and Linux development  and rendering and model optimization. When not he's photographing in locations from the Great Barrier Reef to Chicago's Michigan Avenue, he teaches photography classes and also writes software for Lightbox Software.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 297 pages
  • Publisher: Sybex (August 7, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 047004019X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470040195
  • Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 7.9 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #580,540 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #70 in  Books > Computers & Internet > Software > Business > Workflow

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25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Aperture Exposed, October 9, 2006
By Richard M. Geiger (Anchorage, Alaska USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
What is Aperture? The program is Apple Computer Company's answer to a digital workflow for digital images. The program tries to recreate the days of editing slides on a light table. The program is like the professional version of iPhoto with more power. It is also designed to handle RAW images which most professional Single-Reflex-Lens (SLR) cameras can shoot.

The program is a digital workflow program and has many nondestructive editing fea-tures built into it. The program is not a substitute an external image editor such as Photoshop, Photoshop Elements or other photo editing programs if you are interested in more creative editing. Aperture works in conjunction with these programs.

Apple updated Aperture from version 1.1 to version 1.5 while I was working on the re-view. Apple has added 20 new features to the program so the book is somewhat out of date but the basic functions of the software have not changed much. I wrote the review based on version 1.1. Reading Apple's website, version 1.5 will make the program eas-ier to use with other Apple programs such as the Apple's iLife Suite and the iWorks and a more flexible library management for example.

The authors Ellen Anon and Josh Anon fit a lot of information in 297 pages. The di-mensions of the book are 10.0 x 8.0 x 0.7 inches so the book is easy to take along with you if you use Aperture on a laptop. The book has plenty of white space and color pho-tos so it's easy on the eyes. The chapters covered by the book are Welcome to Aper-ture, Importing and Organizing Your Images, Viewing Images, Finding the Keepers, Nondestructive Image Processing, Exporting Images, Printing, Creating Web Content, Creating a Book, and Advanced Aperture.

The book is easily to understand and the authors tried to make it as non-technical has possible. If you are new to Aperture you might want to read the entire book but if you have used the software for a while you might be interested in the second half of the book. The authors are very clear about this in the introduction of the book stating you can read the entire book, chapters or just sections.

The authors give you examples of various nondestructive editing techniques you can use in Aperture on your digital images. They also give you the published website so you can download the examples files and work with the examples yourself so you can better understand what authors are trying to explain. I found working with examples helpful because you can only go so far with trying to understand text and the screen shots.
As you read through the book the authors discussed how to adjust digital images. They will not give you a lot of theory as to why you would do certain things. This would be beyond the scope of the book but you should be aware if this limitation of you purchase the book.

As I read through the book and the authors discussed various features of the Aperture and then under printing the authors discussed color correcting your computer screen so you get true colors. I was surprised that they waited until three-fourths of the way through the book because they discussed color adjustment and other features in earlier chapters. I think the discussion of color correcting your screen should have been dis-cussed at the beginning. The reason I believe the discussion should be a the beginning of the book is the authors spend so much time on color correcting and editing the digital images through out the book. If your monitor screen colors are not correct you will likely not color correct your images correctly. Once you go to a different computer or print your photos you might be in for a big surprise. Also, if the readers of the book are new to digital photography they might no realize the problems of not having a color corrected screen.

In the copy of the book I reviewed, I found Figure 3.11 had a dark screen shot. The figure is on page 66.

I found that when I read a selection and then came back to it, I had a hard time finding the commands and short cuts. I think the authors might consider a short cut command page per chapter so readers do not have to search for them.

Aperture Exposed is a good book for someone wanting to learn Aperture. If you are an advanced user you might only find the last part of the book useful to you. Just a re-minder this version of the book is for Aperture 1.1 and the newest version that just came out the end of September 2006 is version 1.5. Some of the features have changed so some parts of the book will be out of date if you purchase the book.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Aperture Exposed, September 25, 2006
By P. Luckas (Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is one of the most easy-to-read technical manuals that I have come across. The style is engaging and light, while the content is comprehensive, up to date and surprisingly detailed. Recommended for those just starting with Aperture or those after a very good companion manual.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Finally Exposed, October 14, 2006
The basic principle behind this book is obviously to dissect Apple's Aperture image-editing...no no, workflow program. I was standoffish on buying Aperture as I am very married to Photoshop, however, as I began to shoot more digital photos I found myself with photos on various hard drives, backed up two or three times because I couldn't remember what I did or when I did it, and then there is Aperture and this book.
The book only received 4 of 5 stars from me because I think they should have covered the monitor calibration or color correcting information in the beginning, but this isn't a book about color correction for your monitor, it is about Aperture.
I found the book easy and enjoyable to read. It was technical, but not so technical that you find yourself confused or frustrated. While you do not need a book to get started in Aperture, this book will certainly walk you through all of the features in v1.1 so that you do not under use the application.
I would recommend this book even though Aperture is now running at v1.5.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Not worth purchasing. Out of date. Aperture 2.0 is totally different
I was disgusted to receive this book and find it was for Aperture 1.1. I wasted $20 on this book. The user interface on 2.0 had changed. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Conrad B. Senior

3.0 out of 5 stars Aperture Exposed
The instructions in this text are a little difficult to follow. I am an intermediate photographer, and this book may have been intended for a person with more experience and skill... Read more
Published on August 28, 2007 by David J. Srebalus

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