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The iPhoto 4 Book [Paperback]

Sam Crutsinger (Author), David Plotkin (Author), Andy Ihnatko (Author), Sam Crutsinger (Author), David Plotkin (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0764567977 978-0764567971 December 3, 2004 1
Renowned Mac columnists Andy Ihnatko and David Plotkin deliver a fun, informative, full-color guide to iPhoto, Apple's hot digital photo-editing application. Digital camera users more than doubled last year to nearly nine million, and iPhoto is the most popular the four multimedia applications that make up
Apple's "digital hub." Ihnatko and Plotkin show this exploding market of digital photographers how to make the most of iPhoto, and review how iPhoto has been designed to work seamlessly with the other iLife applications.
* A fun, indispensable guide to the Mac OS X image-editing tool, written in cooperation with Apple Computer, Inc., which also covers iPhoto 4
* Written in a witty, conversational style, this book appeals to Mac users' sense of individuality and offers real-world tips and techniques to help readers get the most out of Apple technologies
* Goes the extra mile to engage readers and make them feel as though the book is not only technically valuable, but a good read as well

Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

Picture the fun you can have with iPhoto
  • Includes plenty of illustrations, witty observations, and great advice
  • Covers digital photography basics; importing, organizing, editing, and sharing photos; and creating an iPhoto Book
  • Explores using iPhoto with other iLife® applications

"Yes, I am the jerk who blocked the aisle in the British Museum, because it occurred to me that if a young woman happened to walk up real close to those female statues and hold a similar pose, it'd make a wicked cool photo. Yes, I am the relative who told everyone to come back in five hours so my nephew could cut his birthday cake with nice western light. Yes, I am the reason security was called to Westminster Abbey. Look, if they really didn't want people taking flash photos during High Mass, their sign would have said '. . .not even if you use a pocket-sized camera and are really sneaky about it.' Yes: I am a photo geek."
—Andy Ihnatko

About the Author

Sam Crutsinger was bitten by the Mac bug in the late 1980s. A professional audio engineer, video editor and producer, graphic designer, videographer, photog-rapher, writer, computer system designer, repair technician, and cat lover, he aspires to being the straight guy on an episode of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.

David Plotkin is a veteran Mac columnist and reviewer, computer book author, and digital photography expert.

Andy Ihnatko, the Chicago Sun-Times technology columnist and inveterate blogger, is a popular writer and speaker in the Macintosh community


Product Details

  • Paperback: 426 pages
  • Publisher: Visual; 1 edition (December 3, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0764567977
  • ISBN-13: 978-0764567971
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,627,018 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars iPhoto 4 Laughing Out Loud, January 2, 2005
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This review is from: The iPhoto 4 Book (Paperback)
Calling The iPhoto 4 Book "just" an instruction manual doesn't do it justice, it was a laugh out loud don't want to put in down read. I laughed out loud so many times I started getting looks from my family. If school text books were this engaging and fun to read we would have more "geeks" on our hands. The book was written from an almost comic conversational stand. It felt like you were sitting around with some of your friends on Saturday night talking about making a funny slide show instead of the old fashioned click "oops that slide was put in backwards slide show." You almost felt like the authors were sitting there with you just shooting the breeze while they imparted their knowledge on how to make friends and family beg to see your photos.

The book is broken down into eight different parts with twenty five chapters complete with notes, tips and sidebars. The sidebars had little stories or observations that will have you chuckling. The walk through was so simple and easy to follow that you almost didn't want the book to end.

Chapter One: Taking Interesting Photos - This chapter covers the garbage in garbage out concept. While computers and software have come a long way in helping you tweak your photos it doesn't help if the original photo has nothing to offer. There should be good composition, object or person etc should fill most of the frame, good lighting and a direction that the eye follows, if it doesn't have all or most of those elements use a different photo. Lag time and how to compensate for it is covered. "Lag time the delay between when you press the shutter button to when the picture is actually taken, is usually more prevalent in the lower end digital cameras". Plus other nifty tips and tricks.

Chapter Two: Getting Started With iPhoto - Covers registering iPhoto if you haven't used it before. The "Organize" mode is where you will be spending most of your time. When you pass your mouse over the icons at the bottom of the screen a little box appears and gives you a bit more info on the icon. In "Edit" mode you can go from the default basic editing program that comes with iPhoto to whatever graphic program you have on your computer. I set mine to default to Photoshop CS. You can also adjust the display pane so your photos are displayed in the number of rows and columns you like working in. You can also change the background color of the display pane from white to black or any of the grays in between.

Chapter Three: Importing Pictures - The "Import" mode lets you bring your photos into iPhoto either directly from your camera, compact flash, CD/DVD or photos already on your hard drive. You can hook your camera up directly to your MAC with either a USB or Firewire cable and bring your photos into iPhoto that way or you could use a card reader. Some cameras have a few more hoops to jump through for you to get your photos into iPhoto, a card reader simplifies things. Using a CD/DVD or hard drive just drag and drop your photos into iPhoto.

Chapter Four: Organizing Your Photos - We sometimes get very excited once we start something new that we forget this important step that will save us much frustration in the long run. Organizing when you first start pulling photos into iPhoto it might not seem like a big deal but once you start taking more and more photos you will wish you had done so in the beginning. This chapter covers how the program will organize things to a point even if you don't in the beginning. It creates a film roll for groups of pictures from an import session. It has a quick view of sorts where you can see all of the photos you imported in the last month or the last roll you imported. You can also rearrange the order of photos, so if you are building a slideshow and you want uncle Bob goofing off to start the slide show move that photo to the beginning. Some of us remember when we had only so much space to name a file, like 8 characters. We now can put more info into naming our files, like "Northern Lights Christmas Day 2004" so at least the name of the roll can be easily identified.

Chapter Five: Leveraging the Power of Albums - Albums are the next progression from the film rolls of chapter 4. You can create and customize albums, by adding, removing and rearranging photos in the albums, you can also merge albums. Or create a smart album. With smart albums you can use keywords or ratings to put specific photos within your album. This becomes very valuable when you want to create slideshows or have a book printed.

Chapter Six: Assigning Titles, Comments & Keywords to Images - Your camera has a default name that it gives your images, most of the time it begins with DSCN followed by several numbers. That's fine to a point but the images that you are keeping you might want to give a relevant name or something other than the numerical code. Comments and keywords are a great tool to use to find that image or images later. You can use "vacation" as a all around comment or keyword, but if you want to get more specific you can put in where you took the vacation like "Brazil Vacation". So you can use those words or comments for iPhoto to only show you the pics you want, it's a great way to weed through the tons of photos and create a smart album.

Chapter Seven: Understanding the Edit Tools - Once you click on the edit tab you see a bunch more tools available to use. You can crop, rotate, retouch, enhance, fix red-eye, adjust brightness/contrast, convert to B&W or to Sepia tone. You can use the default edit tool within iPhoto or you can double click and it will take you to the other application you specified during your setup phase.

Chapter Eight: Better Photography through Editing - You learn about aspect ratio cropping. I really like this chapter so when my clients want me to crop more of the photo to make them look slimmer but they want more of the back ground I will have them read this chapter. You should however have a general idea how you are going to use the photo. You will need to decide if you want a 5x7 or a 4x6 or if you are just using it for the web. You learn how to use the red-eye correction tool. The enhance tool works by taking the lightest part of your photo and the darkest part of your photo, it however is going under the assumption that the light part is white and the dark part is black for it to get a balance of colors between. Sometimes the enhance tools works well and at other times when the colors are not so readily discernible it can make your photo a bit cartoonish. If you want to try and tweak the image yourself you can use the brightness/contrast tool. You can also "retouch" that piece of broccoli stuck between uncle Bob's teeth to make you image better. Changing the photo to either B&W or Sepia tone. This technique works better with some photos than with others. Experiment to see what works best and remember if you don't like any of the changes you can always revert back to the original.

Chapter Nine: - Editing Outside of iPhoto - You set this up in an earlier chapter. iPhoto allows you to make some basic edits to your photo if you have some text you want to add or other more dramatic changes you will need to go to the outside editor. You need to open the outside editor within iPhoto for any changes to apply to the current image. iPhoto makes a copy of your original file so if after your changes you decide to go back to the original you can. You do however have to make sure that the images is saved in the same format .jpeg or iPhoto won't recognize that you have made any changes to this file. If you add layers just save a .PSD file then flatten the layers and save it as a .jpeg file and you're covered if you want to go back and make more changes.

Chapter Ten: Making A Slideshow - This is not your old high school slide projector slide show. This one is way cooler. You can add transitions, set how long the slide will be displayed and chose to have the slides displayed randomly and scale the photos to fit the screen. Need to check this before going ahead because you might cause a few decapitations. You have the choice of creating a slideshow using an album or by selecting specific photos. To add some pizzaz to your slideshow you can add music. The only thing about this slideshow is the transition and timing applies to all slides you can't have different transitions within the same slideshow and you have to use the whole song.

Chapter Eleven: Basic Print Tools - This chapter covers the different types of printers, printer resolution, plus the different types of paper. It explains how to configure your printer to work with iPhoto. I loved the last part of this chapter about the photo off the low res camera, I laughed so hard. I have had clients bring me their out of focus, underexposed print and want me to make uncle Chester look like he's sitting there with them in the correctly exposed photo I just shot.

Chapter Twelve: Using iPhoto to Print Your Pictures - So after setting up your printer you are now ready to print out your photos. You have many options when it comes to printing you can print either one photo, a couple of photos on one page or a contact sheet of all of the photos within an album or that you have selected. You can choose the size of the images you would like to print, like 2 5x7's on one sheet, or 4 3x5's on one sheet, greeting cards etc...you can do this by using the presets that come with iPhoto. However if you print a contact sheet it does not print out the file name which can be a bit of a bummer if you have a lot of photos that look similar.

Chapter Thirteen: Printing Your Photos Professionally - With so many places offering you an opportunity to have your prints made from digital camera it's a shame not to take advantage of them. You have your local services... Read more ›
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best iPhoto Book EVER!, December 25, 2004
This review is from: The iPhoto 4 Book (Paperback)
The best thing about this book is it's conversational approach and handsome author. It's filled with fantastic content that's so entertaining I almost couldn't put it down, and I'm not saying that just because I wrote it! OK, maybe I am a little bit. But seriously, I had a good time writing it and I think you'll enjoy reading it just as much. Plus, my email addy is in the preface so you can tell me what you didn't like.

My sixty-[mumble] year old mom loved it and she's kinda technophobic. She's calling me and telling me about how she read a chapter, designed her own photo book and sent it off to Apple to have it printed all by herself. Trust me. If she's geeking out on a computer book, well, let's just say that she's no geek, so I musta done something right.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
iPhoto lets you organize and fix up photos like never before, but there's only so much it can do. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
external photo editor, organizing your pictures, sharing your photos, album pane, film roll icon, new film roll, main title screen, text contextual menu, display pane, rightmost field, yellow warning icon, page checkbox, customize panel, image slots, scripting dictionary, slide duration, multiple albums, duration slider, timeline area, importing pictures, image rating, batch change, preference pane, film rolls, correct aspect ratio
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Smart Album, Getting It Out There, Editing Your Photos, Organizing Your Photos, Script Editor, Andy Ihnatko, Bonus Chapters, Using Other, Better Photography, Ken Burns Effect, Image Capture, Mac Slides, Photoshop Elements, System Preferences, Page Setup, Slideshow Figure, Assigning Titles, Clip Viewer, Adobe Photoshop, Advanced Options, Interface Builder, Internet Figure, Leveraging the Power of Albums, Book Design, Folder Actions
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