Dear Grannymar,

I don’t want you getting lonely, so would you like a toyboy to keep you company. One you can actually play with?

Meet Tommy. He’s a bit flash and a little slow… oh sorry that should be “he’s a bit of Flash“, and he’ll take more poking than a facebook account. He also seems to be allergic to shirts. Tommy is the “breast awareness guy“; the focus of a special website and starring in a tongue-in-cheek video which is also on YouTube (and embedded below).

The point of the video and the site is to teach you how to examine yourself for breast cancer (which also effects men, so its not quite as silly as it seem), and if you donate via his site he (OK, a server in Cancer Research UK) will send you an exclusive digital desktop calender featuring photos of Tommy. Shirtless naturally.

I wonder if the Irish Cancer Society would do something similar?

OK, its a little less pink than usual, but it almost fits the bill for Pink for October in Ireland.

take care,
and don’t play too hard,
Will Knott

15 Oct 2008

Little pink book

Author: will | Filed under: 2008, Breast Cancer, cancer, p4oi, pink for October, pinkforoctober

I know that the October Breast Cancer Awareness Campaigns like the Pink for October sites are helping. However, is Filofax creating a range for “Breast Cancer Campaign”. “Beautifully crafted from pink lizard-print leather, the collection includes a pocket organiser, with matching passport cover, purse and accessory case. Filofax will make a donation of between £2.00 and £2.50 from the sale of every product direct to the charity” So for a £40 filofax, the charity gets £2.

The name is also a bit odd sounding. No ‘the’, the charity is called “Breast Cancer Campaign”. The charity registered in England (Charity No. 299758) and a company limited by guarantee (Company No. 05074725)

Why not more?
Will Knott

Rebecca Lipkin tells her story about breast cancer.

Simply and boldly told. Slightly surprising given the source.

take care,
Will Knott

Hello again.

This post is going to be very image intensive, and I’m used thumbnails to help the bandwidth impaired.
Click on the image to see a larger version.

A quick word on Selective Colourisation, someone asked “what is it”…
Well, this is a colour image.
stock and daisy

and this is the same image using selective colourisation on the yellow parts.
stock and daisymask

Effective isn’t it. The technique works best on a strong colour, unfortunately pink has many shades. Something which complicates things later on. And when yo do this technique on your own images, clean them up first. Red eye looks silly in black and white. However you could try selective colourisation and have a black and white photo, with red glowing eyes. Very zombie.

Anyway, in part one you downloaded your tools, and I gave you an image to play with.
DSC00939

So lets start.
SC001

Open the photo and you’ll probably have this view. The picture itself and the toolbar. However, in order to do make the changes, you’ll need to see the layers. To bring up the “Layers Dialog window” from the menu bar of the photograph, choose “Dialog” and then “Layers”.
SC003

And you then have the layers window.
SC004

What we are going to do first is create a new layer (a copy of the photograph) and turn that copy in to a monochrome version.

So go to the menu bar of the photograph again, and this time choose “Layers” and “Duplicate Layer”.
SC005

This… does nothing to the photo. But if you look at the layers window, you can see that there is now a second entry.

SC006

Make sure that the upper-most layer is selected, because we are finally going to make that colourful photograph a lot less colourful.

To make the image black and white, go to the menu bar of the image (who by now is an old friend) and choose “Colors” and “Desaturate”.
SC007

This causes a new window to open asking you “How do you want to make this image black-and-white”.
Actually its asking “How do you want to make this layer…”, but you’ve probably going “I don’t know which one of Lightness, Luminosity or Average to pick”.

SC008

Well don’t worry about it. Remember how I said that selective colourisation works best with a strong colour. You will want the maximum contrast between your selected (eventual) colour and its surrounding monochrome. So at the moment you can’t know. If you want to be really sure, you can always take the same image make multiple layers… and try out the technique on them all. Then you can pick the best looking one. Or make use of “undo”.

Anyway, pick one.

SC009

You now have a black and white image. But if you look at the layers window you can see that the colour photo is still available. (You can click on the green arrows at the bottom of the layers window to change the view between the black and white image and the colour one).

So now its time to put some colour back. You don’t use some colour selecting tool, but a mask.

Go back to the picture’s menu bar, and choose “Layers” then “Mask” and “Add Layer Mask”.

SC010

This causes a window to pop-up. The default here is “White (Full Opacity)”, choose that one and click “OK”.

The way we get the colour back is to “cut” through the monochrome image. If you look in the layer window you can see that there is not a white rectangle next to the monochrome image. This is the layer. White here means that you can only see the selected layer. Black here means that the layer is transparent, which lets the image in the layer below show through. To do this we’ll use the paintbrust tool from the tool bar.

SC012

The paintbrush is the 4th from the left and the 4th one down. Pick this tool and you should see the selected (and alternate) colour for the brush. The topmost one should be black, and the one below it should be white. You can see the selected brush in the image above its called “circle 11″.

You can try out the process. Put you mouse over the image and holding down the primary button, scribble on the image.

SC013

See the colour show through?
You can easily get rid of this scribble by choosing “Edit” and “Undo” from (you guessed it) the menu bar of the image.

While the above brush is fine, you should really chose a fuzzy brush. Its more forgiving if you go over the edge of the item you want to return to colour. Click on the “image” of the brush and you’ll see a selection of brushes. Pick a fuzzy brush (you can switch over and over)

SC015

and go back to the photograph.
Before you start re-colouring the image, you had better zoom in (“View”, “Zoom” and either “Zoom In” or select a ratio) so that you can more accurately colour the image.

SC016

Now you can start to colour in your photo. Use small strokes, that way you can use “undo” as needed.

SC017

Personally I prefer to go along the edge of the part I’m colouring in. Filling in is the easy part.

SC018

At this point it might be worth looking at the mask itself. Choose “Layers”, “Mask” and “Show Layer Mask”.
SC019

And you can see the parts I’ve changed.
SC020

You can also see a little “scratch” next to the sleeve. That is a mistake for which I can’t use undo. I can however use the paintbrush to make that black mark white again.

Back on the toolbox, you can see a little two headed arrow where the chosen colours are. Clicking on this will switch the colours.

SC021

Now with my brush “painting” in white, I can erase the mistake.

SC022

Switching the colours back to black, I can cheat.
Since I “painted” the edge of parts I want to re-colour, I can use the “fill” tool (in the picture above it’s the left-most column, 4th one down with an icon of paint being poured from a tin) to, well, fill in a chunk of the image…
SC023
… and switch back to the brush to tidy up the image.

SC024

When you are doing the selective re-colourisation, I’d advise you show the mask so you can see if you missed a bit.

You can now turn hide the mask (“Layers”, “Mask” and select “Show Layer Mask” to deselect it) and see the image.
SC025

Using the green arrows in the layers window to see the full colour and selective colourised image to see if there is another part you wish to colour in.

SC026

Now it’s time to save your image. Go to the menu bar and choose “File” and “Save as”.
Why “save as”? Firstly, if you are using a borrowed machine, you need to make sure you are not overwriting the original image, and that the location you are saving on is going to be on your own removable media. The other reason? Well, GIMP uses the file name extension (the 3 letters after the main file name) to decide how its going to save the image. If you save with a “.xcf” then you are saving n GIMP’s own native format. And it retains all your layer information if (like me) you will need to return to the file to edit it. If you don’t want to return to editing, then the file name extension of the image file sill still be set to the file type you opened (in this case a JPEG or .jpg file).

When you save after editing you are going to get a few warning boxes.

SC027
This one reminds you that you are going to loose your layer information. Since that’s the point choose “confirm”.

SC028
This one tell you that since a jpeg can’t handle the transparency its going to turn your multi-layer image in to a single layer one. Again that’s the point; choose “export”.

And finally (you will get this one)
SC029

The scroll bar on the top wants to know about compression. Since these images are going to be for printing, choose 100%. However if you are just trying out the technique, (and the 100% reslts in a large file size) you can leave the quality levels at a lower setting. Once you are happy with the quality setting click on the “Save” button.

DSC00939sc1

We now have a selective coloured image.

If you look at the pointing hand, I didn’t colour in the cuff. This if you remember is the difficult part.
I could use the same careful drawing technique that I used before (or just leave it as it looks OK) but I won’t.

I’m going to leave it to you. This is the reason for the half post. I want you to tell me the techniques you used to colour in this part. Leave a comment below or e-mail me I’ll post the replies next week.

Take care,
and do your homework,
Will Knott

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

When I wrote “Pink makes the money goes around” I requested that a technique called Selective Colourisation (or selective Colorization if you prefer). When I mentioned this a while back a photobloger (who shal remain nameless) said that (s)he didn’t know how to do it.

So Dr Kno(tt) is here to teach you how.

First off, you need the tools.

I’m not going to assume you have a PC (yup, that simple) but if you have a camera, you probably have a memory card somewhere.

You can install (and run) a photo editing site off that card. I’m talking about the portable app version of GIMP called (naturally enough) GIMP Portable.

Download it, install it on a USB drive or a memory card (even the memory card your use for your camera).

Why?

Well if you don’t own a PC, you can get access to one. At school, in a net cafe, at your friendly neighbourhood co-working facility and even in an emulator on an Apple Mac. The advantage of this method is that you then have an easily accessible photo editor, and you can use it without altering anything on the borrowed PC.

If you have access to your own machine. Use the full version of GIMP. Its available for a wide range of operating systems, and its free (for personal use anyway, which is this P4O project).

So download it and play with it for a while, and tomorrow we’ll be seeing the selective Colourisation of this photo.

Séan Creagh taken by Luke Field  as a promo shot for Prisoners

I’ve chosen this photo for a few reasons. I’m going to select only the red of Séan Creagh’s top and the Star on the poster he points to. The poster is about a play in Cork called Prisoners which runs on August 15 and 16 (and the trailer for it is below), so its a little topical.

And because this arm covers a red advertisement on the window. Red against red. Something which makes this difficult.

So download the software and install it on your removable media, take a copy of the photo, and we’ll start editing it tomorrow.

take care,
Will

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Dear photobloggers. I want you to do something. Raise cash for the Irish Cancer Society!

Most of you are at least aware of the internet phenomena that is Pink for October. This is a breast cancer awareness programme, where websites and blogs go pink for the month, and photobloggers show pink photos for the month.

However, it occurred to me that the one thing this internet outreach does not do is actually help cancer charities. So lets fix this.

Last time I was in Cork city I called in here…
ICS
my local Irish Cancer Society shop. I’m not sure if the Castle Street shop in cork city is unusual, but they tend to have big window displays. So I chatted with the manager (nice lady) about making a window display using pink photos for October. In Cork, the Jazz festival will have its own display, but since she hadn’t planned anything from the start of the month until the festival, she is willing to display the photos.

However it might be worth going one better… donate the photos to the charity not just for display, but to be sold and raise money for the charity.

And while photos of pink objects might sell, portraits will sell, to the subject at least.

My plan is to go to the streets of Cork with model release forms and approach people wearing pink (anything pink from a splash of pink lipstick, to a pink bow in the hair or a pink tie). Explain to the subject why I’m taking the photos and if they would be willing to pose and (under no obligation) buy the photo (I’m thinking €5 at most) from the Cancer charity shop and have the photo displayed online. With a bit of publicity I suspect there would be volunteers lined up on the streets.

Personally I would like to perform a selective colourisation on the photograph so that its a black and white photo with only the pink coloured, but that isn’t a requirement.

Then in the middle of September, present the collection of A4 printouts to the charity shop for display and sale.

So what am I asking you to do?

  1. Go to your nearest Cancer Charity shop (In Ireland it’s the Irish Cancer Society, I’m not sure what it is in Northern Ireland let alone the rest of the world)
  2. Ask the manager of that shop if he or she would be willing to accept the donation of photographs as part of the “Pink for October Breast Cancer Awareness Campaign“, display and sell the photos. You might have to explain the Pink for October story and that model release forms will be produced.
  3. Take the photographs. Print the photographs. Yes some time and expense will be involved. Anything worth doing involves a bit of an outlay.
  4. If you wish, do put some identifying marks (like a web address to the online version of the photo) on the printouts. A Pink for October logo and link should also be included.
  5. Present the photographs (and at least offer the release forms) on (or around) Friday September 19 2008 to the charity shop so that the manager has time to display the photographs. (I can see Kilkenny photoblogers being a little later if they want to include a Podcamp Ireland photowalk)

So, is this a dumb idea?

At the moment I’m looking for a little help with this. Could you help me with…

  • Commitment to join in. You have over two months to do something this year
  • The wording for the model release form. I’m not sure how it should be worded and what details are required.
  • Would I (or anyone else doing the street portraits) need a licence of some kind? If so where and how would I go about getting one?
  • While I’m willing to print out my photos myself, does anyone know of a willing printer?
  • Anything else I should know about?

Happy snapping,
Will Knott

update September 3 2008. The 2008 Pink for October Ireland portraits won’t be happening. Details in this post.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

9 Oct 2007

Cabbage on a stick

Author: will | Filed under: Breast Cancer, cancer, photo, pink for October

pink 08 – plant
Originally uploaded by cork_host

Snapped this bunch of flowers as part of my Pink photo-blogging (it’s all single focus camera phone folks). However this has me stumped. The plant look like a cabbage on a stick. Any idea about what it is?

Will

tags : , , , , ,

7 Oct 2007

Rose pink

Author: will | Filed under: Breast Cancer, cancer, photo, pink for October

pink06
Originally uploaded by cork_host

More of the pink for October shots, finally up to date. There will 31 in the set by Hallowe’en

tags : , , , , ,

6 Oct 2007

Pinking about cancer

Author: will | Filed under: Breast Cancer, photo, pink for October

pink01
Originally uploaded by cork_host

Well this is Breast Cancer Awareness month (and yet there is no Bowel Cancer Awareness day). And I was thinking what could I do.
There is a move on to turn your website Pink for October. I wouldn’t be the first Irish blogger to do so, however its a pain to change the template of a blogger blog without causing damage to the layout.

So I thought, what else could I do?

I’m starting late, but every 2nd day I’ll post a pink photo here and on Flickr. And yes, thats my idea of a pink photo?

take care,
Will

tags : , , , , ,