Here are few pics from our recent nature photo shoot... [if you have missed them on our flickr footer]
If you’re a Photoshop expert, you should probably spend your time reading the other posts in this blog, because this entry is dedicated to our clients and basically anyone who is not a professional in photography or design but would like to give their photos a better look, whether they are intended for their website, brochure or for the family album.

Having a professional photographer take the photos for your new state-of-the-art website or brochure is highly recommended, because the quality of your photos will impact greatly the quality of the final product. A picture is the first element that draws the eye into a page (virtual or not), and the text message is usually secondary.But, if your budget hit bottom and you must take the photos yourself with the shiny point-and-shoot company camera, or if you must dig deep into the archives for past photos, there is still hope. Here is a list with the most common problems that you might run into, and their simple but very effective and easy to apply solutions. The solutions described below are implemented in Photoshop CS3, but they work for previous versions of Photoshop, unless otherwise noted.
This weekend I visited South Lake Tahoe... This is one of the best places I have ever been. Me and Navin have been into Photography from the past few months (if you have not noticed the Flickr stream on the footer) and we tried out a HDR of the lake. This technique seem to produce one of the coolest output :)
High dynamic range (HDR) images enable photographers to record a greater range of tonal detail than a given camera could capture in a single photo. Cambridge in Color has a very good tutorial on creating HDR Photographs. Hope you shoot some good stuff after this tutorial.
And here are the multi exposure shots used to get this output:
