Posts Tagged ‘photography’

Instructions for Summer Photo Contest!

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Starting Monday August 3, we will begin accepting entries to our Summer Photo Contest. You can submit images of your best summer photos all week long until Friday, no entries will be considered if sent before August 3 or after August 7. Then, all the entries will be posted in a gallery on our Facebook Fan Page for voting from Monday, August 10 – Sunday, August 16. The winner will be the image with the most “likes” and that lucky photographer will win a 16×20 canvas gallery wrap of the photo!

  • Images must be in .JPG format
  • Each entrant may submit up to three (3) images
  • Images should be of good resolution, but no more than 5MB in size
  • Only images received between 12:00 am CST August 3, 2009 and 11:59 pm CST August 7, 2009 will be considered.

Instructions

Email images to info@canvaspress.com with the subject line”Photo Contest.” Include your name, location (city, state), phone number and a title or caption for the image.

You will receive a confirmation email within 12-16 hours of receipt that your photo has been entered. If you do not receive an email your attachment may not have been received, please try again or contact us for help.

If the winning canvas does not fit as a 16×20 gallery wrap, a canvas of equal or lesser value may be substituted.

The winner will be contacted immediately upon the contest closing time. If the prize is not claimed within 14 days, it will be given to the image with the next highest number of votes.

Diving into the pool on a hot summer day

Summer Photo Contest from Canvas Press!

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009



Canvas Press is hosting it’s first ever Photo Contest on our Facebook fan page. If you are on Facebook and are not a fan of Canvas Press, join today!

 We’re looking for your best summertime photo, whether it be a vacation shot, portraits, or just sweating in the summer sun! Entries will be posted on our fan page and voted on by our Facebook Fans. We will be accepting entries August 3rd through August 7th, so be thinking about what you want to submit!! One lucky winner will receive a fabulous prize.

 Once all entries are submitted, we will host your images on our Fan Page for voting. Whichever entry receives the most votes wins! (Only one entry per person, please!)

 So, let’s get out there and show us your best summertime image!

 

Canvas Press Facebook Fan Page

 

 

Calling All Oklahoma Photographers!

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Canvas Press will be at the Professional Photographers of Oklahoma annual Tradeshow next month, August 29-30. The event is held at the Reed Convention Center and Sheraton Hotel in Midwest City, OK. Please come visit us at the tradeshow with this free pass! Simply print the pass and bring it with you to the event. The show is open Saturday and Sunday 11am – 4pm. Please visit the PPO website, www.ppok.org for more details.

PPOK 2009 Tradeshow pass

Canvas as Healthcare Wall Décor Solutions

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

A Canvas Wall Decor Solution

After contacting Canvas Press, your Commercial Art Project Manager (CAPM) will help you plan your project as well as meet your budget and deadline.  There are several healthcare wall décor solutions available from Canvas Press.  Canvas Press’s main product, the gallery wrapped canvas, can be used in a variety of ways to ensure your healthcare environment is individualized and inviting. 

Employee Walls

Patients are often eager to return home while staying in a healthcare facility.  A wall of employee photos printed on canvas is a way to create a connection between patients and hospital staff.  Retiring employees as well as distinguished employees can be recognized with large specialty canvases.  These prints may include text with the employees name, position and years of service on the bottom.

Vision Statements

Displaying the healthcare facility’s mission statement on canvas in a very visible spot within the facility can serve as a reminder for employees of their greater purpose on a daily basis.  This makes your wall décor solution serve a dual purpose of art and relationship builder.

Logos

The hospital may want to display its logo in the main entrance. Healthcare funding donors may also be highlighted with canvas art.  Oftentimes, donors come from very different industries and individuals.  By using custom printed canvas art to display donors, it is ensured the logos will be formatted in a cohesive manner with similar sizing and texture.

Expansion Highlights

It can often take as long as a decade to complete healthcare renovations.  It is important to keep healthcare visitors and donors excited and informed about the transformation.  For under $200, a 30” by 40” canvas can be updated each quarter to keep everyone updated on the progress.

Inspirational Stories

Hospitals can often be places of stress.  Having cancer survivors’ stories and photos, for instance, lining the walls can serve to calm visitors.  This moves beyond art as a wall décor solution and into art as a reflective story of those who inhabit a space.

Calming Colors

Colors have meaning in all cultures.  White for purity, red for love, and yellow for happiness – all colors have understood cultural meanings.  Abstract patterns of a certain color can be hung on healthcare walls to create a desired mood.  Check out the Abstract section of the Canvas Press sister site www.ReallyBigCanvas.com.

Photography

Photographs are particularly nice wall décor solutions in healthcare facilities as they evoke an immediate human-to-human relation.  Smiling faces within a photo deepen this relationship even further.   

Signage

Canvas prints may also be used as signage to direct traffic flow within a healthcare facility as well as indicate reception locations, restroom entrances and waiting areas.

Art Interaction

Not all wall décor solutions have to be DO NOT TOUCH items.  Photos may be printed in the center of a large white canvas.  The white border areas may be signed with thin black Sharpie markers by patients and visitors.

Easy cleaning is a major benefit of using canvas as a healthcare wall décor solution.  Simply wiping the dust away with a gentle stroke completes the cleaning.    Additionally canvases are extremely safe because of their light weight and lack of glass.  Canvas Press products arrive with special hardware included to minimize the possibility of art falling if bumped by a patient.  Specialty safety hangers are available upon request.

If you would like to speak to a Commercial Art Project Manager about your healthcare wall décor solution, please call 512-828-5553.

For more information on healthcare wall solutions, please visit http://www.healthcarefineart.com/.

 

A Puppy Remembered

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Puppy Max After OilWorks

 

Puppy Max before OilWorks

We received the following email from a recent customer:

 Dear Canvas Press staff,

I wanted you to know how much I loved my completed canvas. The subject of my canvas is my dog, Max. I lost Max to cancer on March 30, 2009. He had been my faithful companion for 15 years. I wanted a fitting tribute to him, and his finished canvas certainly fit the bill.  I am just thrilled with the outcome. When I look at the canvas, Max looks so much like I remember him, it seems he could jump out to me. I placed his canvas in the center of the mantle over the fireplace, so that I can look at him every day.

You all were great to work with and very patient with me. Thank you for an outstanding job.

                                                                 Linda

 

Megapixels, Resolution, and DPI

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
Megapixels, Resolution and DPI
by Kyle McKee
“How many megapixels?” It still seems to be the million dollar question for most people when it comes to digital cameras, from point and shoots, to digital SLRs, to even your camera phone. Why just yesterday I had a friend flaunting a new phone sporting a hefty 2 megapixels. Yes, these little, seemingly microscopic, pixels are reproducing at alarming levels even in our phones. In less than 10 years we’ve seen the number of pixels explode with most camera manufactures now offering over 10 megapixels. Do we really need 10, if so, why not 20? Is more really better? And if they’re so “mega” why the heck wouldn’t a single megapixel suffice? Why do we consistently want more of these pixels? And, more importantly, how many do we need to print out something worthy of hanging on the wall?

Let’s first quickly define a megapixel. The word megapixel can be broken up into two words Mega, in this case meaning 1 million, and pixel, an abbreviation for picture element. The “pix” portion arises from the common abbreviation for picture. A pixel is basically a little dot that when combined with a bunch of other little dots, one million in the case of 1 megapixel, produces what our eyes recognize as an image. Obviously it takes a lot of these little dots to produce a sizable image.

The first thought that comes to mind for many when the word megapixel is mentioned is image quality. Image quality might also be translated to image resolution. Cameras differ when it comes to how many megapixels it takes to give a certain resolution. In other words, a 4 megapixel photo taken by a Canon camera will more than likely not have the same resolution as a 4 megapixel photo taken by a Sony camera. This is due primarily because the image capturing sensor within each of the cameras differs between manufactures. You can usually determine your camera’s megapixel to resolution ratio by looking in your owner’s manual or visiting your camera manufacture’s website.

We do know that the number of pixels present directly corresponds to an image’s maximum resolution at different sizes. As you increase the size of the photo you actually magnify, or zoom in on, the pixels. Thus, theoretically, the more pixels you have the better the image will look at higher resolutions.

When printing your image, a printer attempts to recreate it on paper by translating megapixels or image resolution to dpi (dots per inch). Dpi is the printer’s measure of printing resolution; in particular the number of individual dots of ink a printer can produce. At around 250 dpi and above the human eye has trouble seeing these individual dots of ink and the printed picture appears as one large image. At Canvas Press we print the majority of our images at a minimum of 240 dpi.


So, what is the relationship between resolution and dpi and what is required to produce a clean crisp printed image? New York Times technical editor David Pogue conducted an interesting experiment that I believe can help give us a better understanding of how resolution relates to dpi.


In his experiment Pogue printed the same picture taken 3 times by the same camera (16.7-megapixel Canon-1Ds Mark II) but at different resolutions. He took one at 7 megapixels, one at 10 megapixels, and another at 16.7 megapixels and then printed the pictures at a poster size of 16×24 inches. The pictures were displayed in a public library and judged by the passing public. According to his results, only 3 out of his 50 test subjects were able to accurately distinguish between the lower and higher resolutions (New York Times).
Pogue doesn’t go into detail on the dpi that each image was printed at but by using some basic calculations we are able to determine the maximum dpi each photo could have been printed at.


To calculate the maximum dpi that an image is capable of printing at we first need to gather the image’s resolution and the size at which we would like to print the image at. Pogue had 3 different image resolutions resulting from three separate photos taken at 7, 10, and 16.7 megapixels. Per Canon’s website the Canon-1Ds Mark II captures images at the following resolutions (Canon EOS-1Ds Mark II):


And we know that the images are then printed at 16 x 24.

To calculate the dpi of each photo we divide image resolution by the print size.


So, 7 megapixel images on the Canon-1Ds Mark II have a maximum resolution of 3072 x 2048. Using this let us calculate the highest dpi that we can print this image at without modifying or enhancing it.


A 7 megapixel image at a size of 16 x 24 has a max dpi of 192 x 85 and by adding vertical and horizontal dpi we get a total of 277 dpi.

A 10 megapixel image with a resolution of 3600 x 2400:


Theses calculations show that the 10 megapixel image maxes out at 325 dpi.

A 16.7 megapixel image with a 4992 x 3328 resolution:


So, taking in mind that the human eye can only detect color squares at around 250 dpi and lower, you can see how Pogue’s test subjects might have had troubles differentiating between the different images.

However, if we were to print these images at a size lager that 16 x 24, maybe something like a 30 x 40, you would probably be able to tell the difference between a 7 megapixel and a 16.7 megapixel image. But these larger sized images are usually not designed to be viewed close up but rather at a distance of at least a few feet or so. And, at that distance you would probably have problems differentiating between them.

I think Pogue’s experiment helps to clarify the point that regardless of how many megapixels are used in capturing an image or the resulting image resolution, the human eye has problems discerning any enhances in quality over about 250 dpi. Any printed image that meets or exceeds this standard dpi will appear sharp and clear.

Now that you can fairly quickly determine the probable dpi that an image will print at, let us suppose that one of your favorite shots was taken at only 4 megapixels, a 2946 x 1664 resolution, and that you would like to see it on a beautiful 30 x 40 canvas gallery wrap. A 2946 x 1664 resolution image could normally only print out at a maximum of 140 dpi at 30 x 40. At that dpi the printed result will more than likely not meet your expectations and may even appear blurry or pixilated.

Fortunately, digital images can be enhanced and at Canvas Press we have the ability to take lower resolution images and resize them to a quality capable of printing at over 250 dpi and at sizes much larger than even 30 x 40. That 4 megapixel photo might even be billboard material after we work our magic on it.

Let us help you worry less about megapixels, resolution, and dpi and concentrate rather on getting that memorable photo focused in and framed correctly. From digital photo enhancements to large format printing, we specialize in ensuring your photos come out looking spectacular on canvas.

Shipping Timeline

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

At Canvas Press, we use FedEx to ship your orders. With our central Texas location, we can send packages to all 50 states within one week. The color -coded Ground Service Map below gives estimated shipping times from our zip code 78665.

Hot Pink – 1 Day

Blue – 2 Days

Orange – 3 Days

Green – 4 Days

Purple – 5 Days

Yellow – 6 Days

Navy – 7+ Days

FedEx Ground Service Map

 As you can see, most of the country requires 3 days for shipping. Rush shipping is available; prices vary according to order size and delivery location.  For more information check out the FedEx Ground Service site,

http://www.fedex.com/grd/maps/MapEntry.do

Meet the Canvas Press Staff: Travis

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Staff Member Travis

Name: Travis

Job: Stretcher Extraordinaire

Experience: Commissioned portraitist and muralist, freelance artist

Favorite Canvas Press Order: Any personal shot, landscapes from around the world, not the stock images of sunsets or what-have-you

Funniest on-the-job Story: We were busy, maybe with the 50 piece Bon Jovi order when the most obtrusive and deafening alarm went off. It sounded like a giant cricket had found a megaphone and was standing right next to my ear. When we made sure we weren’t in any danger, we continued on Bon Jovi for about an hour all the while being berated by the vicious cricket.

Favorite Color: Ultramarine blue

Dream Vacation: I want to become nomadic and explore the entire globe.

Pets: The most adorable Bichon named Finley.

Music: My Morning Jacket & Modest Mouse

Reads: Just finished a Hyruki Morakami novel and started The Gift by Lewis Hyde.

Last Movie You Watched: Religulous

Guilty Pleasure: Mocha, hot or cold, double, single, day or night

On a Saturday, I can be found: In my makeshift studio also known as my bedroom.

2009 Resolution: Go with the flow and if it’s not flowing the way I want it to, changing the flow.

Avoiding Blurry Pictures

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Blurry Picture

One of you recently posted a comment on our blog asking,

Is there any way I can save pictures taken out of focus on my d60 Nikon?

Those nifty crime shows have led us to believe any blurry image can be made sharp with the right computer software. While this is not true, you can use Adobe Photoshop to add a small amount of sharpening.

Filter< Sharpen< Unsharpen Mask

Sharpening more than 150% at a radius of 1 will cause your images to look grainy and computer generated.

Tips for Preventing Blurry Snapshots

  1. The lens on Single Lens Reflex (SLR) cameras should be set to auto instead of manual focus.
  2. Take multiple shots. 9 times out of 10 you will have one print that is not blurry in the bunch.
  3. Find a source of stabilization such as a tripod or fence.
  4. Take a step back. It is hard for your camera to focus if you are extremely close to the subject.
  5. Point-and-shoot cameras usually have face detection software therefore you do not need to adjust your camera settings.
  6. When using an SLR try manually selecting your focal point.  This allows you to control your focus.

Danger! Leopards lurking!

Monday, September 10th, 2007

That’s right – watch out for leopards in your pictures. What am I talking about? Splotchy and uneven lighting can cause the subject of your photograph to appear spotted. Other lighting problems that might make a photograph unsuccessful are harsh light and shadows, improper white balance, and unnecessary flash.

First, let’s tackle how to avoid those pesky leopards. (more…)