I’ve wanted to do this for some time now, but never really took the time to make it happen. Here is a screen cast of a Photoshop and Aperture editing session I did for the Trudell family.
I just got in the new Nikon d7000 and I wanted to do a quick test to see how the video function performed. This footage and audio is straight out of camera with no post work other than slicing the frames together. Shot hand held with Nikon 24-70mm f2.8 in all natural light. I was actually really impressed!
James Charles stood in for me as my test subject. Maybe I should have cleaned up his face and his runny nose, or even taken the candy out of his mouth, but hey… Its a raw test ;)
I had the opportunity to teach a workshop with several other great photographers, in New Orleans back in February. The other instructors were Jason Cohen, Beebe Tran, and Mark Eric. It was a really fun day! Here is a behind the scenes video shot by Dyle Films from our day.
In today’s society it is almost necessary to be able to run your businesses remotely. Thanks to technology we can. Here are a few useful tools that I use which allow me to run my business from wherever I am:
iPhone: iPhone is the main platform I use for remote business management. The beautiful thing about it is the fact that it is a useful tool remotely and locally. Wherever I am it’s there.
Here are a few mobile apps that keep my business going:
Mail
Calendar
Things
Evernote
Dropbox
Facebook
HootSuite
Dev Chart
WordPress
Deliveries
Chase
The Weather Channel
Camera
Insight
Notes
Google Voice
Dragon Dictation
1Password
Maps
There are several other apps that I use for personal use along with apps that come and go which I have tried and may have failed, but these are pretty much the root apps that I tend to use on a very regular basis. Please share suggestions/alternatives if you have found any that work better. If you aren’t taking advantage of your mobile technology I hope you begin to embrace it.
One reason I say NEW(ish) is because I’ve been having this system in place for some time now, but I’ve just caught up with things that I’m finally able to actually make a post about it. I won’t get into crazy detail, but I will give you the general idea. I had previously done a post on archiving and backing up all of my data, but I didn’t have a solution for all of my photography because of pricing and space issues. Now I have something in place that I can easily grow on and it works pretty seamlessly.
I am going to be the first to admit that I definitely didn’t come up with this idea on my own. Doing research for a long time took me to the blog of Image Mechanics. They did a post on their archiving system and I figured it would be perfect for me. I basically am running the exact same system with only a few minor changes to suit my needs so I won’t get into a mile of details.
Backup In a nutshell: I currently run a RAID 10 on two separate Sonnet 5 bay cases. I chose Sonnet because I was able to find a great system that allowed me to use only one eSATA cable per case and I could choose my own drives. Each Sonnet case has can hold up to 5 1Tb Drives. One case has 2 1Tb drives which are striped (data spanned across the drives) and each case have the same 2 1Tb drives which are mirrored. Basically all of my data is written and backed up on an additional set simultaneously. If you don’t have one you will need a RAID card for your computer to be able to do this. I also have an additional set of 2 1Tb drives that I keep off site and back up once a week. I use Retrospect to back up weekly. This ensures that if I have a fire in the studio I’m only out a week at most. I’ll probably move to a 3Tb system of working files, but I’m trying to keep it as small as possible and just archive frequently.
Now for archiving… Mimicking the system I recently stumbled upon: I have a 2 bay Sans Digital case which allows me to set up a RAID internally. The case is hooked up eSATA and old data is copied to two drives which are RAID1. The case also allows me to insert drives without attaching any sort of mount so it is a quick and easy in-and-out. Data is written simultaneously (mirrored) to each drive. I label each drive with the same number adding an A or B and I keep the A drives on site and I keep the B drives off site at my house. I currently archive to 250gb hard drives to span out my data. In the event that drives in the same set are corrupt I don’t loose 1TB of data I would just loose 250gb. Don’t get me wrong… Either would suck, but it’s what I do. Not sure if the 250gb system is as cost effective as the 1Tb drives, but projects are anywhere from 15-35gb so 1Tb archives would probably be overkill anyway.
Once my drives are written I eject them and put one in a case in the studio and take the other drive home to put in a separate case for offsite archive. The cases I use are the Pelican 1520 series. I can hold 16 hard drives in each case. Each case was custom formatted for my drives and the inserts are made of anti static foam which is cut to the drive size. The cases are also water tight and crush proof. I ordered the cases through Cpd Industries which actually cut the foam and all. The website looked a bit sketchy, so I called and placed my order, but everything was legit and came in very quick!
You may ask “Why Hard Drives?”. I was archiving with archival grade DVDs (which weren’t cheep to begin with). I’d burn 2 copies of each project. One was kept in the studio and the other was kept at home. Doing design and photography I am typically asked to rework old projects, reference them, or pull old images for new projects. If the files were archived I have to thumb through tons of DVDs not to mention the data was typically spanned across anywhere from 4-8 DVDs (for archiving you would actually double that number: I was actually burning 8-16 DVDs total). If the data was spanned and I needed all or a specific file that was written on both I had to restore every DVD. Now… I keep a text file on my computer which is searchable. I search for the project title and it shows me which drive it is on. I then pull only that drive, mount it, and it is as if it never left my computer. I pull what I need and I’m good to go!
So that’s it in a nutshell: Good thing I wanted to be brief ;)
Now that I have the new site up and running and most of the little things are taken care of I can begin to focus on the actual content of the site. Just out of sure curiosity I’d love to hear what you would be interested in hearing, discussing, viewing, etc. here on my site.
I will obviously continue to post my same old personal stuff and my thoughts here and there on top of my random iPhone shot of my kids and what not, but I want to know what would you would like to see? What do you want to hear? What do you want to discuss? I’m open to suggestions and I’m hoping to get them! I don’t have all the answers, but I’d love to get some discussions going. Topics can be anything from photography, design, software, ideas, technology, technique, locations, discussion, personal, equipment, behind the scenes, involvement and so on!
Let’s hear it!
Nikon just realesed the new D90 camera for the advanced ameture. Seems to be a great camera. I’ve haven’t had a chance to play with one, but I’ve been able to see a behind the scenes video from a great photographer Chase Jarvis. He demonstrates this camera shooting behind the scenes (everyday type shooting) and in pro settings. This camera also shoots video.. And not just any video… HD720 video! CRAZY! You can control your depth of field on a video recording with a dSLR… WOW! It also has the d300 sensor with a little extra push if you were curious. He also mentions great quality at high ISO which is always a plus. I’m amazed at this little thing!Check out this video:
My buddy Jason Domingues posted a behind the scenes video from our shoot in Kansas City. 1 band and 5 photographers… what a riot!Check it!
Just wanted to let you know that I just posted a new behind the scenes video on the video page. Check it out!

![[Facebook]](http://jamieorillion.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/facebook.png)
![[Twitter]](http://jamieorillion.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/twitter.png)
![[Email]](http://jamieorillion.com/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/email.png)


Most Popular Posts