The Best 5 Photo Sharing Sites and Why I use All of Them.

Posted on Aug 14, 2013 in photography

It seems like every few months a new photography sharing site is coming online.  We are truly in the Golden Age of Photography when thanks to Camera Phones, everyone has a camera and everyone is sharing pictures.  All these websites are rushing to capture a bit of the massive online photo sharing market.

When someone ask me the question, “Which photography website should I use?”,my answer is usually  “All of them.”  You see my strategy for photo sharing is to use different websites.  They all specialize in different aspects of sharing and they all usually add something to my photo sharing that I can’t get from a single site.

The truth is I have about 5 favorite sites that I use, although I have probably tried about 20-30 over the years.  I’ll rank my favorites here and the way that I use those sites because I do not use them all for the same purpose.

#1 – SmugMug – The Best All-Purpose Photo Sharing Site  My Site (www.frankiefoto.com)

How I use it – My bread and butter site.  I upload everything here for people to download.  I keep my blog here.  I do my printing here. This is the site I use to store all of my work as they have unlimited storage capability.

Screen Shot 2013-08-14 at 10.29.30 AM

I spend $30 a month for this site.  That’s by far the most that I spend on any site that I use and I spend it because it is worth it.  Although I am just an amateur, SmugMug is built for professional photographers.  They have integrated printing services, a shopping basket and an infinite number of customization options for galleries and your site.

I got my site customized by www.fastlinemedia.com and they even integrated a blog on my SmugMug site.  A blog is a critical must have for photo sharing. I personally think it is impossible to adequately share your photos without one.

Check out www.smugmug.com if you want to look at this site and sign-up, there are free accounts you can get and some amazing new templates.  They are really improving lately.

While SmugMug ranks high for all of the professional services and customization, the lacking part of their site seems to be in the community and sharing.  You can view other peoples galleries but there just doesn’t seem to be a good mechanism for viewing and voting other photos as they come in on stream as they are uploaded.

#2 – 500PX – The Best Place to Showcase your Best Photos.  (My Site – www.frankmckenna.com)

How I use it?  I use this site to share my best photos.  I do not store pictures here or print from this site.  I use this because they have the best sharing community on the internet.  You can get a lot of exposure from all over the world when you upload here.

Screen Shot 2013-08-14 at 10.38.25 AM

 I think 500PX and SmugMug are in an all out war.  You see SmugMug originally started out years ago and their whole strategy was to present users photos in a way that made them look beautiful.  More recently 500PX started with the same concept.  But 500PX setup a system where you only upload one photo at a time.

They wanted users to share only their best work.  Their less is more concept worked and 500PX quickly emerged as a place to share your best work.  This was not the place to share all of your work.

I have an awesome account which is their premium account level and it runs less than a couple of hundred a year.  It is well worth it.  Why do I use 500px in addition to SmugMug?

Well, because I get a ton of inspiration off 500PX, they have great customized sites where I can share a link to some of my best work and they are a place where the best photographers in the world share their work.  Both sites serve a different purpose.

#3 – Tumblr – The place to share artistic images or just to get more exposure. (My Site –http://frankiefoto.tumblr.com)

How I use it? Tumblr has a very young age demographic.  So I primarily use this site to share my beach and surfing pictures and pictures of San Diego.  The photo sharing is a lot like Instagram (which I do not use) and it allows me to get more links to my blog for traffic.  

Tumblr also is a pretty awesome site to capture some truly artistic work.  I follow some amazing photographers on this site.

Screen Shot 2013-08-14 at 10.44.51 AM

Now Tumblr is free and while it is considered a blog, I don’t really consider it a blog.  Definitely not like WordPress.  To me Tumblr is just a more sophisticated Instagram with some additional features and capability to use it on the Desktop.

I don’t find the pictures to be great resolution because they are typically small but it is  a great site to get a pretty big market of viewers very quickly.

#4 – Facebook – This is the best site to share personal photos with your friends and family. (My Site – https://www.facebook.com/pages/Vinh-Long-Orphanage/434930639893998)

How I use it? I post personal family photos for sharing with friends and family.  I don’t like to share much more than that on Facebook because the resolution is so bad it makes the pictures look pretty crappy.  

Screen Shot 2013-08-14 at 10.52.59 AM

Arrgh.  I know.  I think photos look like crap on Facebook.  But the fact is that Facebook has the easiest interface for sharing personal photos with your personal connections.

I also think FaceBook has an amazing capability to reach a broad audience for your photography work if you are willing to put up with the substandard picture quality and pay a lot of money to promote your site on other people’s timelines.

It’s also great for promoting a cause with your photography. I have a photography project with Vinh Long Orphanage in Vietnam and I have been able to post photos and get a world-wide reach to get them more exposure.

Facebook is free.  It connects you to hundreds of millions of people.  You almost have to be on Facebook to share photography even if the pictures don’t look good.

#5 – Pinterest – This is the best site to share photo ideas with people you are working with. (My Site –http://pinterest.com/frankiefoto/boards/)

How I use it? I use it as a way to have another channel to promote by blog and writing.  I find that that Pinterest crowd are a bit more interested in lifestyle.  Also, I use it share photos of kids and home life.  The Pinterest crowd seems to be more in tune with this type of photography.

Screen Shot 2013-08-14 at 11.04.49 AM copy

Pinterest is unique.  They seem like the only photography site that is directed toward working on future projects rather than showing older work.  I don’t share much on Pinterest and I don’t get a lot of interaction with other people on the site but I do find it invaluable for sharing my work and other ideas with people that I will be working with.

In fact Pinterest has become the go-to place for wedding photographers working with their clients.

Even if it does destroy some of the creativity of the photographer it is an invaluable site to have your photographs on.  Check out this great article I read on it yesterday. Pinterest Destroys Creativity.

So what is not on the list, here are the ones I am not a big fan of

Google Plus  I share on Google Plus and photographers swear by it but for some reason if you’re not Trey Ratcliff or another super celebrity photographer it just doesn’t seem to work.

I think the photos look beautiful but quite honestly I just don’t think the general public has quite figured out when and where to use Google Plus.  For that reason it didn’t make my top 5

Instagram – I share on Instagram to but it is limited to sharing photos from your iPhone.  To me that just replicates what I use Facebook for so I don’t bother.  Instagram is great for businesses to share their product and is great advertising it just doesn’t work for me.

Flickr – I have an account on Flickr too but honestly their site looks outdated and pictures don’t look great on it.  I think Flickr is on the decline and its never really worked for me. It didn’t make the cut.

ShutterFly – I have an account on Shutterfly too but everything about Shutterfly is outdated.

The printing is not good.  The picture quality is bad.  They don’t store the full resolution images for you to download later.  ShutterFly is great for a few things but I don’t find them useful.

Adobe Reveal – Adobe Reveal used to be photoshop.com but they changed the branding and quite honestly its crap.

I used to like it but in typical adobe fashion they just were playing outside their core competency and it just doesn’t work.  Adobe makes great software, they don’t make great photosharing sites.

Photographs of White Man in Vietnam Exposing his Leg

Posted on Aug 13, 2013 in photography

Needless to say, if you are a White Man in Vietnam looking for a reaction from the locals, its quite easy to garner attention.  Take for example this man, as he shows off his leg and gives thumbs up to passers-by he gains near celebrity-like status.  He could have done this for hours, but we needed to leave.

As I instantly suspected, this pose was a traffic stopper.

BDS_4443

Or at the very least it made them pause as their brains worked furiously to comprehend what is was their eyes were seeing.

needless to say

Vinh Long Orphanage Vietnam

Posted on Aug 10, 2013 in photography, Travel

The kids are alright.  We made our third trip to Vinh Long Orphanage a couple of weeks ago and they are still there, still waiting for families.  Its a little sad.  They are happy as can be but you can see how starved for attention and love that they are.

I met with the Director of the Orphanage to see how things were going.  I was disappointed to hear that not only were there less kids being adopted but rather that there were more kids than ever coming in and not leaving.  Apparently the Vietnamese Government is to blame.  New laws and restrictions have made it harder than ever for foreign families to adopt these kids.

Have a look at some of the adorable kids in this place. If you have a moment and want to help, you can email Tran Minh Tuan at [email protected]. He is the director and can tell you the best way to help.

Boo I see you!

o1

This is the sweetest girl in the whole place!

o2

Van is a nice boy, a really nice and caring boy.

o3

And oh my gosh, look at his smile.

o4

They are piling up on top of Tu.  They wont let her go!

o5

 I am not sure why he was in the corner.  He was crying. Maybe that was his spot.

orphan20

What a sweet face.

orphan18

Oh she didn’t like getting her picture taken.  Still.  At Christmas she cried too.

orphan15

Hello, is it me you’re looking for?

orphan14

 They all wear these pajamas.  Cute.

orphan12

 Look at how stylish she is?

orphan10

What  a nice smile he has.

orphan8

Peace to President Obama.

orphan7

Grobo Fruity Pajamas!  ha ha.

orphan6

Sweet girl.  She loved to get her picture taken.

orphan4

This boy really wants a home.  He is always the first to greet us at the door.

orphan2

Happy!  Happy!

orphan1

There he is again.  He would love to have you visit someday.

DSC_4002

Shy.  I think very shy.

DSC_4001

This boy was so full of life!DSC_3842

Intriguing Old Photo Tells a Story

Posted on Aug 3, 2013 in photography

The year was 1970.  The National Guard had just opened fire on a crowd of student anti-war protestors at Ohio’s Kent State University resulting in the death and injury of students. The students were fighting to get soldiers out of Vietnam.  Too many people were dying senselessly in what they considered US genocide of the Vietnamese people.

The anti-war protests in the United States were heating up and the US was beginning it’s slow and painful withdrawal from the war in Vietnam.  There were 280,000 US soldiers in Vietnam and many of them would be coming home soon.

The National Guardsmen at Kent State Ohio shortly before the tragic shooting.

kent-state-may-4-1970-8728622jpg-4be627efabfd5f26

A young man named Phuc

In South Vietnam, a poor young Vietnamese man named Phuc was looking for work.  His father had recently been killed by the Viet Cong (Northern Forces) and his family needed money.  Phuc was very sad and bitter towards the Viet Cong for taking his father.  It was senseless.  He didn’t understand why the Government in the North was attacking the south and trying to steal his home, their land and their families.

He was grateful the US Soldiers were there helping them. He did not necessarily agree with the protestors in the United States.  In his mind the Vietnamese were fighting to maintain their way of life – their survival.

Times were very hard in Vietnam. People were starving.  There was no food.  He was lucky enough if he could eat a simple meal of a bowl of rice each day.  The war had cost him everything.  It was a sad time in Vietnam.  It was a sad time for Phuc.

The past and future collide

While Phuoc looked for work, another man named Lam Thai Hiep was looking for a  driver for his car.  He was a very busy man and needed someone to help him get around Vietnam in his Toyota. Lam worked for the Vietnamese Government (The VietCong) and managed and distributed medicine for the soldiers.  Lam was a thin and serious man.  He was becoming very successful in the government job and on his way up.

The Thin and Distinguished Mr Lam

DSC_3529

As luck would have it, Phuc heard of the job and met with Mr Lam to apply. He was nervous.  He needed a job.  He would do anything to make money.

Well, the interview went well and Mr Lam was instantly impressed by him.  Perhaps, he was also a bit taken aback by Phuc’s sad story of losing his father to the same military that he worked for.  Mr Lam hired Phuc on the spot.

This is the moment when the past and future collided.  Phuc’s father had been killed by the VietCong and now he was being hired to become a driver for a man that worked for the VietCong government.

How ironic life can be.  This was Vietnam at the time.  It was a civil war. Politics were so important on the one hand, but on the other hand they were meaningless when it came to daily survival.

A Good Driver. A Good Man.  A Father and Son.

Phuc worked hard.  He liked Mr Lam.  Mr Lam was good to him and he began to love and respect him deeply.  He was his driver, but slowly he began to think of Mr Lam as his father.  Mr Lam saw this and began to consider and treat Phuc as his son.  It was a mutual relationship of respect.

Over the years the US withdrew from Vietnam.  The VietCong won the war and things became very difficult and painful for most people while the country recovered. Phuc was lucky to have this job with someone that treated him so well.  He was dependent on the goodwill of Mr Lam and was vigilant in making sure he did his very best everyday.

I am not Hungry Sir

But Phuc was never so completely comfortable around Mr Lam to feel as one would towards a natural father.  He still had a fear and respect for him that would not go away.  Even though he felt a bond with him, Mr Lam was still his boss and he treated him like it.

One day after a long day of driving, Mr Lam invited the young Phuc into his house to have dinner.   Even though Phuc had not eaten all day he apologized to him, saying “I’m full sir”.  But he was lying.

Phuc did not feel he could eat at the same table as Mr Lam.  He respected him too much to eat with him.  Phuc was starving actually.  He was so hungry that he ran into the kitchen and drank several glasses of water to try to fill his stomach so he would not feel so hungry.  He drank the water but still felt the stabbing pangs of hunger shoot through his stomach.  The water would have to do.  He had more work to do.

The Intriguing Photo

It was December 2012.  The Vietnam war had ended now over 40 years ago.  Here I was deep in the heart of Vietnam with my girlfriend Tu and we were visiting a friend of their family.  A very good friend she told me.  Someone that her father wanted me to meet.  She said her family held a special place in their heart for this woman that they treated like their grandmother.

They introduced me to her.  Her name was Co Nam.   She was a distinguished looking and kind lady.  She showed me a photo of herself that hung on the wall.  I saw the photo and told her, “Dep Lam”.  That means “pretty”.  She smiled at me and told me the photo was taken of her over 50 years ago.

A pretty lady named Co

DSC_3527

Then she took me to another wall.  There was a single, small framed picture on that wall.  The photo was interesting.  There she was with her husband.  They were standing by a Toyota.  It was somewhere off the road. It was somewhere in Vietnam.  The picture was scratchy and worn.

The man was thin and serious looking.  His name was Lam.  And there was another man in the photo.  He was in the distance.  A shadowy figure in the back who looked like he was watching over the couple.

Lam, his wife and a shadowy figure in the background. This is an intriguingly awesome photograph.

DSC_3525

Well, I learned that the shadowy figure in the back was Phuc.  Phuc was their driver and there he stood loyally in the back with the man he considered his father.  Phuc ended up working for Mr Lam for over 16 years.  The picture this elderly lady was showing me was of herself, her husband and of their driver Phuc.

During that time Mr Lam taught him much about life and helped Phuc every step of the way during those tough years.  Without the job and guidance, Phuc’s life would have most likely taken a very different road.  A road of poverty and perhaps despair.   Phuc was devastated in 1986 when Mr Lam died.  The man he considered his second father was gone forever.

Kindness is Like a Stone Thrown to a Pond

When a stone is thrown into a pond it creates ripples of water that extend outwards to infinity.  This is what happened when Mr Lam and Phuc met.  The kindness Mr Lam showed to Phuc created ripples of good fortune that were playing out even 40 years later.

Phuc went on to meet and marry a girl from a successful family.   Phuc went on to create one of the most successful and largest construction supply companies in Vietnam with that girl whose name was Kim Mai.  Phuc started a family and had a daughter named Cam Tu.  Cam Tu became successful and went to the US to get her Masters Degree in a city called San Diego California.

It was there that Cam Tu and I met while she was getting her Masters.  And then now here I was with her over 12,000 miles away from home standing in a house in Vietnam looking at a picture of  her dad and the couple that hired him to be their driver.  Mr Lam’s kindness was paying itself forward in the grandest and most interesting of ways.  We were all there experiencing a good life thanks to the kindness he displayed to a young man that had just lost his own father.

The Intriguing Photo Tells the Story

I guess I keep going back to that photograph and looking at it.  I wonder who took that photo and I think to myself what an excellent photo it is.  But perhaps even more remarkable is the way that photo has been treated.  It is a small 4 by 6 photo but it sits in a frame – a solitary photo on the wall – placed in way that makes it seem like a shrine.  The photo obviously has significant importance to Mrs Lam even today.

Her and her husband undoubtedly hired dozens of workers and helpers in their years but only one – Phuc was on their walls.  Perhaps, the story of helping Phuc and his success was their own tribute to Mr Lam and his character.  This was a story that everyone loves to tell.

A good photograph can tell a more than a thousand words.  And this photo does.  This photo tells a story.  Even the composition is intriguing.  Mr and Mrs Lam stand in the foreground beside their car.

The photographer didn’t just focus on them however.  He pulled Phuc into the frame.  Even though Phuc was off the right and could easily have been removed from the picture.

Either the photographer saw the importance of the relationship or perhaps he was instructed to include Phuc in the picture.  In either case it is intriguing.  In any case it was on purpose.

And why is Phuc off to the back of the photo and not next to Mr and Mrs Lam?  Usually people stand next to each other when they are taking photos.  The picture was made infinitely more interesting because of where Phuc stood.

My hunch is that Mr and Mrs Lam asked Phuc to come stand beside them and to take the picture.  But just like the time when Phuc said he was not hungry and ran to the kitchen to drink water to fill his stomach he was doing the same thing here.

Phuc respected Mr Lam so much that he stood off to the back like his driver.  There he could watch the man he considered a father from afar.  The man who had given him so much respect deserved that much.  The intriguing old photo tells the story better than any words can.

Double Exposure Photography

Posted on Jul 18, 2013 in photography

Some double exposure photography shots that I  was working on today.  One of my favorite photographers is Yaser Almajed.  He has some brilliant work that i have been studying. I love it.

charlie giron

the alone

THE BUTTERFLY

the light

THE ROOTS

the street

 

the run

San Diego City Skyline at Night

Posted on Jul 16, 2013 in photography

The best views of San Diego are from Coronado.  Those views are particularly spectacular at night.  If you want the best pictures of San Diego, head to Centennial Park in Coronado.   I dropped by there tonight and it was another amazing night as usual.

san-diego-web

downtown8

downtown55

The Diva Lens – The Best Portrait Lens Ever Made for Nikon

Posted on Jul 15, 2013 in photography

Do you love taking portraits?  If you do, then I have a lens that you have to consider to take your portrait photography to the next level.  The Nikon 85mm f/1.4D IF AF Telephoto Nikkor gets my vote for the best portrait lens that money can buy.  For years, this lens has been one of the most popular lenses for photojournalism and wedding photography.  I find the lens to give me the best artistic portraits.  I use this lens when I want to do close-ups but I also use it quite a bit in photographing kids as they move around quite a bit and I need an extra-fast lens.  I call this lens the Diva lens because it will make anyone look great and like a model.

This lens is not for the weak of heart.  It’s expensive and typically only works with your higher end Full Frame cameras like the D3S and D4.  And in addition to that the price tag of $1,200 makes it one of the most expensive 85MM lenses on the market.  The bottom line however is that this lens will probably take the most amazing pictures that you will take in your lifetime.  You will find that you always take this lens to your most important events that require great pictures.  This lens is destined to become your favorite.

nikon_85_f1-4d

Image courtesy of Juzaphoto.com

5 Reasons I absolutely love this lens

1. Bokeh is incredible –  There is simply no better lens out there for depth of field.  I can always count on incredible Bokeh in just about every setting and every picture.  If the lighting is right, I can get the most incredible smooth and creamy backgrounds that make the subjects pop.  The bokeh on this lens is so powerful and beautiful and that is probably the primary reason that most people buy this lens.  If you ever gotten choppy or distorted bokeh with other lenses, that will not happen with this lens.

2.  The AutoFocus is deadly accurate – I am using a D4 and the way that this lens snaps to focus instantly and accurately is beyond compare.  I normally choose to use a single point focus rather than letting the camera choose the focus points based on facial recognition.  I like to laser in on exactly what I want and this camera almost never disappoints. I can get a super sharp face and eyes while the rest of the picture is blurred beautifully.  The Autofocus is just amazing on this camera.

3. The Aperture f/1.F lets in so much light for dark situations – This camera can be dialed up to an aperture setting of 1.4 which means that I can use this lens in very dark settings and still capture amazing shots.  I have taken some shots on this lens in near dark conditions with incredible results. I believe if you are a wedding photographer that this will be one of the primary reasons for getting this lens.  You can take shots in low-lit restaurants and events and pretty much capture the exact color and lighting that you see with your own eyes.  The other benefit to the incredible low light performance is that I can always count on this lens for awesome videography.  This lens helps me capture video that looks very cinematic.   I recommend operating in manual mode however because this lens at f/1.4 will be continually try to update the focus and it will not look right in your videos.

4. Sharpness is awesome.-  I love the sharpness of this lens.  If I dial the aperture down to anything above F/4, I can get great end to end sharpness in the photos.  This is a great balance to the photos that I take where I am looking for a lot of bokeh.  I can choose to get shots where everything is sharp or only the subject is in focus.  This lens is incredibly versatile.

5.  Built like a tank.   I love the rugged construction of this lens.  It’s an older lens from Nikon.  I broke my lens a year ago because I dropped it on concrete and wrecked the focus motor.  I could have bought the newer 85MM lens from Nikon but I went back to this one because I wanted the best.  I think this lens will always be my favorite portrait lens.

Some Reviews from the Experts

Ken Rockwell notes that this lens “works great with almost every film and digital camera Nikon made since 1977.” He says that while the 85mm f/1.4G is sharper and has better bokeh, it also costs twice as much. Tom Hagen says the Nikon 85mm f/1.4D’s build is “rock solid” and that it autofocuses “with certaintly” and concludes with “I’ve never been disappointed when I’ve picked up the 85mm f/1.4D and shot with it…this lens will stay in my lens collection pretty much forever.”

 Some Shots I have Taken with this Lens.

These are a sample of the images that I have taken with the 85MM lens.  There is something very magical about this lens that makes it well worth the expense that you will pay.  Best of all, this lens makes people look great and they will love you for it.

dsc_1592

eoin-1

LILJOHN (27 of 48)

4vn

dsc_2435

Sea Lane Beach Sunday

Posted on Jul 15, 2013 in photography

Tu and I headed to the beach for sunset pictures. I brought the tripod out and we had Selfie Sunday II.  What a great day. I love Sundays.

DSC_9343

DSC_9369_2

sunset2