ph

CSS3 Enhanced Photo Gallery

A simple photo gallery with CSS3 enhancements to rival javascript versions.




ph

CSS3 Photo Information panels

Using CSS3 to produce a set of sliding information panels for photo links.




ph

A Flylist menu suitable for use on the iPad, iPhve and iPod Touch

A flyout list menu with top level links and a close menu icon for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

A Droplist menu suitable for use on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A droplist menu with top level links and a close menu tab for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

A pulldown panel with droplist menu suitable for use on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A pulldown panel containing a droplist menu using just CSS and suitable for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

An image fix for stay open sub menus on the iPad, iPhve and iPod Touch

Using an image to close any open sub menus on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

CSS3 Photo Corner Curls

Using CSS3 to give the impresssion of curled corner on images of any size.




ph

An Anywidth Menu for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

Adapting the Anywidth dropdown/flyout menu to work on the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version 2 for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

The previous menu modified to give a clearer indication of the 'CLOSE' tab for the iPad etc..




ph

A slide down menu for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A single level slide down menu with a 'close' tab for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

A drop/fly menu for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A multi level dropdown/flyout animated menu with a 'close' tab for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version 3 for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A simpler version of the Anywidth v2 menu, using the latest techniques and discoveries for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version 4 for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A simpler version of the Anywidth v3 menu, using the latest techniques and discoveries for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version 5 for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A simpler version of the Anywidth v4 menu, using the latest techniques and discoveries for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.




ph

CSSplay Rotary Photo Gallery

A rotary gallery of images with click to view and permanent image changes.




ph

CSSplay 3D Sphere

A 3D Beach Ball using CSS3 3D transforms and no images.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version 6 suitable for the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch

A simpler version of the Anywidth v5 menu, using the latest techniques and discoveries for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. NO need for a special 'close' button or tab.




ph

An Anywidth Menu version #7 suitable for the iPad, iPad mini, iPhone and iPod Touch

A simpler version of the Anywidth #6 menu, using the latest techniques and discoveries for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. NO need for a special 'close' button or page wide transparent image.




ph

CSS play - Holiday 2013 Photo Gallery

A CSS gallery to display some of the photos taken during our 2013 visit to New Zealand, Australia and Singapore




ph

CSSplay - Smartphone Mini Menu

A multi level mini menu suitable for smartphones.




ph

CSSplay - PC, tablet and Smartphone Menu

A multi level mini menu suitable for PCs, Tablets and Smartphones.




ph

CSSplay - Flip Card Photo Gallery

A 3D flip card photo gallery for all the latest browsers.




ph

CSSplay - PC, tablet and Smartphone Menu verson 2

A second multi level mini menu suitable for PCs, Tablets and Smartphones.




ph

CSSplay - PC, tablet and Smartphone droplist animated menu

A droplist animated menu suitable for PCs, Tablets and Smartphones.




ph

CSSplay - PC, tablet and Smartphone vertical concertina animated menu

A vertical concertina animated menu suitable for PCs, Tablets and Smartphones.




ph

CSSplay - CSS Photo Info demo updated

Using the latest CSS techniques to bring the previous Photo Infor demo up to date.




ph

Photo Practice: Creating a Project

There are a number of psychological battles that you face as a photographer (or anyone pursuing a creative endeavor). If you’re like most people, then you’ll likely find yourself fighting, at one time or another, doubt as to whether you’re a good photographer, or whether a particular photo is clichéd or obvious, or whether there […]

The post Photo Practice: Creating a Project appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

How to get better at photography

(This is an excerpt from the introduction to the companion exercise book for the 9th edition of Complete Digital Photography. It can be downloaded free from the CDP 9 support page on the website.)  Throughout your life you have probably been told to practice one thing or another—musical instruments, sports, handwriting, whatever. If you’re like me, you […]

The post How to get better at photography appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Photo Workshop in Cuba, April 4-9, 2020

Join Hudson Henry and me on a special, six-day photo workshop in Cuba, April 4-9, 2020. It promises to be a magical photographic and cultural experience: Cuba is one of the more exciting, rich photographic locations I’ve been to in a long time. Wonderful people, great landscapes and cityscapes, gorgeous beaches, music and good food […]

The post Photo Workshop in Cuba, April 4-9, 2020 appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Managing your photo library: pruning old growth

At the end of October, 2019, my photo library contained approximately 60,000 images, mostly taken over the past 20 years. (Of those, nearly 40% are from the past five years.) Comparing the size of my library with those of friends of mine, I’m about average, but still, 60,000 is a big number, and managing that […]

The post Managing your photo library: pruning old growth appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Items of photographic interest, January 2020 newsletter

Our January 2020 CDP newsletter, “Items of photographic interest” was sent via email this week to subscribers, and it is also now available as a free downloadable PDF. Download: Jan-2020-CDP-newsletter.pdf List of primary links found in this month’s newsletter: Delicate Arch, with Moon (photo) Managing Your Photo Library: Pruning Old Growth (CDP post) Complete Digital Photography ebook (CDP […]

The post Items of photographic interest, January 2020 newsletter appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Making Photography Your Career

In a world where photographs are everywhere, displayed largely via web pages and small screens, the traditional career tracks for professional photographers have fallen by the wayside. So what do you have to do to make photography your livelihood in today’s world? I recently moderated a lively discussion on this topic with two professional photographers […]

The post Making Photography Your Career appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Photo Projects: West

When speaking with students, Ben and I will often talk about the importance of projects as an element in one’s photographic growth. While we tend to talk about this in the context of practicing, projects can take on a life of their own, and can help motivate you, either when you’re out in the field, […]

The post Photo Projects: West appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Epson debuts SureColor P700 and P900 photo printers

Epson this week announced the SureColor P700 and P900 printers, updates to their SureColor 13- and 17-inch, pro-level photo printer line. The new desktop printers offer a smaller footprint; a new pigment-based inkset with 10 inks; improved color gamut; and enhanced connectivity and paper-handling options. In addition — and possibly the most important enhancement for […]

The post Epson debuts SureColor P700 and P900 photo printers appeared first on Complete Digital Photography.




ph

Topic Tomographies. A visual approach to distil information from media streams.

The project is a collaboration between DensityDesign Lab and ISI... more




ph

Long-term ecological reflections: writers, philosophers, and scientists meet in the forest

Over the past 7 years, a strong collaboration has emerged between the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest ecosystem research group and the Spring Creek Project for Ideas, Nature, and the Written Word, an independently funded program for nature writing based in the Department of Philosophy, Oregon State University. The program is called Long-Term Ecological Reflections and it brings together scientists, creative writers, and environmental philosophers to consider new ways to conceptualize and communicate views of long-term ecological change in forests and watersheds and the participation of humans in that change. The program is designed to parallel the Long-Term Ecological Research program, a national science program initiated in 1980 and involving the Andrews Forest. Both programs focus on primary inquiry and have 200-year planning horizons, which have resulted in some uniquely farsighted perspectives and astute ecological observations.




ph

. 2012. Natural and cultural history of beargrass (Xerophyllum tenax). Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-864. Portland, OR: U.S Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,Pacific Northwest Research Station. 80 p.

Forest managers are seeking practical guidance on how to adapt their current practices and, if necessary, their management goals, in response to climate change. Science-management collaboration was initiated on national forests in eastern Washington where resource managers showed a keen interest in science-based options for adapting to climate change at a 2-day workshop. Scientists and managers reviewed current climate change science and identified resources vulnerable to expected climate change. Vulnerabilities related to vegetation and habitat management included potential reductions in forest biodiversity and low forest resilience to changing disturbance regimes. The vulnerabilities related to aquatic and infrastructure resources included changing water quality and quantity, the risk to roads and other facilities from changes to hydrologic regimes, and the potential loss of at-risk aquatic species and habitats. Managers then worked in facilitated groups to identify adaptations that could be implemented through management and planning to reduce the vulnerability of key resources to climate change. The identified adaptations were grouped under two major headings: Increasing Ecological Resiliency to Climate Change, and Increasing Social and Economic Resiliency to Climate Change. The information generated from the science-management collaborative represents an initial and important step in identifying and prioritizing tangible steps to address climate change in forest management. Next would be the development of detailed implementation strategies that address the identified management adaptations..




ph

Searing The Rhizosphere: Belowground Impacts of Prescribed Fires

A century of fire suppression has resulted in dense fuel loads within the dry pine forests of eastern Oregon . To alleviate the risk of stand-replacing wildfire, forest managers are using prescribed fire and thinning treatments. Until recently, the impact of these fuel treatments on soil productivity has been largely unknown. Such information is essential for making sound management decisions about the successful reintroduction of fire to the ecosystem to retain biodiversity of soil fungi and achieve the desired future condition of large ponderosa pines with low fuel loads. In a recent pair of studies, led by researchers at the PNW Forestry Sciences Laboratory in Corvallis, Oregon, novel molecular techniques were utilized to investigate the response of soil ecosystems to prescribed burning and thinning. The research compared impacts of the season of burn and various combinations of fuel-reducing treatments. Results suggest that overly severe fires can damage soil productivity and that less intense fires can be used to gradually reduce accumulations of fuel. The findings are currently being implemented in decisions about forest management and contribute important new information to the science.




ph

Stereo photo series for quantifying natural fuels Volume IX: oak/juniper in southern Arizona and New Mexico

A series of single and stereo photographs display a range of natural conditions and fuel loadings in evergreen and deciduous oak/juniper woodland and savannah ecosystems in southern Arizona and New Mexico. This group of photos includes inventory data summarizing vegetation composition, structure, and loading; woody material loading and density by size class; forest floor coverage and loading; and various site characteristics. The natural fuels photo series is designed to help land managers appraise fuel and vegetation conditions in natural settings.




ph

Stereo photo series for quantifying natural fuels Volume X: sagebrush with grass and ponderosa pine-juniper types in central Montana.

Two series of single and stereo photographs display a range of natural conditions and fuel loadings in sagebrush with grass and ponderosa pinejuniper types in central Montana. Each group of photos includes inventory information summarizing vegetation composition, structure, and loading; woody material loading and density by size class; forest floor depth and loading; and various site characteristics. The natural fuels photo series is designed to help land managers appraise fuel and vegetation conditions in natural settings.




ph

Gathering in the city: an annotated bibliography and review of the literature about human-plant interactions in urban ecosystems

The past decade has seen resurgence in interest in gathering wild plants and fungi in cities. In addition to gathering by individuals, dozens of groups have emerged in U.S., Canadian, and European cities to facilitate access to nontimber forest products (NTFPs), particularly fruits and nuts, in public and private spaces. Recent efforts within cities to encourage public orchards and food forests, and to incorporate more fruit and nut trees into street tree planting programs indicate a growing recognition among planners that gathering is an important urban activity.




ph

Photo series for quantifying natural fuels

Three series of photographs display a range of natural conditions and fuel loadings for sagebrush-steppe types that are ecotonal with grasses, western juniper, and ponderosa pine in eastern Oregon, and one series of photographs displays a range of natural conditions and fuel loadings for northern spotted owl nesting habitat in forest types in Washington and Oregon. Each group of photos includes inventory information summarizing vegetation composition, structure, and loading; woody material loading and density by size class; forest floor depth and loading; and various site characteristics. The natural fuels photo series is designed to help land managers appraise fuel and vegetation conditions in natural settings.




ph

A photographic guide to Acacia koa defects

Acacia koa (A. Gray), native to the Hawaiian Islands, has both cultural and economic significance. Koa wood is world-renowned for its extensive use in furniture, tone wood for musical instruments, and other items of cultural importance. Old-growth koa is decreasing in supply, yet dead and dying koa is still being harvested for manufacture of products. Knowledge of wood quality in the trees available for harvest is limited and colloquial in nature. We selected logs from four geographically dispersed sites on the Island of Hawaii. Defects on the face and end surfaces of each log were measured and photographed. The four most commonly occurring defects found were seam, branch, decay (log face), and heart rot. Sawing patterns were recorded so that corresponding defects on lumber could be measured and impact on volume recovery calculated for a specific defect. Included is a pictorial accounting that captures the defect indicators on the exterior of the log and the interior manifestation of the defects as seen in the lumber sawn from the log.




ph

Gordon Grant named 2016 American Geophysical Union fellow

First Forest Service researcher to receive honor.




ph

Elemental atmospheric pollution assessment via moss based measurements in Portland, Oregon.

Moss accumulates pollutants from the atmosphere and can serve as an inexpensive screening tool for mapping air quality and guiding the placement of monitoring instruments. We measured 22 elements using 346 moss samples collected across Portland, Oregon, in December 2013.




ph

Characterizing a forest insect outbreak in Colorado by using MODIS NDVI phenology data and aerial detection survey data.

Forest disturbances are increasing in extent and intensity, annually altering the structure and function of affected systems across millions of acres. Land managers need rapid assessment tools that can be used to characterize disturbance events across space and to meet forest planning needs.




ph

The geologic, geomorphic, and hydrologic context underlying options for long-term management of the Spirit Lake outlet near Mount St. Helens, Washington.

The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens produced a massive landslide and consequent pyroclastic currents, deposits of which blocked the outlet to Spirit Lake. Without an outlet, the lake began to rise, threatening a breaching of the blockage and release of a massive volume of water. To mitigate the hazard posed by the rising lake and provide an outlet, in 1984–1985 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers bored a 2.6-km (8,500-ft) long tunnel through a bedrock ridge on the western edge of the lake.




ph

Variation In Shrub and Herb Cover and Production On Ungrazed Pine and Sagebrush Sites In Eastern Oregon: A 27-Year Photomonitoring Study

Study objectives were to evaluate yearly fluctuations in herbage canopy cover and production to aid in defining characteristics of range condition guides. Sites are located in the forested Blue Mountains of central Oregon. They were selected from those used to develop range condition guides where soil, topographic, and vegetation parameters were measured as a characterization of best range condition. Plant community dominants were ponderosa pine/pinegrass, ponderosa pine/bitterbrush/Idaho fescue savanna, low sagebrush/bluebunch wheatgrass, and rigid sagebrush scabland. None of the sites were grazed during the previous 30 years or during the 27-year study. Each location was permanently marked by fence posts, and a meter board was placed 10 m down an established transect line. Photographs (color slides) were taken down the transect with closeups left and right of the meter board. Sampling was limited to August 1-4 each year when canopy cover and herbage production were determined. Both total canopy cover and herbage production varied by about a 2.4-fold difference on each site over the 27 years. Apparently "good range condition" may be something of a "running target" and lacks a well-defined set of parameters. Canopy cover is a poor parameter for characterizing range condition. Three of the four plant communities were dominated by bunchgrasses. Abundance of seedheads is commonly used to indicate good range health. But on these sites, seedheads were not produced about half the time. Because these sites were in "good range condition," lack of seedhead production may indicate maximum competition in the community. Maximum competition and maximum vigor do not seem to be synonymous. These bunchgrass communities varied in their greenness on the first of August each year from cured brown to rather vibrant green suggesting important annual differences in phenology. The pinegrass community, being dominated by rhizomatous species, showed surprising variance in seedhead production. Pinegrass did not flower, but Wheeler's bluegrass, lupine, and Scouler's woolyweed were quite variable, averaging inflorescences only 75 percent of the time.




ph

Video: Typhoon jets fly over Belfast to mark VE Day

One of the jets dipped its wings in salute




ph

Dropkick Murphys' Ken Casey Narrates NHL Network Documentary On 1970 Boston Bruins Stanley Cup Championship

An NHL NETWORK documentary on the 50th anniversary of the BOSTON BRUINS' 1970 STANLEY CUP championship is narrated by DROPKICK MURPHYS founder KEN CASEY. "THE 1970 BRUINS: BIG, BAD … more